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Study Guide: AP World History – Pre-Columbian Americas (Maya, Aztec, Inca)
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AP World History – Pre-Columbian Americas (Maya, Aztec, Inca)

By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.

⏱️ ~5 min read

AP World History – Pre?Columbian Americas (Maya, Aztec, Inca)

AP World History: Pre-Columbian Americas (Maya, Aztec, Inca) – Exam-Ready Study Guide

What This Is

This topic covers the three major Pre-Columbian civilizations of the Americas—Maya, Aztec, and Inca—before European contact (1492). The AP exam tests your ability to compare their political structures, economic systems, cultural achievements, and interactions with the environment. A real-world example: Just as the Roman Empire built roads to connect its territories, the Inca constructed a vast road network (Qhapaq Ñan) to unify their empire, demonstrating how geography shaped state power.


Key Terms & Concepts

  • Maya (c. 2000 BCE–1500 CE):
  • City-states: Independent urban centers (e.g., Tikal, Chichén Itzá) ruled by divine kings (k’uhul ajaw); no centralized empire.
  • Long Count Calendar: A cyclical calendar system tracking time in baktuns (394-year cycles); famously misinterpreted as "2012 doomsday."
  • Glyphic Writing: One of the only fully developed writing systems in the Americas; used for historical records, astronomy, and rituals.
  • Slash-and-burn agriculture: Farming technique where forests were burned to fertilize soil; unsustainable and contributed to decline.

  • Aztec (Mexica, c. 1325–1521 CE):

  • Triple Alliance: Tenochtitlán, Texcoco, and Tlacopan formed a military and tribute-based empire; Tenochtitlán was the dominant power.
  • Tribute System: Conquered regions paid goods (maize, cacao, feathers, jade) instead of taxes; funded Aztec elite and military.
  • Chinampas: Floating gardens built on Lake Texcoco; allowed intensive agriculture in a swampy environment.
  • Human Sacrifice: Religious practice to appease gods (e.g., Huitzilopochtli); often used war captives from the Flower Wars.

  • Inca (c. 1400–1533 CE):

  • Sapa Inca: Divine emperor who ruled as a god-king; claimed descent from Inti (sun god).
  • Mit’a System: Labor tax where subjects worked on state projects (roads, terraces, temples) in exchange for food and protection.
  • Quipu: Knotted strings used for record-keeping (census, tribute, history); no formal writing system.
  • Vertical Archipelago: Economic adaptation to Andes mountains; colonies at different elevations grew diverse crops (maize, potatoes, coca).

  • Comparative Themes:

  • Urban Planning: Maya (pyramids), Aztec (Tenochtitlán’s canals), Inca (Cuzco’s stone masonry).
  • Religion: All polytheistic, but Aztecs had more human sacrifice; Inca emphasized ancestor worship.
  • Decline: Maya (environmental collapse, warfare), Aztec (Spanish conquest + indigenous allies), Inca (civil war + Spanish conquest).

Step-by-Step: How to Analyze a Pre-Columbian Document (DBQ/LEQ)

  1. Identify the Source – Is it a Maya glyph, Aztec tribute list, or Inca quipu? Who created it, and for what purpose?
  2. Contextualize – When was it made? (e.g., Aztec codices were often created after Spanish conquest to preserve history).
  3. Compare to Other Civilizations – How does this document reflect political, economic, or cultural traits? (e.g., Aztec tribute lists show centralized control, while Maya stelae show city-state independence).
  4. Connect to Broader Themes – How does this document show state-building, environmental adaptation, or social hierarchy?
  5. Evaluate Limitations – Is the source biased? (e.g., Spanish accounts often exaggerated Aztec sacrifices to justify conquest).

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Assuming the Maya "disappeared."
  • Correction: The classic Maya civilization collapsed (c. 900 CE), but post-classic Maya (e.g., Chichén Itzá) thrived until Spanish arrival. Why? Overpopulation, drought, and warfare weakened city-states, but Maya people still exist today.

