This innovative work of cultural history examines the function of public rituals in colonial Mexico City. Festivals
were a defining characteristic of life in the capital. For most of the colonial period, inhabitants could witness
as many as 100 religious and civil celebrations in a year. The largest of these events, both civil and religious,
were sponsored by the authorities and were crucial means to embody political and social concepts.
The first European public rituals were introduced immediately after the conquest of the Aztec capital. Spanish
priests seeking to evangelize the native population introduced Catholic festivals, and civil authorities sponsored
celebrations designed to glorify the Spanish empire. Spectacle was one tool in an arsenal of colonizing agents,
and over time the growing diversity of the population made festival statecraft all the more important, as government-sponsored
revelry attempted to promote shared histories and values among diverse and potentially dangerous groups.
Festivals organizers developed a highly sophisticated message embedded within the celebrations that delineated
the principles of leadership and the duties of both rulers and vassals. The pervasiveness of festivals and the
power of the political message associated with them created possibilities for individuals to assess and participate
in a larger discussion of good governance in the colony.