Abstract
By a.d. 1350, central-western Mexico was incorporated into the Tarascan state. This irechequa tzintzuntzani (kingdom of Tzintzuntzan) has been known primarily from sixteenth-century documents. With three decades of archaeological, ecological, and ethnohistoric research, it is now possible to propose a model of the emergence of the first archaic state in Michoacan. Critical issues to be addressed include (1) why state formation occurred (and why this form); (2) why even secondary state formation was 'delayed' for more than a millennium; (3) why it occurred in the Lake Patzcuaro Basin; and (4) the role of Purepecha ethnicity in the process. © Cambridge University Press 2008.
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CITATION STYLE
Pollard, H. P. (2008). A model of the emergence of the tarascan state. Ancient Mesoamerica, 19(2), 217–230. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536108000369
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