  • Mistake: Thinking the Inca had a "primitive" economy because they lacked money.

  • Correction: The Inca used redistributive economics (state-controlled storage houses) and labor (mit’a) instead of currency. Why? Their system was highly efficient for their mountainous terrain.

  • Mistake: Confusing Aztec and Inca human sacrifice.

  • Correction: Aztecs practiced large-scale human sacrifice (thousands per year) for religious reasons. Inca sacrificed animals and children (Capacocha) in smaller, ritualistic ceremonies. Why? Aztec religion emphasized blood debt to the gods; Inca focused on ancestor worship.

  • Mistake: Overlooking the role of indigenous allies in Spanish conquest.

  • Correction: Cortés defeated the Aztecs with Tlaxcalan warriors; Pizarro exploited Inca civil war (Atahualpa vs. Huáscar). Why? Spanish couldn’t conquer alone—they relied on local rivalries.

AP Exam Insights

  • Multiple-Choice Traps:
  • Maya vs. Aztec Writing: Maya had full writing (glyphs), while Aztecs used pictographs (simpler).
  • Inca Roads vs. Roman Roads: Both were state-controlled, but Inca roads were steeper and narrower (adapted to mountains).
  • Tribute vs. Taxes: Aztec tribute was goods, while Inca mit’a was labor.

  • FRQ Likely Questions:

  • DBQ: "Using the documents, compare how the Maya, Aztec, and Inca adapted to their environments."
  • LEQ: "Evaluate the extent to which the political structures of the Aztec and Inca empires were similar."
  • SAQ: "Identify one economic system used by the Maya and one used by the Inca, and explain how each reflected their environment."

  • Tricky Distinction:

  • Centralized vs. Decentralized: Aztec and Inca had centralized empires, while Maya were decentralized city-states.

Quick Check Questions

  1. Which of the following best describes the political structure of the Maya civilization? a) A centralized empire ruled by a single emperor b) Independent city-states with divine kings c) A confederation of tribes with elected leaders d) A theocracy controlled by priest-kings Answer: B – The Maya were city-states (e.g., Tikal, Palenque) ruled by divine kings (k’uhul ajaw).

  2. The Aztec practice of human sacrifice was primarily intended to: a) Punish criminals and rebels b) Feed the population during famines c) Appease the gods and maintain cosmic order d) Demonstrate military power to neighboring states Answer: C – Aztec sacrifices (e.g., to Huitzilopochtli) were religious rituals to prevent disasters.

  3. Short FRQ: "Identify one similarity and one difference between the Aztec and Inca economic systems."

  4. Similarity: Both relied on tribute/labor systems (Aztec: goods; Inca: mit’a).
  5. Difference: Aztecs used marketplaces (Tlatelolco), while Inca had state-controlled redistribution.

Last-Minute Cram Sheet

  1. Maya: City-states, glyphs, Long Count calendar, slash-and-burn farming. Not an empire!
  2. Aztec: Triple Alliance, Tenochtitlán, chinampas, human sacrifice, tribute system.
  3. Inca: Sapa Inca, mit’a, quipu, vertical archipelago, Cuzco, no writing.
  4. Decline: Maya (environmental collapse), Aztec (Spanish + Tlaxcalans), Inca (civil war + Spanish).
  5. Key Dates: Maya Classic (250–900 CE), Aztec (1325–1521), Inca (1400–1533).
  6. Environmental Adaptations: Maya (raised fields), Aztec (chinampas), Inca (terraces).
  7. Religion: All polytheistic; Aztec = most human sacrifice.
  8. Spanish Conquest: Cortés (Aztec, 1521), Pizarro (Inca, 1533).
  9. Don’t say "Inca had no technology"—they had advanced stone masonry, roads, and surgery.
  10. Aztec "empire" was a tribute system, not direct control like Inca.