Oniro History Podcast - Historical Pod for Sleep

Oniro History

History for Sleep: Relaxing and chill Historical ASMR Podcast episodes on Spotify! In this History Podcast We'll cover the wonders and the most important events in a chill History Podcast way for chlling, relaxing and sleep to! Oniro History is, in fact, just this: a chill way to listen to a History Podcast without complications and "school" type learning. Here History podcast just means relaxing and sleep to your favourite Historical Events! A new History Podcast episode out at least weekly. Have a History Podcast episode to recommend? Write in the Comments!

  1. History Podcast - The History of Aztec Empire | Chill History Podcast for Sleep

    May 27

    History Podcast - The History of Aztec Empire | Chill History Podcast for Sleep

    History for Sleep - The History of Aztec Empire | Chill History Podcast for Sleep. The Aztec Empire was not supposed to exist. The people who built it — the Mexica — arrived in the Valley of Mexico in the early 13th century as despised outsiders, a wandering semi-nomadic group from a possibly mythical northern homeland called Aztlan, unwanted by every established city-state in the region, driven from settlement after settlement until they found themselves on a swampy, unpromising island in the middle of Lake Texcoco that nobody else wanted. Within two centuries they had built the largest empire in Mesoamerican history. The speed and totality of that transformation is the first thing to understand, because it shapes everything that followed — the aggression, the ideology, the particular flavor of imperial terror they deployed so effectively.The founding of Tenochtitlan in 1325 CE is where the story anchors. The Mexica claimed their patron deity Huitzilopochtli had promised them a sign — an eagle perched on a cactus, devouring a serpent — to mark the location of their destined city. They found the sign on the island, which is either a genuine founding vision or a retroactive legitimizing myth constructed after the fact, and possibly both simultaneously. What is certain is that Tenochtitlan, built on that island and expanded over generations through the construction of artificial land extensions called chinampas, became one of the great urban achievements of the pre-Columbian world. By the time the Spanish arrived in 1519, it was home to somewhere between 200,000 and 300,000 people — larger than any contemporary European city, cleaner than most, supplied by a sophisticated system of aqueducts, causeways, and market networks that genuinely astonished the Spanish soldiers who first walked into it.The empire itself — more accurately described as the Triple Alliance, a political confederation between Tenochtitlan, Texcoco, and Tlacopan — was assembled primarily during the 15th century through a combination of military conquest, strategic marriage, diplomatic coercion, and calculated terror. The Mexica were not unique in Mesoamerica for practicing warfare or human sacrifice — these were regional traditions with deep roots — but they industrialized both in ways that distinguished them qualitatively from their predecessors and neighbors. The Flower Wars — ritualized conflicts fought specifically to capture rather than kill enemies for sacrificial purposes — were simultaneously a religious institution, a military training mechanism, and a political tool for maintaining pressure on neighboring states without the expense of full conquest. History Podcast for History Lovers - Historical Free Podcast on Spotify.History for Sleep Historical Podcast.

    2h 39m

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History for Sleep: Relaxing and chill Historical ASMR Podcast episodes on Spotify! In this History Podcast We'll cover the wonders and the most important events in a chill History Podcast way for chlling, relaxing and sleep to! Oniro History is, in fact, just this: a chill way to listen to a History Podcast without complications and "school" type learning. Here History podcast just means relaxing and sleep to your favourite Historical Events! A new History Podcast episode out at least weekly. Have a History Podcast episode to recommend? Write in the Comments!