Tula - Mexico City, Central Mexico and Gulf Coast, Mexico
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions (a TripAdvisor™ company)
Tula Mexico City
The ruins of an ancient city that once served as the capital of the Toltecs, Mexico's most powerful people before the rise of the Aztecs.
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Photos from:
- Mexico City, Central Mexico and Gulf Coast, Mexico
Photos in this video:
- Tula Ruins by Kimandjohn from a blog titled Mexico City
Forward Travels Episode 25 - The Ruins of Teotihuacan
The ruins of Teotihucan close to Mexico City. This is an ancient Aztec city know for the Pyramid of the Sun, Pyramid of the Moon, and the Avenue of the Dead.
Tlatelolco Market: Anthropology Museum Mexico City
Glimpses of Mexico: View of the Tlatelolco Market as depicted within the Hall of Mexicas inside the Anthropology Museum of Mexico City, 20 May, 2012.
Palacio de Bellas Artes - Mexico City, Central Mexico and Gulf Coast, Mexico
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions
Palacio De Bellas Artes Mexico City
This historic white marble building serves as both the city's top performance hall and an art museum.
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Travel blogs from Palacio de Bellas Artes:
- At 8 am I stepped outside to do a short run on the quiet streets around Parque Alameda and Palacio de Bellas Artes, past the overflowing congregation attending a Mass at San Hipolito (what saint is that?), back to the Sheraton
- we went on 'Marky's Sightseeing Tour', a free service kindly operated by a local traveller, taking in sights from the Palacio de Bellas Artes (yet more Diego Rivera murals), to El Torre Latinoamerica (the highest building in Mexico City, with great views
- However the Palacio de Bellas Artes was pretty, and there were some guys dressed up as Aztecs in the zocalo who performed an ancient indigenous soul
- Needless to say, the Cathedral, Palacio Nacional (with the magnificent three wall mural by Diego Riviera), Templo Mayor, Palacio de Bellas Artes and the Palacio Postal are the major attractions
- También tenemos diferentes excursiones, esta semana hay una excursión al Ballet Foklórico en el Palacio de Bellas Artes en la Ciudad de México
- Even without a guide book, a look at the map of Mexico City makes it fairly obvious that the Palacio de Bellas Artes located west of the Zocalo would make for an interesting destination
- I went to the Palacio de Bellas Artes (a very fine huge white marble building with some great murals inside), a museum of the artist Diego Rivera who
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Photos from:
- Mexico City, Central Mexico and Gulf Coast, Mexico
Photos in this video:
- Palacio de Bellas Artes from Casa de Correos by Josie_ty from a blog titled Mexico City -architecture past and present
- Alameda Central - Palacio de Bellas Artes by Greensintransit from a blog titled Mexico City (continued)
- The amazing Palacio de Bellas Artes by Josie_ty from a blog titled Mexico City -architecture past and present
- Palacio de Bellas Artes façade by Josie_ty from a blog titled Mexico City -architecture past and present
- Palacio de Bellas Artes nah by Flitterjahr from a blog titled Zurueck in Mexiko Stadt
- Im Palacio de Bellas Artes by Flitterjahr from a blog titled Zurueck in Mexiko Stadt
- El Palacio de Bellas Artes by Otherguru from a blog titled Mexico vue de près
- Palacio de Bellas Artes 1 by Tiara from a blog titled Fokloric Ballet (Ballet Foklórico)
- Palacio de Bellas Artes by Sam.callender from a blog titled Mexico is way better than Europe
Tlatelolco - Mexico City, Central Mexico and Gulf Coast, Mexico
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions (a TripAdvisor™ company)
Tlatelolco Mexico City
This site was once a major Indian city that rivaled and eventually was conquered by the Aztec empire.
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Travel blogs from Tlatelolco:
- ... Da aber irgendwo 6 Leute vergessen wurden, gab's dann einen laengeren Stop bei Tlatelolco (bzw ...
- ... If I'm honest the ruins of Tlatelolco which take up much of the ...
