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In [[precolumbian]] [[Aztec society]], a '''calpulli''' (from [[Classical Nahuatl language|Classical Nahuatl]] ''[[wiktionary:calpolli|calpōlli]]'', {{IPA-nah|kaɬˈpoːlːi}}, meaning "large house") were commoner housing split into kin-based land holding groups in In Nahua city-states, also known as [[altepetl]]. In Spanish sources, they are termed ''parcialidades'' or ''barrios.''<ref>Carrasco, Pedro. "Calpulli." In [[David Carrasco|Davíd Carrasco]] (ed). ''The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures''. Vol 1. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. {{ISBN|9780195108156|9780195188431}}</ref> The inhabitants or the calpullis were collectively responsible for different organizational and religious tasks in relation to the larger altepetl. These groups were not simply grouped based on family units; a calpulli could be created based on an extended family, being part of a similar ethnic or national background, or having similar skills and tribute demands. Because of this, calpullis were structured in a vast array of ways.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hicks |first1=Frederic |title=Tetzcoco in the Early 16th Century: The State, the City, and the "Calpolli" |journal=American Ethnologist |date=May 1982 |volume=Vol. 9 |issue=2 |pages=230-249 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/644674 |access-date=7 March 2023}}</ref>
In [[precolumbian]] [[Aztec society]], a '''calpulli''' (from [[Classical Nahuatl language|Classical Nahuatl]] ''[[wiktionary:calpolli|calpōlli]]'', {{IPA-nah|kaɬˈpoːlːi}}, meaning "large house") were commoner housing split into kin-based land holding groups in In Nahua city-states, also known as [[altepetl]]. In Spanish sources, they are termed ''parcialidades'' or ''barrios.''<ref>Carrasco, Pedro. "Calpulli." In [[David Carrasco|Davíd Carrasco]] (ed). ''The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures''. Vol 1. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. {{ISBN|9780195108156|9780195188431}}</ref> The inhabitants or the calpullis were collectively responsible for different organizational and religious tasks in relation to the larger altepetl. These groups were not simply grouped based on family units; a calpulli could be created based on an extended family, being part of a similar ethnic or national background, or having similar skills and tribute demands. Because of this, calpullis were structured in a vast array of ways.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hicks |first1=Frederic |title=Tetzcoco in the Early 16th Century: The State, the City, and the "Calpolli" |journal=American Ethnologist |date=May 1982 |volume=Vol. 9 |issue=2 |pages=230-249 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/644674 |access-date=7 March 2023}}</ref> This misunderstanding that calpullis were family units can be blamed on the fact that the word “family” refers to different things in English and Nahuatl. In English, family refers to blood relation, while in Nahuatl it refers to the people whom you live with.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Nichols |first1=Deborah L. |last2=Rodríguez-Alegría |first2=Enrique |title=The Oxford Handbook of the Aztecs |date=December 5, 2016 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780199341962}}</ref>
A Nahua city-state was divided into a number of calpullis, whose inhabitants were collectively responsible for different organizational and religious tasks in relation to the larger altepetl. Calpullis controlled land which was available for calpulli members to cultivate and also operated the [[Tēlpochcalli]] schools for young men of commoner descent. In Aztec culture, as in most other civilizations, the family unit was very important. There were several levels of organization in Aztec family life beginning with the base family unit. The base family unit consisted of two parents and their unmarried children. The main functions of the base family unit were education of the children and food preparation. Many base family units, however, banded together to form extended families. The households of extended families were usually composed of several brothers and their families. The primary functions of the extended families were to coordinate land use and food production (such as growing crops). In most cases, extended families contained just a few base family units. In large cities, however, they often grew to many more.


Although extended families farmed the land, they usually did not own it. They were allowed to use it by the calpulli to which they belonged. Calpulli were groups of families that controlled the use of the land and performed other territorial functions, as well as social ones. The majority of calpulli had a telpuchcalli, a school for young men. Another function of the calpulli was a taxation unit. The empire collected taxes from each calpulli, which in turn collected taxes from its member families.
Although extended families farmed the land, they usually did not own it. They were allowed to use it by the calpulli to which they belonged. Calpulli were groups of families that controlled the use of the land and performed other territorial functions, as well as social ones. The majority of calpulli had a telpuchcalli, a school for young men. Another function of the calpulli was a taxation unit. The empire collected taxes from each calpulli, which in turn collected taxes from its member families.

