Atlas
Below are some maps about the Aztec. They show the Aztec territory, Hernando Cortez's route to the Aztec, Tenochtitlan's water ways, the area around Tenochtitlan and a graph that shows the Aztec and Inca populations after the Spanish Conquest. I hope you enjoy!
The map above shows the Aztec territory. Although the Aztecs main city, Tenochtitlan, was on a small lake, their territory spread over 80,000 square miles. Today, that territory is Central and Southern Mexico.
Above is a map that shows Hernando Cortez's course to the Aztec. Originally, Cortez started traveling with Velasquez to Cuba so Velasquez could govern Cuba. Once Cortez and Velasquez reached Cuba, Velasquez said that Cortez could take three ships and some men to go explore. When Cortez reached the Americas, so his men couldn't run away, he burned his ships. From there, Cortez met a woman named Malinche. Since Malinche could speak Aztec and Mayan and Cortez's translator could speak Spanish and Mayan it made it so Cortez and Malinche could communicate. Malinche helped Cortez around the land and helped him make alliances with other civilizations the Aztec had conquered. Once Cortez had enough alliances, he went to Tenochtitlan and conquered the Aztec.
Here is a map that shows Tenochtitlan's water ways. Because Tenochtitlan was built on a lake, the Aztecs main form of transportation was by boat. The Aztec separated there chinampas so they could have canals.
The map above shows Tenochtitlan and the surrounding area. The Aztecs didn't just build chinampas for Tenochtitlan, they also built them at other locations. If you look at the key, you can see that the Aztec had a ton of chinampas.
Above is a chart that shows the fall of the Aztec and Inca after the Spanish Conquest of the Americas. If you look closely, you can see that over 24 million Aztec fell to About 3 million Aztec in just 50 years. That's about 420 thousand Aztec a year that died.