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Fall of Tenochtitlan

The fall of Tenochtitlan, the capital of the Aztec Empire, was an important event in the Spanish conquest of the empire. It occurred in 1521 following extensive manipulation of local factions and exploitation of pre-existing political divisions by Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés. He was aided by La Malinche, his interpreter and companion, and by other indigenous allies.[who?]

Fall of Tenochtitlan
Part of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire

"Conquista de México por Cortés". An Unknown artist, second half of the 17th century. Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
DateMay 26 – August 13, 1521 (2 months, 2 weeks and 4 days)
Location
Result

Spanish and Tlaxcallan victory

Belligerents
Spanish Empire (Governorate of Cuba)
Confederacy of Tlaxcala
Tetzcoco
Otomis
Chalco
Mixquic
Iztapalapa[1]

Triple Alliance

Commanders and leaders
Hernán Cortés
Gonzalo de Sandoval
Pedro de Alvarado
Cristóbal de Olid
Xicotencatl I
Xicotencatl II 
Chichimecatecle
Ixtlilxochitl II
Cuauhtémoc (POW)
Coanacoch (POW)
Strength
200,000 native allies
900–1,300 Spanish infantry
90–100 cavalry
16 cannons[2]
13 lake brigantines
[2]
80,000 warriors[3]
400 war canoes[4]
Casualties and losses
450–860 Spanish[2]
20,000 Tlaxcaltecs
100,000 killed in action[5]
300 war canoes sunk[4]
At least 40,000 Aztecs civilians killed and captured,[6] other sources claim 100,000[7] to 240,000[8][9] were killed in the campaign overall including warriors and civilians

Although numerous battles were fought between the Aztec Empire and the Spanish-led coalition, which was composed mainly of Tlaxcaltec men, it was the siege of Tenochtitlan that directly led to the fall of the Aztec civilization and the ensuing sacking and violence against the survivors. The indigenous population at the time was devastated due to a smallpox epidemic, which killed much of its leadership. Because smallpox had been endemic in Spain for centuries, the Spanish had developed an acquired immunity and were affected relatively little in the epidemic.

The conquest of the Aztec Empire was a critical stage in the Spanish colonization of the Americas. With this conquest, the Spanish Empire used Tenochtitlan's substantial access to the Pacific Ocean to reach Asian markets.[clarification needed]

Early events edit

Cortés goes to Tenochtitlan edit

In April 1519, Hernán Cortés, a nobleman recently landed in present-day Cuba, and the leader of the third Spanish expedition to the coast of what is known as Mexico, landed at San Juan de Ulúa, a high-quality harbour on Mexico's east coast, with 508 soldiers, 100 sailors, and 14 small cannons. (Survivors of the previous two expeditions directed him to this harbour.) Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar, the Governor of Cuba, called for Cortés to lead an expedition into Mexico after favourable reports from two previous expeditions to Yucatán caught the interest of the Spanish in Cuba.[10] Under pressure by his relatives, who had a different leader in mind, Velázquez revoked Cortés's mandate to lead the expedition before the man left Cuba. Thus Cortés had to struggle to persist as expedition leader while still in Cuba; twice messengers from Velázquez arrived to depose him, and twice they were dissuaded from executing their mission. After Cortés sailed, Velázquez sent an army led by Pánfilo de Narváez to take him into custody.[citation needed]

But after reaching Mexico, Cortés used the same legal tactic as had been used by Governor Velázquez when he invaded Cuba years before: he created a local government and had himself elected as the magistrate. He was thus theoretically responsible only to the King of Spain. Cortés followed this tactic when he and his men established the city of Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz, also known as Veracruz, seven miles from the harbour of San Juan de Ulúa on the east coast of the area. An inquiry into Cortés' action was conducted in Spain in 1529 and no action was taken against him.[citation needed]

Cortés happened to land at the borders of Cempoala, a vassal state to the Aztecs that had many grievances against them. As he encountered several polities who resented Aztec rule, Cortés told them he had arrived on orders of his Emperor to improve conditions, abolish human sacrifices, teach the locals the true faith, and "stop them from robbing each other".[citation needed] He was successful in enforcing excellent behaviour by his army when among potential allies. Cortés clashed with some of these polities, among them the Totonac and Tlaxcalan. The latter gave him two good day battles and one night battle, and kept up a strong defence, holding off his army on a hilltop for two weeks. His numerically inferior force finally triumphed when the Tlaxcalan began to consider his ceaseless offers of peace. Notably Xicotencatl the Elder wanted to form an alliance with the Spaniards against the Aztecs, which was the goal of Cortés as well.[citation needed]

