ZAPOTEC

zäˈpətĕk, säˈ–, indigenous people of Mexico, primarily in S Oaxaca and on the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. Little is known of the origin of the Zapotec. Unlike most native peoples of Middle America, they had no traditions or legends of migration, but believed themselves to have been born directly from rocks, trees, and jaguars.

The early Zapotec were a sedentary, agricultural, city-dwelling people who worshiped a pantheon of gods headed by the rain god, Cosijo—represented by a fertility symbol combining the earth-jaguar and sky-serpent symbols common in Middle American cultures. A priestly hierarchy regulated religious rites, which sometimes included human sacrifice. The Zapotec worshiped their ancestors and, believing in a paradisaical underworld, stressed the cult of the dead. They had a great religious center at Mitla and a magnificent city at Monte Albán, where a highly developed civilization flourished possibly more than 2,000 years ago. In art, architecture, hieroglyphics, mathematics, and calendar the Zapotec seem to have had cultural affinities with the Olmec, with the ancient Maya, and later with the Toltec.

Coming from the north, the Mixtec replaced the Zapotec at Monte Albán and then at Mitla; the Zapotec captured Tehuantepec from the Zoquean and Huavean of the Gulf of Tehuantepec. By the middle of the 15th cent. both Zapotec and Mixtec were struggling to keep the Aztec from gaining control of the trade routes to Chiapas and Guatemala. Under their greatest king, Cosijoeza, the Zapotec withstood a long siege on the rocky mountain of Giengola, overlooking Tehuantepec, and successfully maintained political autonomy by an alliance with the Aztec until the arrival of the Spanish. The Zapotec today are mainly of two groups, those of the southern valleys in the mountains of Oaxaca and those of the southern half of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec; together they number some 350,000. The social fabric of Zapotec life—customs, dress, songs, and literature—though predominantly Spanish, still retains strong elements of the Zapotec heritage, particularly in the present-day state of Juchitán.

See H. Augur, Zapotec (1954); M. Kearney, The Winds of Ixtepeji (1972); B. Chinas, The Isthmus Zapotecs (1973).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Zapotec  - 486 results

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...Juchitecas drink more than their men do," "Zapotec women dominate Zapotec men," and so forth. While, in some cases, these...great deal of variability among the large Isthmus Zapotec population. Furthermore, human relations are volatile...
...of the Pan-American Highway, is the Zapotec-speaking town of Mitla, which is the...1950 national census counted 215,651 Zapotec-speaking people in the state of Oaxaca. In that census, Zapotec was listed as a single language. There...
...whooping when I come by, in the manner of Indians theyve seen in movies. My only response has been to tell them that I am a Zapotec from Oaxaca, and to describe for them, with a little exaggeration, the jungle where, I tell them, every hundred yards...
...Zapotcc. 80,000: Mexico. Zapotcc, Mitla ?zaw?: Didxsaj, East Central Tlaco- lula Zapotec, East Vallcy Zapotec. Oto-Manguean, Zapotecan, Zapotec. 19,500: Mexico I less than 1% mon<>lingual; popula- tion includes 4,.SCO...
...image of the proud, fierce, wealthy Zapotec who manage through their wealth and shrewdness to maintain Juchitan as a Zapotec city. Most fiestas in Juchitan are...this occurs within the context of a Zapotec-non Zapotec marriage. At the Sunday...
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journal articles on: Zapotec  - 115 results

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...HOUSEHOLDS, AND FIELDWORK: MULTISITED ZAPOTEC WEAVERS IN THE ERA OF LATE CAPITALISM...and international ethnic art markets, Zapotec weavers have become more closely tied...dispersed schemes of production. Some Zapotec families have responded to such flexibility...
Zapotec hieroglyphic writing. by Brian Stross URCID SERRANO, JAVIER. Zapotec hieroglyphic writing. xviii, 486 pp., maps...Mexico and Guatemala by half a millennium, the Zapotec hieroglyphic writing system apparently originated...
Zapotec Science: Farming and Food in the Northern...Jeffrey H. Cohen GONZALEZ, ROBERTO J. Zapotec science: farming and food in the northern...ethnography of traditional farming among the Zapotec of Oaxaca, Mexicos Rincon (the mountainous...
"Barrio" as a metaphor for Zapotec social structure by Gregory F. Truex...divisions of the Villa of Santa Maria, a Zapotec town in the Valley of Oaxaca, are...barrio are more Indio, speak more Zapotec, and are generally backward. Empirical...
Mixtepec Zapotec Ethnobiological Classification: a Preliminary...speaking colonial powers, members of the Zapotec-speaking community of San Juan Mixtepec...knowledge in southern Mexico. Mixtepec Zapotec animal classification appears to be relatively...
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magazine articles on: Zapotec  - 62 results

