Acknowledgments
Mexica Royal Family Tree
Introduction
Chapter 1: Genghis Khan on Foot
Chapter 2: People of the Valley
Chapter 3: The City on the Lake
Chapter 4: Strangers to Us People Here
Chapter 5: A War to End All Wars
Chapter 6: Early Days
Chapter 7: Crisis: The Indians Talk Back
Chapter 8: The Grandchildren
Epilogue
Notes
Annotated Bibliography
Index
Camilla Townsend is Distinguished Professor of History at Rutgers
University. She is the author of numerous books, including
Malintzin's Choices: An Indian Woman in the Conquest of Mexico,
Pocahontas and the Powhatan Dilemma, and The Annals of Native
America: How the Nahuas of Colonial Mexico Kept Their History Alive
(OUP, 2016), which won multiple prizes, among them The Albert J.
Beveridge Award awarded by the American Historical
Association.
"A revolutionary history." -- Ben Ehrenreich, The Guardian
"Camilla Townsend's incredibly compact and helpful Fifth Sun will
serve equally well professional historians, upper-division
undergraduate and graduate students, and the general public." --
Andrae Marak, World History Connected
"This is the best book on the Aztecs yet written, full stop....The
value of Fifth Sun lies in how it rescues Aztecs and Nahuas from
centuries of colonialist caricature and renders them human again -
fully human, with flaws, people capable of brutal violence but also
of deep love." -- History Today
"This wonderfully fresh, readable new work invites you to
reconsider everything you think you knew about them." -- Jonathan
Gordon, All About History
"Spanning the thirteenth to the seventeenth centuries, this book
recreates key moments in the Mexica past as the Mexica themselves
experienced and remembered them. We meet real men and women whose
actions changed the course of history. We see time as the Mexica
did, a sequence of years extending unbroken from mythic origins to
intrepid migration to imperial splendor to the challenges of living
with the Spanish colonial presence. Never before has the Aztecs'
own
epic story been so vividly and engagingly recounted for readers of
English." -- Louise M. Burkhart, author of Aztecs on Stage:
Religious Theater in Colonial Mexico
"From the initial migration southward, to the second generation
after the conquest, Fifth Sun is a masterful account of the history
of the Aztecs in their own words. A whole world arises from the
pages: vivid, complex, and much closer to us than expected.
Townsend's understanding of the indigenous annals is unmatched, and
her book reads like a novel. You simply cannot put it down." --
Caterina Pizzigoni, author of The Life Within: Local Indigenous
Society in Mexico's Toluca Valley, 1650-1800
"Never before has the political history of the Aztecs, who knew
themselves as the Mexica, been told with such sweeping élan.
Townsend brings keen insight into the motivations of the players,
be they seasoned warriors, shackled slaves, or calculating
concubines. Her gripping narrative, underscoring Aztec tenacity and
endurance before and beyond the Spanish conquest, is sure to
captivate readers." -- Barbara Mundy, author of The Death of
Aztec
Tenochtitlan, the Life of Mexico City
"Camilla Townsend has an unusually profound understanding of Nahua
culture, before and during the colonial period. She also has a rare
set of research, linguistic, and writing skills. That combination
of expertise and talent make her uniquely positioned to offer us a
new book on the Aztecs, one that manages to be-despite the plethora
of existing studies-both original and mandatory reading. This is a
page-turner that is nonetheless packed with new insights and
interpretations." -- Matthew Restall, author of When Montezuma Met
Cortés: The True Story of the Meeting That Changed History
"A compelling drama... After centuries of the end of the Aztec
empire being related through a Spanish lens, Fifth Sun and its use
of Mexica firsthand accounts and perspectives is a needed
corrective. It helps fill in a story that's been one-sided for far
too long."
--Foreword Reviews, Starred Review
"Historian Camilla Townsend continues her groundbreaking work in
the field in the marvelous Fifth Sun: A New History of the Aztecs,
a dramatic and accessible narrative that tells the story as the
Nahuas saw it."--BookPage, Starred Review
"A landmark masterpiece, powerful in its precision and subtle in
its weaving of tragedy and glory."--Foreign Affairs
"Ms. Townsend has combed the extraordinary accounts of the early
colonial era written by indigenous historians to paint a far more
complex picture of persistence by the Aztecs and their descendants.
It is a vivid account of what Aztec writers and chroniclers had to
say about their own history and of a world decimated through
constant change and loss... Fifth Sun provides essential reading on
the complex cultural fabric of Mexico, helping to rescue a
deep and layered history that might otherwise have fallen into
oblivion."--Wall Street Journal
"This wonderfully fresh, readable new work invites you to
reconsider everything you think you knew about them."--All About
History
"Vivid narratives."--Library Journal
"This is the best book on the Aztecs yet written, full stop... The
value of Fifth Sun lies in how it rescues Aztecs and Nahuas from
centuries of colonialist caricature and renders them human again -
fully human, with flaws, people capable of brutal violence but also
of deep love."--History Today
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