It once was widely believed that the Aztecs first thought Cortés was Quetzalcoatl, a mythical god prophesied to return to Mexico—coincidentally in the same year Cortés landed and from the same direction he came. This is now believed[when?] to have been a myth of the conquerors, and perhaps of natives who wished to rationalize the actions of the Aztec tlatoani, Moctezuma II. Most scholars[who?] agree that the Aztecs, especially the inner circle around Moctezuma, did not believe that Cortés was a god in any shape or form.[11] Messages between Cortés and Moctezuma, however, frequently allude to the legend, which was widely known across the Aztec dominions to both Aztecs and their subjects. It strongly influenced them, as Bernal Díaz del Castillo repeatedly attests.[citation needed]

Moctezuma sent a group of noblemen and other emissaries to meet Cortés at Quauhtechcac. These emissaries brought golden jewelry as a gift, which greatly pleased the Spaniards.[12] According to the Florentine Codex, Lib. 12, f.6r., Moctezuma also ordered his messengers to carry the highly symbolic penacho (headdress) of Quetzalcoatl de Tula to Cortés and place it on him. As news about the strangers reached the capital city, Moctezuma became increasingly fearful and considered fleeing the city. He reportedly resigned himself to what he considered to be the fate of his people.[13]

Cortés continued on his march toward Tenochtitlan. Before entering the city, on November 8, 1519, Cortés and his troops prepared for battle by armoring themselves and their horses, and arranging into military rank with four leading horsemen followed by five contingents of foot soldiers. The contingents had iron swords and wooden or leather shields; horsemen in cuirasses, armed with iron lances, swords, and wooden shields; crossbowmen; more horsemen; soldiers armed with arquebus guns; and lastly, indigenous soldiers from Tlaxcalan, Tliliuhquitepec, and Huexotzinco armed with cotton armor and shields and crossbows, many of whom carried provisions in baskets or bundles or escorted the cannons on wooden carts.[citation needed]

Cortés's army entered the city on the flower-covered causeway from Iztapalapa, associated with the god Quetzalcoatl. Cortés was amicably received by Moctezuma. The captive woman Malinalli Tenépal, also known as Doña Marina, translated from Nahuatl to Chontal Maya; the Spaniard Gerónimo de Aguilar translated from Chontal Maya to Spanish.[citation needed]

The Spanish soon took Moctezuma hostage on November 14, 1519, as a safety measure because they were so outnumbered by the Aztec. Secondly they learned that Moctezuma had heard from a messenger, a few days before Cortes, that at least eight hundred more Spaniards in thirteen great ships had arrived on the coast. Cortés had been communicating to the Crown that he already had control of the territory and was practically running the city of Tenochtitlan. He was at risk of having his commission revoked, because the vast new Spanish forces were sent by his enemy Diego Velázquez. If they competed for power, they could have ended his campaign in Mexico and might have doomed the try for a lightning conquest.[citation needed]

Cortés attempted to take Moctezuma hostage in an effort to ensure his cooperation.[14] According to all eyewitness accounts, Moctezuma initially refused to leave his palace but after a series of threats from and debates with the Spanish captains, and assurances from Doña Marina, he agreed to move with his retinue to the Axayáctal palace. The first captain assigned to guard him was Pedro de Alvarado. Other Aztec lords were also detained by the Spanish, when they started questioning the authority of their captive tlatoani.[12] The palace was surrounded by over 100 Spanish soldiers in order to prevent any attempt at rescue.[15]

Tensions mount between Aztecs and Spaniards edit

It is uncertain why Moctezuma cooperated with the Spaniards. It is possible he feared losing his life or political power; however, one of the effective threats wielded by Cortés was the destruction of the city in the case of fighting between Spaniards and Aztecs (which ultimately came to pass). This Moctezuma at all costs wanted to avoid, vacillating and deferring the rupture until this policy claimed his life. From the perspective of the tlatoani, the Spaniards might have been assigned some decisive role by fate. It could also have been a tactical move: Moctezuma may have wanted to gather more information on the Spaniards, or to wait for the end of the agricultural season and strike at the beginning of the war season.[clarification needed] However, he did not carry out either of these actions even though high-ranking military leaders such as his brother Cuitlahuac and nephew Cacamatzin urged him to do so.[2][page needed]

With Moctezuma as his captive, Cortés did not need to worry about being cut off from supplies or being attacked, although some of his captains had such concerns. He also assumed that he could control the Aztecs through Moctezuma. However, Cortés had little knowledge of the ruling system of the Aztecs; Moctezuma was not all-powerful as Cortés imagined. Being appointed to and maintaining the position of tlatoani was based on the ability to rule decisively; he could be replaced by another noble if he failed to do so. At any sign of weakness, Aztec nobles within Tenochtitlan and in other Aztec tributaries were liable to rebel. As Moctezuma complied with orders issued by Cortés, such as commanding tribute to be gathered and given to the Spaniards, his authority was slipping, and quickly his people began to turn against him.[2][page needed]

