write this story please
The Aztecs were a fierce and powerful culture in ancient times. They made many important strides in art, religion, and medicine as a thriving culture. Their economic tribute system helped to support military operations. The tributes also helped rulers and leaders to stay wealthy. However, the Aztec empire did not last forever. The empire fell in the early part of the 16th century.
Task: You will create a storybook about the origin, growth, and fall of the ancient Aztec culture. The storybook will have five sections and should be written like you are telling a story from start to finish. It is up to you to decide what five aspects of Aztec history you will present in your story. However, it is important that you remember to tell about the origin, growth, and fall of the Aztecs. Each section of the story must also have an image that goes along with it.
Audience: Imagine that you are making this book to read to a group of fourth graders and the goal of the book is to teach them about the rise and the fall of the Aztecs.
Requirements:
Your storybook must have five sections. Each section should explain a unique part of the Aztec story.
Your storybook must specifically tell about their origins, how the civilization expanded, and what factors led to their collapse.
On each page should be the text of the story along with an image that goes along with the story.
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Aztecs:
- The priests brought the battle god to the Great Temple after months of preparation. At the top of the pyramid stairs, the highest award was waiting for him. He would soon be a part of the sun god Tonatiuh. The warrior had spent his entire life preparing for this great day.
- The nobleman who had captured the warrior-god met him at the summit of the pyramid temple. The holy rite was about to start. The warrior-god was laid out on a stone altar after four priests grabbed hold of his arms and legs. He raised his gaze to the endlessly blue sky. The top priest raised his arm in the air and stabbed the warrior-god in the chest. The priest made deliberate movements to insert his hand into the wound, seize the warrior-heart, god's and rip it from his body. He gave the sun deity Tonatiuh the still-beating heart.
- Others pushed the lifeless body down the Great Temple's gory stairs. More priests chopped off the head at the bottom, where it was displayed on a rack of skulls among hundreds of others.
- The above-mentioned nameless warrior stood in for the hundreds of thousands of people that were offered as sacrifices to the gods during the Aztec Empire. The Aztecs held the view that the creation of humans required the blood of the gods. They felt they had to give the blood back to the gods in order to keep the empire going. To appease what they thought to be the gods' ravenous desire for blood, they sacrificed soldiers who had been caught in combat as well as other men, women, and even children. However, the very beliefs that were supposed to keep the Aztec Empire afloat also contributed to its destruction.
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