Central Places and Cities: A Consideration of the Protohistoric Tarascan State

Systems of human settlement serve as primary sources of evidence for investigating variability in the evolution of complex societies. In particular, the existence of and nature of cities reveals much about the nature and direction of sociopolitical changes characteristic of prehistoric states. The present study places the analysis of prehistoric urbanism within the context of settlement system analyses and applies this approach to the protohistoric Tarascan state of western Mexico. This first synthesis of our knowledge of major Tarascan settlements evaluates the protohistoric communities at Tzintzuntzan, Ihuatzio, Pátzcuaro, and Erongarícuaro (within the Lake Pátzcuaro Basin) and considers those outside the Tarascan core, especially Zacapu. This study suggests that the Tarascan state did not participate in the Central Mexican urban tradition, and that the historic capital, Tzintzuntzan, may have been unique in its urban status. Rather, the state was characterized by a complex and overlapping network of central places and specialized places. To the extent that this pattern diverges from other prehistoric systems it constitutes one source for understanding the diversity in the protohistoric Mesoamerican world.

[1]  W. T. Sanders,et al.  A mesoamerican capital. , 1978, Science.

[2]  Carole L. Crumley Toward a Locational Definition of State Systems of Settlement , 1976 .

[3]  Richard A. Diehl,et al.  Studies of ancient Tollan : a report of the University of Missouri Tula archaeological project , 1974 .

[4]  C. Kolb,et al.  Man, Settlement and Urbanism. , 1973 .

[5]  George L. Cowgill,et al.  The Teotihuacán map , 1973 .

[6]  Harold Carter,et al.  The study of urban geography , 1972 .

[7]  R. Spores Settlement, farming technology,and environment in the nochixtlan valley. , 1969, Science.

[8]  J. Hardoy,et al.  El proceso de urbanización en América desde sus orígenes hasta nuestros días , 1969 .

[9]  L. Sarrelangue,et al.  La nobleza indígena de Pátzcuaro en la época virreinal , 1967 .

[10]  J. E. Thompson,et al.  The Mixtec Kings and Their People. , 1967 .

[11]  J. Jennings,et al.  Prehistoric man in the New World , 1965 .

[12]  S. F. Cook,et al.  The aboriginal population of central Mexico on the eve of the Spanish conquest , 1963 .

[13]  R. Chán Ciudades arqueológicas de México , 1963 .

[14]  R. Ricard The Indian Population of Central Mexico, 1531-1610. By Sherburne F. Cook and Woodrow Borah. [Ibero-Americana, Vol. 44.] (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1960. Pp. iv, 111.) , 1961, The Americas.

[15]  S. F. Cook,et al.  The population of central Mexico in 1548 : an analysis of the Suma de visitas de pueblos , 1960 .

[16]  S. F. Cook,et al.  The Indian population of central Mexico, 1531-1610 , 1960 .

[17]  L. Simpson The Population of 22 Towns of Michoacán in 1554. A Supplement to Cook and Simpson, The Populalation of Central Mexico in The Sixteenth Century , 1950 .

[18]  R. West,et al.  Cultural geography of the modern Tarascan area , 1949 .

[19]  D. Stanislawski Tarascan political geography. , 1947, American Anthropologist.

[20]  D. Brand An Historical Sketch of Geography and Anthropology in the Tarascan Region: Part I , 1943, New Mexico Anthropologist.

[21]  A. Caso Informe preliminar de las exploraciones realizadas en Michoacán. , 1929 .