The Aztecs actually called themselves __. | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Estimated number of people who speak Nahuatl today | 1.5 million |
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| | Max height (in feet) a poinsettia can grow in its natural habitat in Mexico | 15 |
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| Year Aztecs founded the capital city of Tenochtitlán, which is now the location of Mexico City | 1325 CE |
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| | Number of live poinsettias imported to the U.S. in 2022 | 2.2 million |
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| Poinsettias are named after a person. |
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The beautiful red plant that adorns mantles and dining tables during the holiday season is known by many names. The Aztecs called the plant cuetlaxóchitl, meaning "a flower that withers," while the Maya used the phrase k'alul wits ("ember flower"). The Spanish friars of the 17th century called it flor de Nochebuena, or "Holy Night flower," while other parts of Latin America used flor de Pascuas, or "Easter flower." But in the U.S., Euphorbia pulcherrima goes by another name — poinsettia. The name is an homage to the U.S.'s first ambassador to Mexico, Joel Roberts Poinsett. An amateur botanist, Poinsett became enamored with the plant when he came across it while staying in Taxco, Mexico. Poinsett brought specimens back to his greenhouses in the U.S. around 1825 and sent clippings to a specialist in Philadelphia, who eventually christened the plant Euphorbia poinsettia. Unfortunately, Poinsett's legacy outside horticultural circles is a troubling one, as he was an enslaver and expansionist, and interfered so much in Mexican politics that he was removed from his post by a request from the Mexican president in 1829. Because the name is both controversial and divorced from its Mesoamerican roots, some people now call this holiday favorite by its original name — cuetlaxóchitl. | |
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