I am going on a honeymoon in June and have it narrowed down to these two places. I was wondering which you thouhgt is better and if you have traveled to either of them. Maybe there isn't much ...
My husband and I are planning on going for four days in October and will be staying at the Riu Caribe. We are getting in at 9 pm so , is safety going to be an issue? will we get a hard time getting ...
So my gf's company is taking her entire sales group and their significant others (me included Yay!) on an all expense paid trip to Cancun, Mexico at some Golf & Spa Resort called I think B...
i don't have a passport and i need to fly to Mexico city next week. to my knowledge getting a passport takes like 2 months. is their any letter or temporary authorization i could get to be able ...
archaeological site in northwestern New Mexico, U.S., on the Animas River, just north of the city of Aztec. The national monument was established in 1923 and has an area of 0.5 square mile (1.3 square km).
Gevera Bert
There are lots of them.
* What's left of Tenochtitlan under Mexico City.
* Cholula
* Tula and Teotihuacan (actually Toltec, not Aztec)
* Tenayuca
There are many other sites in Mexico but most of them are Mayan, not Aztec.
Alex Ortiz
the aztec tribe was a nomad bunch of people, that wandered for decades, until they settled on an island in the middle of Texcoco lake. Then they changed their name to 'mexica' and built the capital of Mexico-Tenochtitlan.
The ruins of their city are mostly under the actual Mexico city, but you can visit some of them at downtown (the Zocalo), and Tlatelolco and Tenayuca.
If you're interested, you could visit the Anthopology Museum.
Teotihuacan, Tula and Cholula were built by other tribes.
cosaxteacher
Most of the Aztec ruins are around the Mexico City and Central Mexico area. Google them, I'm sure you'll find thousands of sites.
amin_226
Aztec Ruins National Monument preserves ancestral Pueblo structures in north-western New Mexico, United States, located close to the town of Aztec.
The buildings date back to the 11th to 13th centuries, and the misnomer attributing them to the Aztec civilization can be traced back to early American settlers in the mid-19th century.