Read these blogs and more at:
Photos from:
- Mexico City, Central Mexico and Gulf Coast, Mexico
Photos in this video:
- Tlatelolco 10 by Erriuc from a blog titled Mexico City - Aztecs World
- Bh Tlatelolco by Cat2222 from a blog titled Mexico City
- Tlatelolco 2 by Erriuc from a blog titled Mexico City - Aztecs World
- Tlatelolco 9 by Erriuc from a blog titled Mexico City - Aztecs World
- Tlatelolco 5 by Erriuc from a blog titled Mexico City - Aztecs World
- Tlatelolco 7 by Erriuc from a blog titled Mexico City - Aztecs World
- Tlatelolco 8 by Erriuc from a blog titled Mexico City - Aztecs World
- Tlatelolco 6 by Erriuc from a blog titled Mexico City - Aztecs World
- Tlatelolco 1 by Erriuc from a blog titled Mexico City - Aztecs World
- Tlatelolco 4 by Erriuc from a blog titled Mexico City - Aztecs World
- Tlatelolco 3 by Erriuc from a blog titled Mexico City - Aztecs World
- Tlatelolco 8 by Patrick_viajero from a blog titled Plazas, Churches, and Pyramids
- Tlatelolco 7 by Patrick_viajero from a blog titled Plazas, Churches, and Pyramids
- Tlatelolco by Alezg from a blog titled Mexiko-Stadt - Modernes und Antikes
- Tlatelolco by Vermaakjeanne from a blog titled Tlatelolco, Basilica de Guadalupe & Teotihuacan
Teotihuacan
The impressive 1 BC city of Teotihuacan, outside of Mexico City. Believed to have falled in 700-800 AD, it peaked with more than 200.000 inhabitants, making it the largest city of the world at that time. This clip is filmed from the moon-pyramide. See more on worldonbike.com
Castillo de Chapultepec - Mexico City, Central Mexico and Gulf Coast, Mexico
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions
Castillo De Chapultepec Mexico City
This 18th-century palace, known for its impressive gardens, served as the home of the Mexican President until 1939 and now houses the famous Museo Nacional de Historia.
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Travel blogs from Castillo de Chapultepec:
- Had a tequila sunrise though And we also went to see the castillo de chapultepec, or castle of Chapultepec, in the city, theres big gardens and a zoo, and museums
- We visited the Castillo de Chapultepec which a catle at the top of a hill in the park where the Emperor Maximillian and his wife
- ; First she took us to the Jardin Botanico and explained the many uses of Cacti, then explained a little bit about the Castillo de Chapultepec and the Monumento a Los Ninos Heros, then we went to watch the ´Fliers´ in Chapultepec Park, four Totonac men
- We then visited the ' Castillo de Chapultepec ' which is a grand castle that sits on top of the hill housing the 'Museo Nacional de Historia',
- In lieu of my photos I urge you to go a google image search on ' castillo de chapultepec '
- Nosotros nos centramos en el castillo de Chapultepec, dejando el museo de Antropología para el día siguiente
- on saturday, we went to el castillo de chapultepec in a park equivalent to central parc
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Photos from:
- Mexico City, Central Mexico and Gulf Coast, Mexico
Photos in this video:
- 'Castillo de Chapultepec & the Museo Nacional by Nikandads2008 from a blog titled Destination 13 - MEXICO...... & backpacking again!
- Mural @ Castillo de Chapultepec by Camposgalan from a blog titled DF, day 1
- View from Castillo de Chapultepec by Solskjaer20 from a blog titled Final days in Mexico City
- Castillo de Chapultepec by Camposgalan from a blog titled DF, day 1
Teotihuacan and the Making of a World City
2018 Gordon R. Willey Lecture and Reception
Deborah L. Nichols, William J. Bryant 1925 Professor of Anthropology; Chair, Latin America, Latino, and Caribbean Studies, Department of Anthropology, Dartmouth College
In the first century CE, Teotihuacan became the capital of the area known today as Central Mexico. The city grew to include 100,000 people, drawing immigrants from Western Mexico, the Valley of Oaxaca, Veracruz, and the Maya region. Deborah Nichols will discuss how Teotihuacan became the largest and most influential city in Mexico and Central America; how it maintained this position for 500 years through diplomacy, pilgrimages, military incursions, and commerce; why modern scholars consider it a “world city”; and what challenges exist in advancing an understanding of its legacy.
Recorded 3/28/18
Olmec Earth Energies at La Venta, Mexico's Oldest Pyramid
Explore Megalithic Mexico, Mayan pyramids and the Olmec culture with Hugh Newman and Jj Ainsworth in February 2019. Details here: Subscribe here: - Hugh Newman explores La Venta at the centre of the Olmec world on the Gulf Coast of Mexico. They existed before the Maya, created the famous long-count calendar, were megalithic master stonemasons, and their origin is shrouded in mystery, with debates about whether they were from Africa or Polynesia. Elongated skulls have been found nearby and many of the statues and figurines show evidence of cranial deformation. Hugh discovers earth energies that were originally detected scientifically by John Burke when researching his book 'Seed of Knowledge, Stone of Plenty', and finds serpent symbolism that suggests Quetzalcoatl might have been here collaborating with the first great civilization of Central America.
