Asteckee
(Aa-enmyssit ass Asteckagh)
She sleih as cultoor Americaanagh bun-dooghyssagh ayns Mesoamerica va ny h-Asteckee. Ren ad reirey harrish yn Impiraght Asteckagh veih'n 14oo eash derrey yn 16oo eash.[1]
Ta'n fockle "Asteckagh" çheet ass aztēcatl ny aztēcah 'sy Nahuatl t'eh meanal "sleih ass Aztlan". Ta ny shenn skeealyn gra dy nee Aztlan va'n chied voayl raad ren ny h-Asteckee cummal ayn. Ta "Aztlan" hene meanal "boayl coaryn ny h-astan" ayns Nahuatl.[2]dg. 8
Dy mennick, ta'n enmys "Asteckagh" çheet er sleih Tenochtitlan. She ard-valley er ellan ayns Logh Texcoco v'eh. Denmys y sleih adsyn hene Mexica, as, kyndagh rish shen, ta'n çheer hene enmyssit Meksico. Chur ad Nahua orroosyn hene as, myr shen, she Nahuatl enmys nyn jengey oc.[3]
Imraaghyn
reagh- ↑ Berdan, Frances (1982). "The Aztecs of Central Mexico: An Imperial Society." Case Studies in Cultural Anthropology. York Noa: Holt, Rinehart & Winston. ISBN 0-03-055736-4.
- ↑ Somervill, Barbara A. (2009). Great Empires of the Past: Empire of the Aztecs. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-1604131499.
- ↑ Hansen, Valerie; & Curtis, Kenneth R. (2015). Voyages in World History, Volume I. Centgage Learning. dg. 326. ISBN 978-1305537712.
Kianglaghyn magh
reaghTa tooilley mean ayns Wikimedia Commons bentyn rish: Azteckee.
- Aztecs / Nahuatl / Tenochtitlan: Cooid bentyn rish Mesoamerica Henndeeagh ec Ollooscoill Minnesota, Duluth
- Aztec history, culture and religion B. Diaz del Castillo, The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico (çhyndaait liorish A.P. Maudsley, 1928, aa-phrentit 1965)
- "Article: "Life in the Provinces of the Aztec Empire"" (PDF).
- "The Aztecs-looking behind the myths" er In Our Time liorish BBC Radio 4, goaill stiagh Alan Knight, Adrian Locke as Elizabeth Graham