Montezuma$50257$ - translation to Αγγλικά
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Montezuma$50257$ - translation to Αγγλικά

SPECIES OF PLANT
Montezuma Pine; Montezuma pine
  • Tree
  • Shoot

Montezuma      
n. Montezuma (De laatste heerser over de Atzeken in Mexico)
Montezuma II         
  • Map showing the expansion of the Aztec Empire through conquest. The conquests of Moctezuma II are marked by the colour green (based on the maps by Ross Hassig in ''Aztec Warfare'').
  • Baptism of Ixtlilxochitl II, by José Vivar y Valderrama
  • Cacamatzin as ''tlatoani'' of Texcoco. Florentine Codex
  • Colonial copy of a portrait of Hernán Cortés dated to the year 1525.
  • War with Cuatzontlan. Durán Codex
  • Moctezuma's coronation according to the [[Durán Codex]]
  • New-Spanish]] artists Juan González and Miguel González
  • 5 suns]] of the Aztec are indicated. They are significant in their timeline of Aztec civilization. Each sun represents the belief of the Aztec people that the world has gone through 5 distinct cycles of creation and destruction. One should read the stone starting with the first sun in the bottom right and moving counterclockwise (following the blue arrows in the annotation). The 5th sun in the center of the stone represents the present era of the Aztec.  
  • Folios 30 to 31 (right to left) of [[Codex Azoyú 1]] depicting the campaigns launched by Moctezuma II in Tlapanec lands
  • Coat of arms of the Dukes de Moctezuma de Tultengo (Descendientes del Emperador Mexica Moctezuma II)
  • ''Tequihua'' spies gathering information on an enemy city during the night. Codex Mendoza
  • Moctezuma's ancestry as depicted in a 1566 manuscript
  • Celebrations during Moctezuma's coronation according to the Durán Codex
  • Francisco Javier Girón y Ezpeleta Duque de Ahumada
  • The massacre of Mexica merchants in Quetzaltepec. Durán Codex
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  • Moctezuma II receiving the Huexotzinca embassy requesting for aid against the Tlaxcalans. Durán Codex
  • Moctezuma II in the ''[[Codex Mendoza]]''
  • Moctezuma's Palace from the ''[[Codex Mendoza]]'' (1542)
  • Montezuma II
  • Moctezuma II, from ''Les vrais pourtraits et vies des hommes illustres'', Paris 1584
  • Nezahualpilli's funeral, according to the Durán Codex
  • Nezahualpilli (right) telling Moctezuma about the omens warning the destruction of the empire, according to the Durán Codex
  • Cuauhtémoc borough]]
  • Then-prince Moctezuma the Younger arriving to the rescue of the merchants who were put under siege during the conquest of Ayotlan, according to the [[Florentine Codex]]. The merchants are seen talking to Moctezuma, informing him about the end of the war
  • Anonymous portrait of Moctezuma II, 17th century.
  • Location of Moctezuma's palace (left) south of the central plaza of Tenochtitlan and the ''Totocalli'' (down) next to it in a map likely made by Hernán Cortés
  • Stone of the Five Suns, a stone with inscriptions in [[Nahuatl writing]] depicting the date 15 July 1503 in the Aztec calendar. Some historians believe this to be the date in which Moctezuma was crowned
  • Genealogy of Tecuichpoch
  • Campaigns launched by the Mexica over the Tlapanec Kingdom of Tlachinollan, including the conquest of Tototepec by Moctezuma II. The map doesn't show his campaigns against Xipetepec, Acocozpan, Tetenanco and Atlitepec
  • Death and cremation of Moctezuma as depicted in the [[Florentine Codex]], Book 12
  • The ''Totocalli'' as depicted in the Florentine Codex
  • Moctezuma captured and imprisoned by Cortés
  • Moctezuma's military victories listed in [[Codex Mendoza]]
9TH TLATOANI OF TENOCHTITLAN AND RULER OF THE AZTEC TRIPLE ALLIANCE (1466-1520)
Montezuma II; Moctezuma Xocoyotzin; Motecuhzoma II; Motecuhzoma Xocoyotzin; Muteczuma II; Muteczuma Rex
(1466-1520) laatste Azteekse heerser van Mexico voor de Spaanse invasie geleid door Hernando Cortez in 1520

Βικιπαίδεια

Pinus montezumae

Pinus montezumae, known as the Montezuma pine, is a species of conifer in the family Pinaceae.

It is native to Mexico and Central America, where it is known as ocote. The tree grows about 35 m high and 80 cm in diameter; occasionally it may reach a height of 40 m and diameter of 1 m. It has a round crown. The bark is dark brown-grayish. It is the only pine species (in the variety rudis) which has seven needles in each fascicle.

It is found from the Mexican states of Nuevo León (25° N. Lat.) and Jalisco (22° n.l.) to the north and to Nicaragua (15° N. Lat.) to the south. It occurs on both mountain ranges of the Sierra Madre Oriental and Sierra Madre Occidental. It grows at altitudes from 2000–3200 m above sea level. It is found in areas between 800–1000 mm rainfall per year. In most of the tree's habitat, rain falls mostly in summer, but in the state of Veracruz, precipitations are spread year round and the climate is very wet. However, specimens from the state of Jalisco grow in semi-arid places. It occurs in warm temperate to cool climates (18 °C to 10 °C). At the highest altitudes of its distribution it usually receives snow in the winter.

Ocote wood is yellowish-brown white, with the heartwood being light brown, is hard, heavy and used for construction. It is appreciated for its resin. The resin is so flammable that a cut branch will burn as a torch emitting black smoke when ignited; for this reason, it is very common in Mexico to use ocote wood as a fire starter for campfires and barbecues. Growth is slow in the first three or six years, after this stage it is a fast-growing tree. The cities of Ocotlán in Jalisco Mexico and Ocotal in Nicaragua derive their names from this tree. It is planted in plantages in South Africa and Queensland, Australia at mid altitudes; in Kenya, Malawi, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Bolivia at high altitudes. Trees planted in New Zealand and New South Wales, Australia near sea level have done very well.