CLICK HERE and to join Megalithomania and Andrew Collins in 2015 on tours to Göbekli Tepe in Turkey, Angkor Wat for the Spring Equinox, and Peru in June.
Plus the Megalithomania Conference in Glastonbury UK is on May 9th 2015.
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Filmed, Produced, and Directed by Hugh Newman. Copyright Hugh Newman/Megalithomania 2014/2015. All Rights Reserved.
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Archaeologists unearth Aztec-era bones in Mexico City
(14 Jul 2012) STORYLINE
Archaeologists in Mexico City have unearthed the skeletons of 15 people, most of them children believed to be from travelling merchant families of Aztec times.
Alejandra Jasso Pena, who is the archaeologist in charge of site, said on Friday that many of the remains came with offerings of pottery so she believes they were part of a sacrifice.
Pena said they also found ceramic flutes, bowls, incense burners and the remains of a dog that was sacrificed to accompany a child in the afterlife, along with other artifacts of a pre-Colombian civilisation.
She added that the skeletons found were probably buried anywhere between 800 and 900 years ago.
Ancient people linked the belief of life and death so they lived where they also buried their dead, in this case it was at the central neighbourhood. So besides being a public place used for rituals and ceremonies it was dedicated as a funeral site, she added.
The excavations followed theories that the site was an important ceremonial centre for the Tepanec tribe between 1200 and 1300AD. The influential traders living there were called Pochtecas.
The opportunity came to investigate when the National Institute of Anthropology and History asked to excavate the site after discovering that construction was about to start on five buildings in the capital's Azcapotzalco neighbourhood.
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Secret Outpost of the Olmecs - Chalcatzingo in Ancient Mexico
An exploration of a relatively unknown, but very impressive Olmec pyramid site south of Mexico City in the state of Morelos. It dates from at least 1500 BC and was an outpost of the powerful Olmec culture who thrived around the area of the Gulf Coast. It has numerous pyramids, a ball court and ancient, sophisticated relief carvings suggesting it was used as a shamanic site. It was later adopted by the Teotihuacan culture who built the pyramids, and strange lights and possibly UFOs were reported there two years ago. The video also features an investigation of the private onsite museum that has rare artifacts and skeletons, and a visit to the National Museum in Mexico City where further pieces are on display. Includes exclusive aerial footage and rare engravings of the relief carvings.
Copyright Megalithomania 2018. All Rights Reserved.
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Xochimilco - Mexico City, Central Mexico and Gulf Coast, Mexico
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions (a TripAdvisor™ company)
Xochimilco Mexico City
Built on the same site as a major pre-Columbian city, Xochimilco is famous for its floating gardens and is a popular weekend destination among tourists who visit in boats.
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Travel blogs from Xochimilco:
- ... God that must make them dizzy The next day, we take a metro ride, to the south of Mexico city, and to an area called Xochimilco, a world heritage site, famous for it's c****s and colouful boats ...
- ... ' établi pour la ville de Mexico, on prévoyait resté 2 jours et aller précisément à Xochimilco et au site maya de Teotihuacan Arrivée à Mexico à 22h30 en direction de l´Hostal Moneda tout près du Zocalo (centre historique de ...
- ... coming soon) Xochimilco was a despedida (leaving do) for my very good friend Liliana ...
Read these blogs and more at:
Photos from:
- Mexico City, Central Mexico and Gulf Coast, Mexico
Photos in this video:
- Petit tour de trajinera a Xochimilco by Rayou from a blog titled Trucha au Mexique - visite de Mexico
- Village just south of Xochimilco by Guscaesar from a blog titled ..
- Family self-portrait, Xochimilco by Mebiner from a blog titled Cruising the c****s at Xochimilco
- Colourful boats in Xochimilco by Pengs_nadz from a blog titled Las Ilegales
- Colorful boats at Xochimilco by Mebiner from a blog titled Cruising the c****s at Xochimilco
- Us on a boat at Xochimilco by Smdelight from a blog titled Xochimilco
- On the boat at Xochimilco by Mebiner from a blog titled Cruising the c****s at Xochimilco
- On the bus to Xochimilco by Engelkeros from a blog titled More basketball, museums and boats...
- The boats at Xochimilco by Engelkeros from a blog titled More basketball, museums and boats...
- Boat ride, Xochimilco by Pengs_nadz from a blog titled Las Ilegales
- Xochimilco market by Warty007 from a blog titled Mexico City
- Xochimilco 2 by Flitterjahr from a blog titled Wieder mal in Mexiko Stadt
- Xochimilco 2 by Ccheng from a blog titled Mexico 2 - Xochimilco & Anthropology Museum
- Xochimilco 1 by Flitterjahr from a blog titled Wieder mal in Mexiko Stadt
- Xochimilco by Samellietravels from a blog titled A City of 20 Million
- Xochimilco by Mebiner from a blog titled Cruising the c****s at Xochimilco
- Xochimilco by Guscaesar from a blog titled ..
