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- Mexica - Wikipedia
The Mexica are eponymous of the place name Mexico (Mēxihco [meːˈʃiʔkoˀ]), originally referring to the interconnected settlements in the valley that is now Mexico City
- Mexica or Aztec: How the Mexicas Were Renamed
Mexica — a postclassic Náhuatl-speaking people who migrated south to the Valley of Mexico from Aztlán who founded Tenochtitlan and established what is commonly referred to as the Aztec Empire
- Introduction to the Aztecs (Mexica) - Smarthistory
But what did the Aztecs call themselves? They referred to themselves as the Mexica Those who lived in their capital city, Tenochtitlan, were the Tenochca-Mexica The Mexica formed part of a larger ethnic group known as the Nahua, who spoke Nahuatl Unfamiliar with this language?
- Mexica Identity - Sixth Sun Ridaz
Mexica pronounced (meh-shee-ka) is a broad term used on here to refer the collective of Mexican area Indigenous peoples of which there are many Most people who claim Mexica today cannot actually claim actual Mexicah-Tenochca lineage
- Who were the Mexica? - Mexicolore
It’s a vague term that tends to cover all the peoples who began migrating from the mythical Aztlan to the Basin of Mexico in the 12th century, including the Mexica who later founded Tenochtitlan
- Mexico - Aztecs, Tenochtitlan, Mesoamerica | Britannica
The Aztecs are also known as Mexica or Tenochca Tenoch, or Tenochca, was a legendary patriarch who gave his name to Tenochtitlán, the city founded by the Aztecs on an island in Lake Texcoco, in the Valley of Mexico
- 8. Who were the Mexica? - Lienzo Quauhquechollan
Mexica refers specifically to the inhabitants of Tenochtitlan, a city built in the fourteenth century on an island in Lake Texcoco—known today as Mexico City The terms Aztec and Mexica (pronounced me-shee-ka) are often used synonymously, but they are not the same
- Azteca or Mexica?
Mexica means people from Mexico Aztecs wandered until they found their new homeland, Mexico When the found it, they changed their name to Mexica, people from Mexico
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