Eight Deer's migration and reign The first settlements in Tututepec dates back to 400 BCE, afterwards the population of the area would fluctuate until 800 CE where the site would be almost devoid of activity. Prior to Eight Deer's journey to the coast the area there were little evidence of Mixtecs in the region, the idea of a migration led by Eight Deer to the coast is supported by linguistic evidence of the highland and coastal dialects diverging around 900-1000 CE and little cultural similarity between the highland Mixteca Alta and the coast outside of ceramics prior to Tututepec's founding. The founding of Tututepec is recorded in 3
Mixtec codices that vary slightly,
Codex Bodley,
Nuttall, and
Colombino-Becker. Eight Deer after meeting with oracle Nine Grass at
Chalcatongo migrates to the coast with a group of Mixtecs and founds Tututepec in 1083. The foundation activity done by Eight Deer to establish the city varies between codices, in Codex Bodley he meets with the
Chatino rulers of
Juquila to gain their recognition, in Codex Nuttall he performs a ballcourt ceremony, lastly in Codex Colombino-Becker he performs a ballcourt ceremony in addition to bringing sacred objects to the new site. After founding Tututepec, Eight Deer begins wars of consolidation as he conquers dozens of towns establishing Tututepec power in a fragmented region as the collapse of the Rio Viejo state prior to his arrival left the region fragmented and easier to conquer, the result of the conquests allowed the Mixtecs to gain access to new resources from tribute such as cacao and feathers. In 1097 a
Toltec delegation led by their leader Four Jaguar visited Tututepec and allied with Eight Deer, aiding him in conquering
Tilantongo the next year. After Eight Deer conquered Tilantongo he never returned to Tututepec leaving the history of the city unknown until the eve of Spanish conquest. The imperial program of Tututepec allowed the rulers to access many resources from tribute using them to trade with other states. It is not unlikely that Tututepec's sphere of influence reached as far north as
Santa María Zacatepec and as far west as Cahuitan, on the Pacific coast very near the modern border with
Guerrero. Tututepec's relationship with the Aztec empire is not well known, Tututepec expansion northward was halted by Aztec expansion into Oaxaca but no records of direct interactions remain. After the Aztecs captured the obsidian mines of
Pachuca, Tututepec, which used the material extensively, began relying on these mines less for their obsidian needs, suggesting unwillingness to directly trade with the rival empire. While they never explicitly warred with the Aztecs it is known they have had proxy wars as the Aztecs would aid communities on Tututepec's border like Coatlan in defense while Tututepec sent soldiers to
Yanhuitlan to aid in their defense against the Aztecs. After the
Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire Hernan Cortes sent his lieutenant
Pedro de Alvarado to the coast where they were aided by
Zapotecs from
Tehuantepec in January 1522, arriving in Tututepec in February being taken to the core of the city before conquering it by March 4 after capturing their ruler Coaxintecuhtli and extorting 30,000 peso's worth of gold eventually leaving him to die in captivity.
Archaeological investigations In 1956 Gabriel DeCicco and Donald Brockington published a survey of a site called Cerro de los Pájaros an hour south of the modern Tututepec town where they noted informants described gold objects being found in the site, which led to
Ronald Spores suggest the site being historical Tututepec in 1983. Scott O'Mack's surface reconnaissance in 1990 failed to find Cerro de los Pájaros and concluded that the modern town of
Villa de Tututepec de Melchor Ocampo was historical Tututepec. Full coverage surveys of the lower Rio Verde Valley since 1994 led by Joyce have resulted in extensive archaeological data that corroborates with the Mixtec codices on the founding of the city. Commoner household excavations were conducted in 2005 led by Levine reveal that commoners were able to obtain luxury goods without elite interference on distribution. == Site description ==