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Primary Source Sets
The Columbian Exchange
A fire pot depicting Aztec gods, circa 1325 to 1521.

A fire pot depicting Aztec gods, circa 1325 to 1521.

This fire pot, also called a brazier, was used by the Aztecs to offer burnt offerings to their gods. The figure attached to the front of the brazier is a combination of the Aztec rain god, Tlaloc, and the corn god, Centeōtl. One of the most important deities among the Aztecs, Centeōtl reveals the significance and importance of corn in that society. As a result of the Columbian Exchange, corn also became extremely important in other regions of the world.

Citation Information
“Brazier with deity combining elements of Tlaloc and Maize God,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/5ccfa003638140f8057fb630d99e00e3.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of Yale University Art Gallery via ARTstor.

Tips for Students

For this source, consider:

  • the author's point of view
  • the author's purpose
  • historical context
  • audience

Item 12 of 13 in the Primary Source Set The Columbian Exchange

Previous ItemNext Item
A drawing of Christopher Columbus.
An illustration of Christopher Columbus’s initial meeting with Native Americans.
An excerpt from the 1815 book The History of the Small Pox by James Carrick Moore.
A drawing of a sugar plantation.
An excerpt from The Potato, a 1917 book by Arthur W. Gilbert.
An 1891 photograph of a traditional Native American cow shield.
An excerpt from a 1672 book describing plant and bird discoveries in New England.
An excerpt from an 1890 book on horse training.
An Aztec codex prominently displaying maize, 1830.
An excerpt from a 1994 book of cultural ecology discussing Spanish missions.
A photograph of a sweet potato plant, 1900.
A fire pot depicting Aztec gods, circa 1325 to 1521.
An eighteenth-century illustration of a tomato plant.

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