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Three city-states unite to form the Aztec Triple Alliance

In 1428 C.E., three powerful city-states in the Basin of Mexico forged one of the most consequential political agreements in the ancient Americas. Tenochtitlan, Texcoco, and Tlacopan — each home to a distinct people, each ruled by its own king — joined forces not as equals absorbed into a single state, but as sovereign partners bound by shared military ambition and interlocking economic interests. The Aztec Triple Alliance they created would reshape Central Mexico within a generation.

Key facts

  • Aztec Triple Alliance: Formed in 1428 C.E. among Tenochtitlan (the Mexica), Texcoco (the Acolhua), and Tlacopan (the Tepaneca) after a successful revolt against the dominant city-state of Azcapotzalco.
  • Military expansion: The combined forces subdued most of the Basin of Mexico within roughly a decade — the south by 1432 C.E., the west by 1435 C.E., and the east by 1440 C.E.
  • Tribute division: Spoils were split deliberately: two-fifths to Tenochtitlan, two-fifths to Texcoco, and one-fifth to Tlacopan — a structural acknowledgment of each partner’s role and the late arrival of Tlacopan to the alliance.

What sparked the alliance

The Basin of Mexico in the late 14th century was a patchwork of small city-states called altepetl in Nahuatl — each with its own ruler, territory, and dependent villages. Some competed peacefully through trade and marriage. Others fought nearly constantly.

By the early 15th century, the Tepaneca confederation based at Azcapotzalco had come to dominate much of the basin. Their increasing tribute demands pushed subject peoples toward the breaking point. In 1428 C.E., the Mexica of Tenochtitlan revolted. Texcoco joined them, and after early victories, Tlacopan — itself a Tepaneca city-state — switched sides. Together they defeated Azcapotzalco and ended its regional supremacy.

The alliance that emerged was not simply a military arrangement born of convenience. It was a carefully structured political compact that preserved the sovereignty of each partner while creating a shared apparatus for war, taxation, and expansion.

How the alliance actually worked

Each of the three rulers governed his own domain independently. City-states conquered during military campaigns were distributed among the three partners, each of which then administered its share as a dependent territory. Tenochtitlan eventually assumed the role of supreme military commander, while Texcoco became the cultural and legal center — renowned for its contributions to law, engineering, and the arts. Tlacopan, the junior partner, received the smallest share of tribute but held full sovereignty over its own territory.

Archaeologist Michael E. Smith has argued that the flow of goods from subject states to the alliance capitals functioned more like a taxation system than simple tribute — regular, routinized, and integrated into a broader market economy. The three cities actively developed their urban centers, divided neighborhoods into administrative quarters, and encouraged immigration to fuel growth.

Trade networks that had existed before the alliance were not dismantled — they were expanded. Scholarship published in Ancient Mesoamerica documents how obsidian exchange routes, ceramic styles, and market systems across the region became more integrated under Triple Alliance influence, suggesting that economic coordination ran alongside military force as a tool of empire-building.

Inter-marriage between elite families across the three cities — and with dynasties throughout the empire — reinforced political bonds that no army alone could sustain. Feasting, shared markets, and ceremonial exchanges kept the compact alive across nine decades.

Lasting impact

The Aztec Triple Alliance built what became the most powerful empire in Mesoamerica before European contact. At its height, it extracted tribute from hundreds of communities across what is now central and southern Mexico, generating surpluses that supported monumental architecture, sophisticated calendrical systems, long-distance trade, and one of the largest cities on Earth — Tenochtitlan, with an estimated population of 200,000 to 300,000 people by the early 16th century C.E.

The administrative and economic systems the alliance developed influenced the governance structures the Spanish imposed after the conquest of 1521 C.E. — and some scholars argue that existing trade routes and tribute networks simply changed hands rather than disappeared. Research on Aztec market systems suggests that local commerce continued relatively intact even under colonial rule, in part because the alliance had already built deeply embedded regional market relationships.

The Nahuatl language, spread in part through Triple Alliance expansion, remains spoken by well over a million people today. Dozens of everyday words in English — including tomato, chocolate, avocado, and chili — trace their path into global vocabulary through Nahuatl-speaking peoples.

Tenochtitlan itself now lies beneath Mexico City, one of the largest urban centers in the world. The Templo Mayor archaeological site at the heart of the city continues to yield new findings, including a 2023 C.E. discovery of a monumental offering deposit that scholars are still interpreting.

Blindspots and limits

The historical record of the Triple Alliance comes largely from sources compiled at or after the Spanish conquest, which means it was filtered through colonial-era interests and the perspectives of those who survived to tell it. Indigenous voices were recorded selectively, and the contributions of commoners, women, and smaller allied peoples are largely absent from the surviving documents.

Expansion also carried real costs. Archaeological evidence from Xaltocan, the Otomi capital, shows signs of population displacement following Triple Alliance conquest — suggesting that annexation was not always the relatively gentle imposition of tribute the official accounts describe. Genetic studies of ancient DNA from the site support evidence of community disruption. And internal tensions within the alliance were real: it was partly with Texcocan support that Hernán Cortés ultimately overthrew Tenochtitlan in 1521 C.E.

The alliance was a political achievement of the first order — and like most such achievements, it contained the seeds of its own contradictions.

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For more on this story, see: ThoughtCo — The Aztec Triple Alliance

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