flower wars

(noun)

The form of ritual war where warriors from the Triple Alliance fought with enemy Nahua city-states.

Related Terms

  • Nahuat
  • ahuatl
  • Nahua
  • Nahuatl
  • altepetl

Examples of flower wars in the following topics:

  • Aztec Religion

    • Huitzilopochtli – The “left-handed hummingbird” god was the god of war and the sun and also the founder of Tenochtitlan.
    • Mixcoatl – The “cloud serpent” god that was incorporated into Aztec belief and represented war.
    • Veneration of Huitzilopochtli, the personification of the sun and of war, was central to the religious, social, and political practices of the Mexica people.
    • Many times players of the game were captured during the famous Aztec flower wars with neighboring rivals.
    • This depiction of the war and sun god shows him in all of his warrior and ritual garb.
  • The Aztec People

    • One component of this reform was the institution of ritual war (the flower wars) as a way to have trained warriors, and the necessity of constant sacrifices to keep the Sun moving.
  • The Pax Romana

    • By binding together these leading magnates into a single title, he eliminated the prospect of civil war.
    • The Pax Romana was not immediate, despite the end of the civil war because fighting continued in Hispania and in the Alps.
    • Despite continuous wars of imperial expansion on the Empire's frontiers and one year-long civil war over the imperial succession, the Roman world was largely free from large scale conflict for more than two centuries.
    • The Romans regarded peace not as an absence of war, but the rare situation that existed when all opponents had been beaten down and lost the ability to resist.
    • Beneath the women rests a bull and lamb, both sacrificial animals, and flowering plants fill the empty space.
  • The Opium Wars

  • Total War

  • The Russian Civil War

  • The Propaganda War

  • The Korean War

  • The Bush War

  • The Six-Day War

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