Revision as of 23:51, 7 March 2023

In precolumbian Aztec society, a calpulli (from Classical Nahuatl calpōlli, Nahuatl pronunciation: [kaɬˈpoːlːi], meaning "large house") were commoner housing split into kin-based land holding groups in In Nahua city-states, also known as altepetl. In Spanish sources, they are termed parcialidades or barrios.[1] The inhabitants or the calpullis were collectively responsible for different organizational and religious tasks in relation to the larger altepetl. These groups were not simply grouped based on family units; a calpulli could be created based on an extended family, being part of a similar ethnic or national background, or having similar skills and tribute demands. Because of this, calpullis were structured in a vast array of ways.[2] This misunderstanding that calpullis were family units can be blamed on the fact that the word “family” refers to different things in English and Nahuatl. In English, family refers to blood relation, while in Nahuatl it refers to the people whom you live with.[3]

Although extended families farmed the land, they usually did not own it. They were allowed to use it by the calpulli to which they belonged. Calpulli were groups of families that controlled the use of the land and performed other territorial functions, as well as social ones. The majority of calpulli had a telpuchcalli, a school for young men. Another function of the calpulli was a taxation unit. The empire collected taxes from each calpulli, which in turn collected taxes from its member families.

Most rural calpulli were based on lineage. In other words, the members of a rural calpulli believed that they were descended from a common ancestor. In the cities, the calpulli were based more on geographical, political, and occupational similarities than lineage. In both cases, calpulli were tightly knit and sometimes were even somewhat isolated from other calpulli, both politically and physically. The nature of the interrelatedness between the members of the calpulli is a matter of debate. Traditionally it has been argued that the calpulli was firstly a family unit in which the inhabitants were related through blood and intermarriage. Other scholars such as Van Zantwijk (1985) deny that this was necessarily the case. Van Zantwijk demonstrates that at least in some altepetl the family-based nature of the calpulli was replaced with a hierarchical structure based on wealth and prestige. Newcomers from other altepetl were allowed to settle down and become part of the calpulli. Michael Smith (2003) shows that in some Nahua cities, notably Otumba, each calpulli specialised in a trade and took almost the form of a trade guild.

Calpullis of Tenochtitlan

The wards of Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital, were also known as calpulli. The exact number of calpullis within the city is not known but Van Zantwijk (1985) based his calculations on a wide array of ethnohistorical sources. Van Zantwijk reached a number of 20 calpullis, 7 of which represented the original founding groups of Tenochtitlan and the remaining 13 being composed by groups coming to the city at later points in its development. Van Zantwijk assumed that each calpulli was ritually connected to one of the twenty day names. Below is a list of the twenty calpullis of Tenochtitlan based on the data from Van Zantwijk (1985):

Founding calpullis

  • Tlacatecpan
  • Tlacochcalco
  • Huitznahuac
  • Yopico
  • Chalman
  • Izquitlan
  • Cihuatecpan

New calpullis

  • Chililico
  • Coatlan
  • Apanteuctlan
  • Acatliacapan
  • Tzonmolco
  • Tezcacoac
  • Tlamatzinco
  • Molonco Itlillan
  • Tecpantzinco
  • Xochicalco
  • Coatlxoxouhcan
  • Cuauhquiahuac
  • Atempan

Notes

  1. ^ Carrasco, Pedro. "Calpulli." In Davíd Carrasco (ed). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures. Vol 1. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 9780195108156, 9780195188431
  2. ^ Hicks, Frederic (May 1982). "Tetzcoco in the Early 16th Century: The State, the City, and the "Calpolli"". American Ethnologist. Vol. 9 (2): 230–249. Retrieved 7 March 2023. {{cite journal}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
  3. ^ Nichols, Deborah L.; Rodríguez-Alegría, Enrique (December 5, 2016). The Oxford Handbook of the Aztecs. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199341962.

References