Teotihuacán: View looking up slope of the Temple of the Feathered Serpent
Date
Circa 1910
Location
Architecture Library, Hesburgh Libraries
Further down the Avenue of the Dead is the area known as the Citadel (Ciudadela), containing the ruined Temple of the Feathered Serpent. The sculptures are the feathered serpent and Tlaloc or a "war serpent." Pre-Columbian site in the Mexican Central Highlands. It was the region's pre-eminent city during the Late Pre-Classic and Classic periods (c. 250 BC-c. AD 900). Little is known about their ethnic origins, but, with a population estimated at up to 200,000, in the 6th century AD Teotihuacán was the largest and most populous city in the Pre-Columbian Americas and sixth most populous in the world. The religion of Teotihuacan was similar to those of other Mesoamerican cultures. Many of the same gods were worshiped, including the Feathered Serpent (the Aztecs' Quetzalcoatl) and Rain God (the Aztecs' Tlaloc.). The dominant civic architecture is the pyramid. The fall of Teotihuacán occurred in the 8th century, when the centre of the city was extensively destroyed and, according to ethnohistorical sources, its population dispersed. Some seven centuries later the site was known to the Aztecs only as a place of religious pilgrimage and myth.
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Also from
Architectural Lantern Slides of Mexico

Temple of the Feathered Serpent

Chichén Itzá: Interior view of a small temple at the site

Mitla: Distant context view of one of the palace complexes

Chichén Itzá: Relief carving from the palace complex showing ruler and Mayan glyphs above

Teotihuacán: View looking down from the Adosada platform at the staircase of the Temple of the Feathered Serpent

Chichén Itzá: One of the platform temples
