Annotations+Page

1. Aztec History Jaime. "Aztec Timeline." //Aztec History//. 2006. Web. 19 Oct. 2011. . This website talks about Aztec history. It provides a timeline. And it also talks about the food, life, jewelry, culture, language, weapons, warriors, map, religion, clothing, and temples. 2. The Aztecs andMexico City: 14th century AD Gascoigne, Bamber. "HISTORY OF THE AZTECS." //History World - History and Timelines//. History World, 2001. Web. 19 Oct. 2011. . This site talks the Aztecs. About their rituals, the quetzal coat, Cortes advances into Mexico, Cortes and Montezuma, and the brutal end. This is basically a broad timeline. Except it goes deeper into each section.

3. Mexico- Mexican history time-line overview-resource page Pazos, Luis. "Mexico - Mexican History Time-line Overview - Resource Page: Mexico History." //Access Mexico Connect - Current Issue - The Electronic Magazine All about Mexico//. MexConnect, 19 May 2011. Web. 19 Oct. 2011. [].This website is about Mexican History. It provides a long timeline of all of the events that happened in Mexico. It also has a timeline of Europe.

4. Pre-Columbian Mexico"Mexican History." //MexicanHistory.org Mexican History from Ancient times to Today//. MexicanHistory.org. Web. 19 Oct. 2011. []. This website has a lot of information. It has information about Pre-Columbian Mexico which talks about tribes. There also Cortes and the Spanish conquest which talks about the Spanish invading Mexico. Than there’s the colonial Mexico, which has information on colonial Mexico. Then there Mexican Independence, this provides information about leaders in the revolution. And last there is Mexican Revolution Modern Mexico, which talks about modern Mexico.

5. Mexico: History and culture "Mexico - History & Culture." //Geographia - World Travel Destinations, Culture and History Guide//. Geographia, 1998. Web. 19 Oct. 2011. []. This website provides information about states in Mexico. Like their cultures and the tribes that lived there. It also talks about historical sites in Mexico.

6. End Illegal Immigration"History of Illegal Immigration in U.S." //End Illegal Immigration. Stop Illegal Immigration//. 7 July 2009. Web. 19 Oct. 2011. []. This site provides info on the history of immigration. I also talks about Mexican illegal immigration coming toUSA.

Hannah:
1. Culture Across Borders Maciel, David, and María Herrera-Sobek. Culture across Borders: Mexican Immigration & Popular Culture.Tucson:UniversityofArizona, 1998. Print. This research book is about the revolution betweenMexicoandSpain. It talks about how both countries reacted and how they were harmed from the war. The revolution happen around 1810 to around 1940. The revolution had a huge impact onMexico, and most ofMexicois still really influenced bySpain. In the bookIndependenceand Revolution inMexico, they also talk about the leader of the revolt, FatherHidalgoand the violent revolution led by Pancho Villa and Emilano Zapata. 2.Independenceand Revolution inMexico Stefoff, Rebecca.Independenceand Revolution inMexico: 1810 - 1940.New York,NY: Facts on File, 1993. Print. In this book, the author, Rebecca Stefoff, talks about many different aspects ofMexico. She talks about the imagration laws, and how they were different a while back, and how thay have changes now. One of the main aspects she focuses on is how imagration has changed people’s lives inMexico. An interesting thing about this book is that it talks about how the native people ofMexicohave used art, literature, movies, folk songs and their own humor to protest the imagration laws that are harmful to most of them, or some of their family members. 3. The riddle and rediscovery of the lost civilization /Maya "Amazon.com: Maya: The Riddle and Rediscovery of a Lost Civilization; Third Revised Edition (9780140088311): Charles Gallenkamp: Books." Amazon.com: Online Shopping for Electronics, Apparel, Computers, Books, DVDs & More. Web. 19 Oct. 2011. <@http://www.amazon.com/Maya-Riddle-Rediscovery-Civilization-Revised/dp/0140088318>. This wonderfully reviewed book is a great collection of assembled art of Maya. It talks about over 250 discovered objects of Maya, some of them were recently discovered. This book tells you all about the ancient Maya, whose ruins are in the jungles ofMexico. The Maya were among some of the earliest cultures to develop the principle of zero. They also made the 365-day calendar and developed sophisticated art and religion. But at the height of Maya (A.D. 800) many Maya cities were abandoned. The author, Charles Gallenkamp, enlightens you about one of the most amazing cultures inMexico. 4. Sons of the shaking earth "Amazon.com: Sons of the Shaking Earth (PhoenixBooks) (9780226905006): Eric Wolf: Books." Amazon.com: Online Shopping for Electronics, Apparel, Computers, Books, DVDs & More. Web. 19 Oct. 2011. <@http://www.amazon.com/Sons-Shaking-Earth-Phoenix-Books/dp/0226905004>. In this book by Eric Wolf, he is tracing a timeline ofMexicoback to the date it was very first named and created. Eric Wolf offers a general idea of what anthropologists have learned aboutMexico. Three chapters of the book cover the geography ofMiddle America. The next four chapters cover the prehistoric expansion of the culture, and the last four chapters deal with the growth ofMiddle Americaafter the conquest. Eric Wolf was mainly influenced by Pedro Armillas, and that is where a lot of the information in this book comes from. 5. History ofMexico-Mixtecs and Zapatecs ofOaxaca Schmal, John P. "History of Mexico- Mixtecs and Zapatecs of Oaxaca." Houston Institute for Culture. Web. 19 Oct. 2011. <@http://www.houstonculture.org/mexico/oaxaca_cultures.html>. This website is about the Mextic and Zapotec people ofMexico. The author, John Schmal talks all about the culture of the people. He gives you charts about people speaking both language, including the number of people speaking the language and the percentage of people inMexicothat speak the given language. He gives you the whole history of the two given tribes: when they were first created, what religion they all practice, what they grow in their farms and where they are on the map ofMexico.