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HOUSES OF THE AZTECS OR ANCIENT MEXICANS. 
The first accounts of the pueblo of Mexico created a powerful sensa- 
tion in Europe. In the West India Islands the Spanish discoverers found 
small Indian tribes under the government of chiefs; but on the continent, 
in the Valley of Mexico, they found a confederacy of three Indian tribes 
under a more advanced but similar government. In the midst of the valley 
was a large pueblo, the largest in America, surrounded with water, approached 
by causeways; in fine, a water-girt fortress impregnable to Indian assault. 
This pueblo presented to the Spanish adventurers the extraordinary spectacle 
of an Indian society lying two ethnical periods back of European society, 
but with a government and plan of life at once intelligent, orderly, and 
complete There was aroused an insatiable curiosity for additional particu- 
lars, which has continued for three centuries, and which has called into 
existence a larger number of works than were ever before written upon any 
people of the same number and of the same importance 
The Spanish adventurers who captured the pueblo of Mexico saw a 
king in Montezuma, lords in Aztee chiefs, and a palace in the large joint- 
tenement house occupied, Indian fashion, by Montezuma and his fellow- 
householders. It was, perhaps, an unavoidable self-deception at the time, 
because they knew nothing of the Aztec social system. Unfortunately it 
inaugurated American aboriginal history upon a misconception of Indian 
life which has remained substantially unquestioned until recently. The 
first eye-witnesses gave the keynote to this history by introducing Monte- 
zuma as a king, occupying a palace of great extent crowded with retainers, 
and situated in the midst of a grand and populous city, over which, and 
much beside, he was reputed master. But king and kingdom were in time 
found too common to express all the glory and splendor the imagination was 
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