Mitla

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Palace with "mosaics" and original paint
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Palace with "mosaics" and original paint
The Spanish church built on top of Mixtec/Zapotec ruins
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The Spanish church built on top of Mixtec/Zapotec ruins
For the mountain pass in the Sinai Desert, see Mitla Pass.

Mitla is a town in the state of Oaxaca, Mexico, famous for its pre-Columbian Mesoamerican buildings.

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[edit] Present day Mitla

The official name of the town is San Pablo Villa de Mitla. With a population of just over 7,000 people in 1990, Mitla is located about 45 km (some 26 miles) by road from the state capital of Oaxaca, Oaxaca, at 16°55′N 96°24′W. The main group of pre-Hispanic buildings is at the north end of town. The town of Mitla also has a small museum and Mitla hosts a large outdoor market.

[edit] Pre-Columbian Mitla

While archaeological evidence shows that Mitla was occupied by 500 BC, the earliest construction dates to only about 200 AD. Construction of pre-Columbian style buildings continued up until the arrival of the Spanish conquistadores in the 1520s. The town has been continually occupied ever since; part of the more recent town was built over pre-Hispanic Mitla, but some groups of old elite palace complexes remained. At its height Mitla had a population of approximately 10,000 people.

The earliest structures at Mitla are Zapotec; the remainder are Mixtec but often display an interesting mix of Zapotec and Mixtec styles.

Grupo de las Columnas
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Grupo de las Columnas
The famous wall mosaics
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The famous wall mosaics

Five main groups of buildings remain including the Grupo de las Columnas in the east of the site which is a former palace. It consists of three large rooms set around tombs and a courtyard. The palace walls are decorated with distinctive geometric mosaics that characterize Mitla's buildings. Each frieze consists of up to 100,000 separate pieces of cut stone. One of the rooms, known as the Salon de las Columnas, houses six monolithic pillars that once supported the roof. To the north is the Grupo de Iglesia centred around the colonial Catholic church. The pre-Columbian buildings that survived its construction are of similar design to those in the Grupo de las Columnas, but on a smaller scale. They still retain traces of paintwork and some artifacts which have been found at the site are displayed in the Museo Frisell de Arte Zapeteco Mitla in the centre of the town which cloded temporarily for renovation in 2001.

Grupo de Iglesia Church
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Grupo de Iglesia Church

In 1494 the Aztecs conquered Mitla and sacked the city. Once the Spanish took over, they found their efforts to convert locals to Catholicism thwarted by competition from native beliefs, manifesting themselves at ancient buildings such as those at Mitla. To combat the problem, the Spanish built a new church on top of the footprint of a former temple , scavenging the original temple for building materials.

A number of Spanish writers of the colonial era remark on the well built pre-Hispanic buildings here. Alexander von Humboldt published a description of the site in 1810.

Some excavations and repair of buildings was done under the direction of Leopoldo Batres in 1901. The Mexican government made further excavations of the site in the mid 1930s and the early 1960s.

Mitla is a popular tourism destination for visitors to Oaxaca.

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