Casas Nuevas de Moctezuma

Casas Nuevas de Moctezuma

Model of Moctezuma's palace, based on an illustration from the Codex Mendoza (1542).
Alternate name New Houses of Moctezuma
Location Mexico City
History
Material stone, basalt[1]
Cultures Aztec
Site notes
Excavation dates 2008[1]
Archaeologists Elsa Hernández Pons,[1] Colette Taurillo

Casas Nuevas de Moctezuma (English: New Houses of Moctezuma) is the name of a pre-hispanic residential complex composed of five interconnected palaces with large platforms.[1] The complex served as the royal palace and chambers of Tenochtitlan's ninth tlatoani Moctezuma II,[1] who was the Aztec leader during the arrival of Hernán Cortés.

The name casa nuevas ("new houses") was given to distinguish the palaces from anterior Aztec palaces. The stones of these buildings were used for the construction of the National Palace of Mexico.

Moctezuma's Palace from the Codex Mendoza (1542)

The site was uncovered in 2008, during a partial remodelation of the Museo Nacional de las Culturas, along with a series of excavations led by archaeologist Elsa Hernández Pons. The site is several layers deep because the Spanish colonials built Mexico City on top of the once-majestic Aztec buildings, that the Spanish salvaged.

Moctezuma's Casa Denegrida, or "black house", was among the discoveries found. It was a window-less room that was painted black and served as Moctezuma's meditating place.[2]

References

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