Mexico Through the Ages
From the Aztec founding of Tenochtitlan to the Mexican Revolution — trace one of the world's great civilizations through the pyramids, colonial cathedrals, and battlefields where history still stands.
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Mexico's history hit me differently than any place I'd been before. Standing inside the Templo Mayor in Mexico City — knowing a 16th-century cathedral was built directly on top of the Aztec capital — I understood for the first time what it means when history layers itself visibly onto the present. Jenice grew up with this history in ways I never could. Walking Monte Albán at sunrise with her, hearing what Zapotec culture actually means to living communities, changed how I understood everything I'd seen in Mexico. This timeline is our attempt to give you the same context before you go.
— Scott
Three Thousand Years in One Country
Mexico's history spans from pyramid-building civilizations to brutal conquest, hard-fought independence, and revolutionary upheaval. These are the places where that history is still visible — built into the foundations of every city and carved into the hillsides.
Toltec Empire — Tula and the Warrior God
Hidalgo / Central Mexico
The Toltecs established Tula as the capital of a militaristic empire that spread cultural influence across Mesoamerica. Their feathered-serpent god Quetzalcoatl was later adopted by the Aztecs. The warrior columns at Tula still stand — 15 tons of basalt shaped like soldiers.
New Spain — 300 Years of Colonial Rule
Mexico City / Oaxaca / Guadalajara
The Viceroyalty of New Spain became Spain's wealthiest colony — mining silver at Zacatecas and Guanajuato, building baroque cathedrals on Aztec foundations, and creating a complex racial caste system. The Spanish built and the indigenous died by the millions — 90% population loss from disease within a century of contact.
Guanajuato's historic center sits atop silver mine tunnels. Oaxaca's Santo Domingo Church (built 1575–1703) is perhaps the most spectacular colonial baroque building in Mexico.
The Mexican Revolution
Across Mexico
The Mexican Revolution killed an estimated one million people — the most violent decade in Mexican history. Emiliano Zapata ("Tierra y Libertad") fought for land reform from Morelos. Pancho Villa raided across the north. Francisco Madero, Victoriano Huerta, Venustiano Carranza, and Álvaro Obregón all rose and fell. The 1917 Constitution emerged — the first in the world to enshrine social rights.
The Muralist Movement
Mexico City / Guadalajara / Oaxaca
After the Revolution, President Álvaro Obregón commissioned Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, and David Alfaro Siqueiros to paint the nation's history on its public walls. The result was one of the 20th century's greatest artistic movements — a visual retelling of Mexico from Aztec creation myths to revolutionary struggle.
Diego Rivera's murals cover the Palacio Nacional staircase. Orozco's Hospicio Cabañas murals in Guadalajara are UNESCO World Heritage. The Palacio de Bellas Artes has all three muralists under one roof.
The Living Heritage
All Destinations
Mexico's history isn't in museums — it's under your feet. Aztec pyramids buried beneath Mexico City's subway stations. Colonial aqueducts still standing. Villages where Zapotec and Maya are the first language. The murals still being painted. Every destination in Mexico is a palimpsest — layers of civilizations, each visible if you know where to look.
Plan a Heritage Trip
Tell our AI planner you want to follow the history trail and it will build a chronological itinerary — Teotihuacán, Templo Mayor, Monte Albán, Chichén Itzá, and the Revolution sites.
Start Planning →Frequently Asked Questions
Teotihuacán (near Mexico City) — the largest pre-Columbian city in the Americas, with the Pyramid of the Sun and Moon. Chichén Itzá (Yucatan) — UNESCO World Heritage Maya site and New Seven Wonder of the World. Monte Albán (Oaxaca) — Zapotec capital atop a mountain, predating the Aztecs by 800 years. Palenque (Chiapas) — extraordinary Maya city in the jungle. Most sites charge MXN 80-600 ($4.65-$34.80 USD) entrance.
Teotihuacán is 50 km northeast of Mexico City and accessible by bus from the Norte terminal (MXN 52 each way, 1.5 hours). Arrive before 9am to beat the crowds and climb the Pyramid of the Sun (248 steps) before the heat. The site is massive — allow 4-5 hours minimum. The on-site museum and the Avenue of the Dead are not to be missed. Book a guided tour from CDMX for deeper context.
The Aztec Empire (1428-1521) was the dominant power in Central Mexico, ruling from Tenochtitlán — the island capital built in Lake Texcoco where Mexico City stands today. At its peak, the empire had 5-6 million subjects across 200,000 km². Hernán Cortés and his allies defeated the Aztecs in 1521 after a brutal siege. The Templo Mayor in central CDMX was the empire's sacred center — you can visit its ruins today next to the Zócalo.
The Mexican Revolution (1910-1920) overthrew dictator Porfirio Díaz and reshaped the country's political landscape. Key figures — Emiliano Zapata (agrarian reform), Pancho Villa (northern guerrilla leader), Francisco Madero (first democratic president) — are immortalized across Mexico. The revolution produced Mexico's 1917 Constitution, still in force today. Muralists Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, and David Siqueiros painted its history across government buildings in CDMX.
Spain ruled New Spain (Mexico) for 300 years — from the fall of Tenochtitlán in 1521 to Mexican Independence in 1821. The colonial period produced Mexico's most beautiful architecture: the cathedrals of Oaxaca, Puebla, and CDMX, the silver cities of Guanajuato and Zacatecas, and the hacienda culture of the Bajío region. Mexico declared independence on September 16, 1810 (celebrated as Independence Day) though actual independence wasn't achieved until 1821.
Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) is a pre-Hispanic tradition blended with Catholic All Saints' and All Souls' Day, celebrated October 31–November 2. Families build ofrendas (altars) with photos, marigolds, food, and mementos to honor deceased relatives. Cemetery vigils are the heart of the celebration — especially in Oaxaca, Michoacán (Pátzcuaro), and indigenous communities. It is UNESCO-recognized as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.