- Xochimilco by Susieandisidro from a blog titled The Grand Tenochtitlan
Fine arts building Mexico City
The Fine Arts Palace in Mexico City. Circa 2009.
Qué hacer en CIUDAD DE MÉXICO en un día ???? Palacio de Bellas Artes y Templo Mayor
✈???????? Qué hacer en Ciudad de México en un día? En nuestro primer video en Ciudad de México les estaremos enseñando 3 de los lugares más populares de la ciudad. Empezaremos con el Ángel de la independencia y el Paseo de la reforma, la avenida más importante de la ciudad. Luego caminaremos hasta el Palacio de Bellas Artes donde les contaremos cómo es la visita a este icónico lugar. Y finalmente los llevaremos al Templo Mayor, visitaremos su museo y terminaremos en la Catedral y en el espectacular Zócalo de la Ciudad de México. (Qué visitar en Ciudad de México)
El Monumento a la Independencia, conocido popularmente como El Ángel o El Ángel de la Independencia fue Inaugurado en 1910 para conmemorar el Centenario de la independencia de México por el entonces presidente de México, Porfirio Díaz. Es uno de los monumentos más emblemáticos de la urbe y usado actualmente como un icono cultural de la Ciudad de México y lugar de festejos y manifestaciones nacionales. (Qué hacer en Ciudad de México en un día)
El Paseo de la Reforma es la avenida más importante de Ciudad de México. Fue mandada a construir por Maximiliano de Habsburgo en 1860 y tenía como fin acortar la distancia entre
el Castillo de Chapultepec y el Palacio Nacional, éste último ubicado en el centro histórico de la ciudad. Actualmente es el centro financiero más importante de Ciudad de México y es donde se encuentran la mayoría de los rascacielos de la ciudad. (Qué hacer en Ciudad de México en un día)
El Palacio de Bellas Artes es un recinto cultural ubicado en el Centro Histórico de la Ciudad de México, considerado el más importante en la manifestación de las artes en México y una de las casas de ópera más renombradas del mundo. En su interior alberga diversos escenarios y salas para la práctica y exposición de obras. El Museo Palacio de Bellas Artes y el Museo Nacional de Arquitectura se alojan dentro, el primero exhibe de forma permanente 17 obras murales de siete artistas nacionales ejecutadas de 1928 a 1963.
El Templo Mayor o Gran Templo de México es un recinto que comprende una serie de construcciones, edificios, torres y un patio, el espacio físico donde se ubicaban las mismas, cercado por una pared que contaba con unas puertas que daban acceso a las calzadas principales de la ciudad. En el Recinto del Templo Mayor confluían los aspectos más importantes de la vida política, religiosa su mitología y económica de los mexicas, aquí tenían lugar desde las fiestas que el tonalpohualli marcaba hasta la entronización de tlatoanis y funerales de viejos gobernantes.
0:01 Intro - Qué hacer en Ciudad de México #1 (Qué hacer en Ciudad de México en un día)
0:37 Hotel Armonik Suites (Ciudad de México)
1:24 Ángel de la Independencia (Qué visitar en Ciudad de México)
1:51 Pase de la Reforma (Qué hacer en Ciudad de México en un día)
2:51 Palacio de Bellas Artes de Ciudad de México
3:19 Palacio de Bellas Artes de Ciudad de México por dentro
4:29 Murales del Palacio de Bellas Artes (Diego Rivera) - Qué hacer en Ciudad de México en un día
5:39 Nuestras impresiones del Palacio de Bellas Artes
6:25 Restaurante Café de Tacuba - CDMX
7:16 Introducción al Templo Mayor de Ciudad de México (Gran Templo Mayor de Tenochtitlan por dentro - interior)
7:59 Qué ver en el Templo Mayor - Cómo visitar el Templo Mayor - Historia del Templo Mayor de Ciudad de México
9:17 Museo del Templo Mayor (Qué visitar en Ciudad de México)
10:11 Nuestras impresiones del Templo Mayor - Tips y consejos para visitar el sitio arqueológico del Templo de Mayor y el Museo
10:34 Zócalo de Ciudad de México y Catedral de Ciudad de México (Qué hacer en Ciudad de México en un día)
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(Qué hacer en Ciudad de México, Ciudad de México qué hacer, Ciudad de México, qué hacer en CDMX, Qué hacer en la Ciudad de México, Qué visitar en Ciudad de México, Centro Histórico Ciudad de México, Ciudad de México Centro Histórico, Ciudad de México Lugares Turísticos, Ciudad de México Turismo, Palacio de Bellas Artes, Palacio de Bellas Artes por dentro, Palacio de Bellas Artes México, Templo Mayor Ciudad de México, Armonik Suites)
Tours of Mexico Archaeology
Join Hosts Jeronimo Jergens and Valerie Johnson as they tour Mexico's Archaeological sites in Tours of Mexico. In this award winning series
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opalimages.com
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MEXICO A PIE | Walking Tours Mexico City PROMO - Daily FREE TOUR through the Historic Downtown
MEXICO A PIE | Walking Tours Mexico City
Please LIKE, SUSCRIBE & and come to Mexico City, and on foot – a pie – visit with us an open-air museum.
