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Columns in the form of Toltec warriors in Tula
'Tula' is a town of 28,432 (2005 census) in the southwestern part of the state of
Hidalgo in central
Mexico, some 100 km to the north-northwest of
Mexico City. The modern town is known as 'Tula de Allende'; also a state
municipality that covers part of the southeastern portion of the
Pre-Columbian city. The present-day municipality has a population of 93,296 and an areal extent of 305.8 km² (118.07 sq mi), which includes numerous smaller outlying towns, the largest of which are
El Llano,
San Marcos, and
San Miguel Vindho.
Nearby are the remains of the ancient capital city of the
Toltecs, also known as "Tula" or as "
Tollan". Usually identified as the Toltec capital around 980 AD, the city was destroyed in or about 1168 or 1179.
The site is at and around the junction of the
RÃo Rosas and the
RÃo Tula. The two largest clusters of grand ceremonial architecture are nicknamed "Tula Grande" (the most visited by
tourists) and "Tula Chico". Remains of other buildings extend for some distance in all directions. In the residential areas streets were laid out in a grid pattern.
The city was the largest in central Mexico in the 9th and 10th centuries, covering an area of some 12 km² with a population of at least some 30,000, possibly significantly more. While it might have been the largest city in
Mesoamerica at the time, some
Maya sites in the
Yucatán may have rivaled its population during this period.

Pyramid at Tula archaeological site
Distinctive Toltec features here include terraced
pyramids, colonnaded buildings, and relief sculptures, including the characteristic
chacmools, reclining figures that may have been
avatars of the rain god,
Tlaloc. There are two large courts for playing the
Mesoamerican ballgame. Some of the architecture is similar to that at
Chichen Itza.
The site was extensively looted in
Aztec times, with much of the artwork and sculpture carted off.
The first scholarly description of the ruins was made by
Antonio GarcÃa Cubas of the
Mexican Society of Geography and History in
1873. The first archaeological excavations were conducted in the
1880s by
French antiquarian
Désiré Charnay. A twenty year archaeological project under
Jorge Acosta of Mexico's
National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) began in
1940. In the
1970s further excavations and restorations of some structures were conducted by INAH and the
University of Missouri–Columbia.
Parts of the site are open for tourist visits, and Tula has a small
museum.
References
★
Link to tables of population data from Census of 2005 INEGI: Instituto Nacional de EstadÃstica, GeografÃa e Informática
★
Hidalgo Enciclopedia de los Municipios de México
External links
★
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Tula - full text article