Mitla: View of one of the palace structures
Date
Circa 1910
Location
Architecture Library, Hesburgh Libraries
One of three main palace groups (Church Group, Column Group and Arroyo Group) showing the low, extremely wide, but shallow buildings which would have had flat roofs. Site of a Pre-Columbian Zapotec and Mixtec city in the eastern arm of the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico. Excavations have revealed that Mitla was a small Zapotec town around AD 400. Mixtec rule began c. AD 1000, when the city became a royal burial centre, but even then most of the population was still probably Zapotec. Mitla (Nahuatl: 'Arrow place', a corruption of 'Miquitla', 'Death place', which was a rough translation of Zapotec 'Lyobaa', 'Inside-tomb') comprises groups of surviving palaces and platforms that are a late part of the ancient community, most of which lies under the modern town. The palaces for which it is known were probably built during the 14th century AD, when Mixtec rulers dominated the Valley of Oaxaca and many Zapotecs had migrated east to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.
Our collection information is a work in progress and may be updated as new research findings emerge. If you have spotted an error, please contact Architecture Library, Hesburgh Libraries at asklib@nd.edu.
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

Teotihuacán: View looking up slope of the Temple of the Feathered Serpent