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WHATSAPP, VIBER or TELEGRAM: +52 (55) 6014 2996
Who is Mexico a Pie?
“México a pie” /‘me·ji·ko a pi·eh/ is a company that offers walking tours by different streets and with different themes – basically in the historic center – but also in some other zones and attractions within the city.
Visit the Palace of the Fine Arts, the emblematic “Postal Office” building, the “Torre Latinoamericana” and its anti seismic system in its foundation, the National Palace and the Metropolitan Cathedral, the continent’s largest, in just one cost-free walking tour?
This will be a great introduction to our city, a magnificent way to fall in love with Mexico, and its wonderful stories and magical corners.
We’re sure you’ll want to keep walking in the city with us.
Take a group tour and know a Mexico of contrasts; walking by places built during the first years of the Spanish rule, to know emblematic places of the independence period or by buildings over 100 years old, and finishing it in the modern Mexican skyscrapers.
Reserve a private tour and visit the National Museum of History – located in the only royal castle in the Americas: Chapultepec Castle.
Visit the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the second most visited catholic sanctuary of the world – just behind the Basilica of Saint Peter in Vatican City.
Feel with us the energy surrounding the majestic Teotihuacan – City of Gods – with a few hours long tour, or visit one of the gems in the Gulf of Mexico, the Totonac ancient city of Tajin, in a day-long tour visiting the original place of the ritual “Dance of the Flyers” or the vanilla plantations.
We’re working hard so we can offer you a wonderful choice of group and private tours. We seek to let the world know what Mexico really is: with all its joy, culture, warmth and richness of colors.
Please SUSCRIBE & and come to Mexico City, and on foot – a pie – visit with us an open-air museum.
We are “México a pie”, and we will be waiting you.
Music: extract Huapango de J. P. Moncayo
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Tours of Mexico Colonial Cities
Come visit the colonial cities of Mexico. San Miguel Aliende, Taxco, Queretaro, Vera Cruz, Mexico City, Oaxaca, Guanajuato, Merida and Guadalajara. This project was produced by David W Jones for Doublejay Productions. For more info go to: opalimages.com
#mexico #travel
Best of Mexico
Mexico has so much to offer and yet most people flock to the beaches. It's safe to travel and safe to eat the fabulous food if you use common sense. Spend time in the many museums of Mexico City. The innovative Museum of Anthropology sports ancient cultures and modern village traditions; history comes alive at the Trotsky Museum; and the Casa Azul, Anahuacalli and studios in San Angel illustrate where Diego Rivera and Frieda Kahlo lived and worked . The modern art museum and sculptures all over the streets continue the strong artistic tradition, also carried out in music with the colorful Mariachi bands and performances at the Palacio de Bellas Artes let alone all sorts of clubs and cafes.
Outside of the city, drift by wooden boat on the canals of Xochimilco. Then shop the streets of Cuernavaca and Taxco, the silver mining town where you can buy a souvenir or drop serious cash. Religious devotees with enjoy the Basilica of Guadaloupe on the way to the ancient ruins of Teotihuacan. From there you can go to the state of Michoacan for the most authentic Day of the Dead celebration in November, or head across the Yucatan Peninsula where ancient ruins and cactus-filled landscapes are interspersed with Indian Villages where people weave exquisite garments and practice colorful tradition in the market place and the church.
Swim, hike, shop, eat and dance. You'll come home smiling.
WANT MORE?! View and purchase photos by country or theme and watch videos from around the world.
Episode 4: Visiting Ruins of Teotihuacan and Drive to Veracruz
Video Diary of Day 5 of the Mexico Trip:
Leaving Tuxpan in the morning to go through the mountains (50 degrees) to Teotihuacan. And from there back to the coast: Veracruz.