Matlatzinca people
Nation | Active
1252 CE to 2057 CE
Matlatzinca is a name used to refer to different indigenous ethnic groups in the Toluca Valley in the state of México, located in the central highlands of Mexico.
The term is applied to the ethnic group inhabiting the valley of Toluca and to their language, Matlatzinca.When used as an ethnonym, Matlatzinca refers to the people of Matlatzinco.
Matlatzinco is the Aztec (Nahuatl) term for the Toluca Valley.
The political capital of the valley is also referred to as “Matlatzinco;” this is a large city whose ruins are today known as the archaeological site of Calixtlahuaca.
In Prehispanic times the Toluca Valley is the home to speakers of at least four languages: Otomi, Matlatzinca, Mazahua, and Nahuatl.
Thus speakers of any of these languages could be called “Matlatzinca” if they resided in the Toluca Valley.
When the Aztec native historical sources or the Spanish chroniclers refer to “the Matlatzinca” it is often not clear where they mean speakers of the Matlatzinca language, the peoples of the Toluca Valley, or even the inhabitants of Calixtlahuaca.
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The Valley of Toluca was known as Matlatzinco Valley in ancient times and home to at least four linguistic groups: the Matlatzinca, Otomi, Mazahua, and Nahua peoples.
In the Postclassic period, the valley was ruled by a large powerful capital city whose ruins are located today in the village of Calixtlahuaca, just north of the city of Toluca, some forty miles (sixty-five kilometers) southeast of Mexico City.
In 1478, the Mexica emperor Axayacatl had conquered the Toluca Valley.
The capital had been stripped of its dynasty and power and some lands were distributed to kings and nobles from the Valley of Mexico.
One of the rivals of Calixtlahuaca was Tollocan, a minor city-state before 1478.
When Axayacatl destroyed Calixtlahuaca, he placed the imperial provincial capital in Tollocan.
Calixtlahuaca and other towns in the Toluca Valley had paid tribute to the Aztec Empire through Tollocan.
After the Spanish conquest, the name Tollocan has been changed to Toluca.
Archaeologists have not yet located a major Postclassic settlement within the modern city.
Either the pre-Hispanic city of Tollocan was destroyed and covered over by the expansion of Toluca, or else the remains of Tollocan could lie outside of the modern city.
A small Postclassic site was discovered on the hill called Tolochi, which is in the north of the modern city, but the remains seem too insubstantial to have been a major provincial capital.
The tree of "Las Manitas Rojas", which literally means "little red hands", was planted before the Spanish Conquest in what is now the monastery of Nuestra Señora del Carmen.
This tree is significant because it shows that Toluca was important enough for the Aztecs to create a botanical garden.
In 1521, the Spanish conquered the Valley of Toluca.
Leading the troops was Gonzalo de Sandoval, one of Cortes' many sergeants.
Toluca’s first governor was Pedro Cortés Coyotzin.
The valley of Toluca and what is now the city of Toluca had been included in the concession made by King Carlos V of Spain to Hernán Cortés.
In 1524, the evangelization process began in Toluca.
The most notable figure of this effort is Fray Andrés Castro, from Burgos, the old capital of Castile, by making a great number of improvements to the city and being the first one to learn the native Matlatzincan language.
The friar is well loved by the Matlzinca people, as he works to protect them from the injustices of the early colonial period.
He is remembered to this day with a plaza that bears his name which includes a sculpture depicting him.
A Spanish community is established in 1530.