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Not Aztec, not Mayan, Zapotec sculpture from Oaxaca by Pamela Hellwege...or nonverbal symbol, is typical of Zapotec art created before 900 AD. Although...C glyph headdress identifying it as Zapotec. The central enclosed area has a wavy...
...Maya lowlands, and the Zapotecs enjoyed centuries of...prosperity. Over time, Zapotec culture grew increasingly...capital had fallen, Zapotec culture did not die...Some 425,000 modern Zapotecs speak their traditional...Thousand Weavers." Modern Zapotec culture continues the...
...population, food, climate, or geography. My goal was to have students make whimsical animals based on the traditions of the Zapotec Indians of Oaxaca, Mexico. Students began with two realistic sketches of animals showing gesture and character. These animals...
...fields. "Sometimes the Zapotecs added agave worms to...Trilling enlists a local Zapotec woman who is famous...culture. In fact, modern Zapotec cooking remains so close...about 500 B.C. by the Zapotecs. Three centuries later...going into contemporary Zapotec villages and documenting...
...Spaniards and 100 Indians to pacify Zapotec communities in the mountains...slopes of Cerro Negro, the Zapotecs of Tiltepec ambushed the Spaniards...Tiltepec is a small, isolated Zapotec community. The settlement...of Tiltepec are bilingual. Zapotec is their first language and...
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newspaper articles on: Zapotec  - 13 results

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...large Balkan ensemble. And that his latest, March Of The Zapotec ( Pompeii Recordings, pounds sterling12.72 inc p p 01634...which American dominance never came to pass. March Of The Zapotec is two EPs combined: the first, as supple and engaging a...
...Nicaragua, and Costa Rica. Most modern Zapotecs live in rural communities throughout...way of life. Linguists believe the Zapotec language originated more than 6...Zapotec. Around 1400 B.C. the Zapotecs were among the first Mesoamerican...
...sombreros u and have recapped the most important bits for you to remember here. In 1862, both Mexican President Benito Juarez (a Zapotec Indian with European style and taste) and U.S. President Abraham Lincoln were leading countries through strife and war...
...and the violence of the war in Mexico between the emperors forces and the opposition, led by Benito Juarez. Juarez was a Zapotec Indian and the elected president, who had been forced out by the French invasion. He was re-elected in 1867 and died of...
...m. to 8 p.m. Monday, LaVerne Krause Gallery. Vida Nueva Weaving Cooperative, show and sale of handmade wool rugs by Zapotec women from Oaxaca, Mexico, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Monday, Unitarian Universalist Church. TICKET WINDOW De La Soul, 8 p...
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encyclopedia articles on: Zapotec  - 13 results

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...000. The social fabric of Zapotec life customs, dress, songs...retains strong elements of the Zapotec heritage, particularly in...Juchitan. See H. Augur, Zapotec (1954); M. Kearney, The...B. Chinas, The Isthmus Zapotecs (1973...
...Cultures The area of the Mixtec and Zapotec in Oaxaca , Mexico, was not completely conquered by the Aztecs. The Zapotec originally occupied the site of Monte...about a.d. 900. Then a new seat of Zapotec civilization was founded at Mitla...
...from Oaxaca, SW Mexico, capital of the Zapotec . Monte Alban was built on an artificially...Mexican archaeologist Alfonso Caso . The Zapotec apparently had an advanced culture here...the ascendancy of the Mixtec , when the Zapotec were driven from Monte Alban and Mitla...
...they had overshadowed their rivals, the Zapotec . The Mixtec produced some of the finest...noticeable in Mitla and Monte Alban , Zapotec cities taken by the Mixtec during the...alliance to defeat the Aztec , but the Zapotec soon teamed up with the Aztec and eventually...
...la Nahuatl,=abode of the dead, religious center of the Zapotec , near Oaxaca, SW Mexico. Probably built in the 13th cent...frescoes, Mitla is thought to represent the highest expression of Zapotec architectural talent, although the mosaics have been attributed...
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