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Mexico unearths mass grave
from Spanish conquest
Archeologists have found a
mass grave in Mexico City with four dozen human skeletons laid out in neat
lines that could reveal clues about the 16th century Spanish conquest that
killed millions.
The investigators found
the 49 skeletons, all lying face up with their arms crossed, as they
searched for a palace complex in the Tlatelolco area, once a major religious
and political center for the ancient Aztec elite and now a district in the
north of the sprawling Mexican capital.
"We were completely taken
by surprise. We didn't expect to find this massive funeral complex,"
Salvador Guilliem, in charge of the site for the government's archeology
institute, said when the discovery was announced on Tuesday.
Historians think the
Aztecs built Tlatelolco in the early 1300s along with the nearby city of
Tenochtitlan, the capital of the Aztec empire and now the heart of Mexico
City, which the Spanish founded after they conquered the Aztecs in 1521.
It is likely the
indigenous people buried in the grave died in battle against the invading
Spanish or fell victim to diseases that wiped out large swaths of the native
population in 1545 and 1576, Guilliem said.
Many Aztec fighters died
resisting the Spanish invasion and millions also perished during a four-year
epidemic of hemorrhagic fever that began in 1545, killing 80 percent of
indigenous Mexicans.
The 13-by-32-foot
(four-by-10-meter) burial site differs from other conquest-era graves
because of the reverential way the bodies were buried, following Christian
customs of the time, unlike thousands of contemporary graves at other Aztec
cities where bodies were thrown in at random.
"It is a mass grave, but
they were very carefully buried," Guilliem said.
The burials were likely
ordered by Spanish overlords but carried out by Aztecs since most of the
artifacts found around the bodies, such as copper necklaces and bone
buttons, are from pre-Hispanic cultures, he said.
The skeletons of two
children, a teenager, and an old person wearing a ring that could signify
higher status, were found along with 45 young adults in the tomb.
The scientists expect to
find at least 50 more bodies as excavations continue at the massive
Tlatelolco complex, home to 67 ancient structures, including massive
pyramids.
"The discovery is filling
us with more questions than answers at this point," Guilliem said.
(Writing by Mica
Rosenberg; Editing by Eric Walsh)
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