Tlaxcala (Postclassic)
In the prehispanic Nahua state of Tlaxcala, there were no signs of a palace or central temple. Instead, the city appears to have been a republic governed by a parliament of elected representatives.[1]
Conquistador Hernán Cortés wrote that the "order of government so far observed among the people resembles very much the republics of Venice, Genoa, and Pisa for there is no supreme overlord."[2]
According to the Francisco Cervantes de Salazar's Crónica de la Nueva España, Tlaxcala had an urban parliament that made decisions by consensus. There were between 50 and 200 members, all of them elected. Before joining, they had to undergo a brutal and self-effacing public induction process involving exposure, fasting, sleep deprivation, and bloodletting.[3]