By the time Moctezuma I ruled (1440-1469), the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan was one of the largest cities on Earth. What made it remarkable was not just its size — it was built in the middle of a lake.
Tenochtitlan sat on an island in Lake Texcoco, in the Valley of Mexico. The Mexica people had founded it there in 1325, and by the mid-1400s it had grown into a dense, carefully planned city of temples, palaces, markets and homes.
Two innovations solved one problem: An island city has no roads in or out, and no easy way to move goods around inside it. The Aztecs solved this with causeways (raised roads across water linking the island to the shore) and a network of canals running through the city itself.
- Causeways — three main ones (Iztapalapa to the south, Tepeyac to the north, Tlacopan to the west) carried people, goods and soldiers between the island and the mainland.
- Removable bridges — sections of each causeway could be lifted out, so in wartime the Aztecs could cut Tenochtitlan off completely, turning the whole island into a natural fortress.
- Canals — a grid of waterways worked like streets, letting canoes glide produce, building stone and people from one part of the city to another faster than walking.
For a Paper 1 source, this urban plan matters because it is exactly the kind of thing eyewitnesses wrote about. Spanish soldiers who saw Tenochtitlan for the first time in 1519 described it in letters and chronicles — and those descriptions are some of our best surviving sources for how the city looked and worked.
Reading a source's content — worked example: Imagine a source is a Spanish soldier's letter describing Tenochtitlan as "a city standing in the water, reached by wide roads." To use its content to answer "What innovations took place?", you would quote or paraphrase the specific detail (the causeways) and explain what it shows: that the Aztecs engineered a solution to the problem of building a capital on an island. Always link the detail back to the inquiry question — don't just describe the source.
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A city of well over 100,000 people needed a huge, reliable food supply. The Valley of Mexico's lakeshore land alone could not have grown enough — so the Aztecs invented a way to farm the lake itself.
A chinampa was built by staking out a rectangle in the shallows, weaving reeds into a fence, and piling up layers of mud, plant matter and lake sediment inside until a raised bed rose above the waterline. Willow trees planted along the edges held the whole structure in place with their roots.
Why chinampas worked so well: Because the beds sat directly in the lake, the soil stayed in constant contact with water and nutrient-rich sediment. Farmers never had to leave fields fallow to recover — this meant several harvests a year, of maize, beans, squash and vegetables, on the same plot.
Stake and fence
Reed fences were staked into the lakebed to mark out a plot in the shallow water.
Build up the bed
Layers of mud, decayed plants and sediment were piled inside the fence until the bed rose above the water.
Anchor with willows
Willow trees planted along the edges grew roots that held the soft raised bed firmly in place.
Farm year-round
Farmers grew maize, beans and vegetables on the fertile bed, harvesting several times a year.
Stake it, build it, root it, farm it.
Chinampas ringed Tenochtitlan and nearby towns like Xochimilco, and canoes carried the produce straight into the city along the canal network from Section 1 — the two innovations worked together.
Reading a source's context — chinampas example: Suppose a source is a 16th-century Spanish official's report praising chinampa farming as "more productive than any field in Spain." For context (Q2), ask: who wrote it, and why? A colonial administrator reporting to the Spanish crown had a purpose — showing the value of the land he now controlled. That purpose doesn't make the description false, but it shapes how you use the source: as evidence chinampas impressed outsiders, read alongside its likely bias toward justifying Spanish rule.
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Tenochtitlan's innovations were not only about building and farming — the Aztecs also had to secure resources the Valley of Mexico simply did not have.
Under Moctezuma I, the Aztec Empire (through the Triple Alliance of Tenochtitlan, Texcoco and Tlacopan) expanded its control over neighbouring regions. One key target was Totonacapan, the territory of the Totonac people on the Gulf coast.
Why Totonacapan mattered: The Gulf coast grew things the highland Valley of Mexico could not: cacao (for chocolate drinks, also used as currency), cotton, vanilla and colourful feathers. Annexing Totonacapan meant these goods flowed into the empire as tribute, rather than through trade the Aztecs didn't control.
| Resource from Totonacapan | Why it mattered to the empire |
|---|---|
| Cacao | Used to make a prized drink and as a form of currency |
| Cotton | Woven into fine textiles and tribute cloth |
| Vanilla | A valuable luxury good from the coastal lowlands |
Annexation was usually backed by military campaigns, but it also relied on the threat of force and the promise of continued local rule for elites who submitted and paid tribute — a pattern the Aztecs repeated across their expanding empire.
Don't overreach the dates: This micro's period is c.1428-1469, focused on Moctezuma I's reign. Later events — like Totonacapan's alliance with Hernan Cortes against the Aztecs in 1519 — belong to a different part of Aztec history. Keep your Paper 1 answer inside the prescribed dates unless a source explicitly points forward.
Perspectives across sources — worked example: One source (an Aztec tribute record) lists Totonacapan's goods as routine income for the empire. Another (a later Spanish account) describes Totonac resentment at Aztec demands. Used together (Q3), these sources show perspectives: the Aztec view frames annexation as successful state-building, while the Totonac experience — later exploited by the Spanish — was one of resentment. Neither source alone gives the full picture; using both shows the same event looked very different depending on who you were.