PhotosBiographyFacebookTwitter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tariácuri
Cazonci of the Purépecha Empire
Reignca. 1350–1390
PredecessorPauacume II
Successor Hiquingaje
Bornbefore 1300
Michoacán, Mexico
Died c. 1350 (1351)
Pátzcuaro, Mexico
Issue Hiquingaje
FatherPauacume II

Tariácuri (fl. ca. 1350–1390) was a culture hero of the Purépecha people and one of the foremost rulers of the Purépecha Empire. Traditionally hailed as the state's founder, Tariácuri is credited with growing the Purépecha Empire from an individual city-state to the dominant power of the region.

Biography

Tariácuri (meaning "strong wind" [1]) was born into the uacúsecha clan, one of the most powerful families of the Lake Pátzcuaro basin, in the fourteenth century CE. [2] His father and predecessor, Pauacume II, ruled as the lord of Pátzcuaro.

Tariácuri's career originated after a prophetic dream in which the sun god Curicaueri, the patron deity of the uacúsecha, sent him forth to create and expand a unified Purépecha state. [2] [3] To put this ambition into practice, he first joined forces with allied cities, including Urichu, Erongarícuaro, Pechátaro, [2] and Jarácuaro. [4] He then began expanding the state's territory, first to the southwest and then throughout the entire Pátzcuaro basin. [2] Tariácuri's military record was not perfectly successful – at one point, "enemies from Curinguaro" are described as attacking his homeland and forcing his nephews into flight – but this seems to have been a temporary setback, after which Tariácuri managed to resume his program of expansion. [5]

After Tariácuri's death, his domain was divided among several of his descendants: his son Hiquingaje received rulership of Pátzcuaro, while Tariácuri's nephews Tangaxoan and Hiripan were granted Tzintzuntzan and Ihuatzio respectively. [1] [4] They would follow Tariácuri's pattern, however, by maintaining an alliance and continuing efforts to expand the Purépecha state.

References

  1. ^ a b Amerlinck, Teodoro. "The Origins of the Mexican Flag" (PDF). Flag Institute. Retrieved 2019-04-02.
  2. ^ a b c d Evans, Susan Toby; Webster, David L. (2000). Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 700. ISBN  978-0415873994.
  3. ^ Pollard, Helen Perlstein (2016). "Ruling 'Purépecha Chichimeca' in a Tarascan World". In Kurnick, Sarah; Baron, Joanne (eds.). Political Strategies in Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica. University Press of Colorado. pp. 228–29. JSTOR  j.ctt1b7x60z.13.
  4. ^ a b Roth-Seneff, Andrew; Kemper, Robert V.; Adkins, Julie (2016). From Tribute to Communal Sovereignty: The Tarascan and Caxcan Territories in Transition. University of Arizona Press. p. 116. ISBN  978-0816535491.
  5. ^ Roth-Seneff et al., 123–24.
Preceded by
Pauacume II
Cazonci of the Purépecha Empire
ca. 1350
Succeeded by