Cortés and his army were permitted to stay in the Palace of Axayacatl, and tensions continued to grow. While the Spaniards were in Tenochtitlan, Velázquez assembled a force of nineteen ships, more than 1400 soldiers with twenty cannons, eighty horsemen, one-hundred and twenty crossbowmen, and eighty arquebusiers under the command of Pánfilo de Narváez to capture Cortés and return him to Cuba. Velázquez felt that Cortés had exceeded his authority, and had been aware of Cortés's misconduct for nearly a year. He had to wait for favorable winds, though, and was unable to send any forces until spring. Narváez's troops landed at San Juan de Ulúa on the Gulf of Mexico coast around April 20, 1520.[16]

After Cortés became aware of their arrival, he left Pedro de Alvarado in charge in Tenochtitlan with 80 soldiers, and brought all his forces (about two hundred and forty men) by quick marches to Narváez's camp in Cempohuallan on May 27. Several negotiations between the two Spaniards took place on the way, in which Cortés was able to persuade many persons of weight in Narváez's camp to incline to his side. Cortés attacked Narváez's camp late at night; his men, much superior in experience and organization, wounded Narváez in the eye and took him as a hostage quickly; also taken were his principal adherents, de Salvatierra and Diego Velasquez (the nephew of the Governor of Cuba). Evidence suggests that the two were in the midst of negotiations at the time, and Narváez was not expecting an attack. Cortés then completed winning over Narváez's captains with promises of the vast wealth in Tenochtitlan, inducing them to follow him back to the Aztec capital. Narváez was imprisoned in Vera Cruz, and his army was integrated into Cortés's forces.[2][page needed]

Rapid deterioration of relations edit

Massacre at the festival of Tóxcatl edit

 
Conquistador Pedro de Alvarado.

During Cortés's absence, Pedro de Alvarado was left in command in Tenochtitlan with 80 soldiers.[citation needed]

At this time, the Mexica (Aztecs) began to prepare for the annual festival of Toxcatl in early May, in honor of Tezcatlipoca, otherwise known as the Smoking Mirror or the Omnipotent Power. They honored this god during the onset of the dry season so that the god would fill dry streambeds and cause rain to fall on crops. Moctezuma secured the consent of Cortés to hold the festival, and again confirmed permission with Alvarado.[17]

Alvarado was commissioned by Cortés to take over his post and to foresee everything related to interactions among Spaniards and the Mexica, right at the time when the Toxcatl festival was to occur. Cortés expressly instructed Alvarado to not perform any military action, during his absence. Alvarado however had an unstable temperament and engaged in inquiring where the gold of the nobility was stored. [18]

He tortured priests and nobles and discovered that the Aztecs were planning a revolt. Unable to assert control over events, he sequestered Moctezuma and increased the guards around the tlatoani.[19]

By the day of the festival, the Aztecs had gathered on the Patio of Dances. Alvarado had sixty of his men as well as many of his Tlaxcalan allies into positions around the patio. The Aztecs initiated the Serpent Dance. The euphoric dancing as well as the accompanying flute and drum playing disturbed Alvarado about the potential for revolt. He ordered the gates closed and initiated the killing of many thousands of Aztec nobles, warriors and priests.[20]

Alvarado, the conquistadors and the Tlaxcalans retreated to their base in the Palace of Axayacatl and secured the entrances. Alvarado ordered his men to shoot their cannons, crossbows, and arquebuses into the gathering crowd. The result either preempted or triggered the Aztec revolt, which was, however, inevitable from the moment of Moctezuma's capture and was accelerated by the split of the Spanish forces. Alvarado forced Moctezuma to appeal to the crowd outside the Palace and this appeal temporarily calmed them.[21]

The massacre had the result of resolutely turning all the Aztecs against the Spanish and completely undermining Moctezuma's authority.[22]

Aztec revolt edit

Alvarado sent word to Cortés of the events, and Cortés hurried back to Tenochtitlan on June 24 with 1,300 soldiers, 96 horses, 80 crossbowmen, and 80 arquebusiers. Cortés also came with 2,000 Tlaxcalan warriors on the journey.[2] Cortés entered the palace unscathed, as the hostilities had not started yet, although the Aztecs had probably planned to ambush him. The Aztecs had already stopped sending food and supplies to the Spaniards. They became suspicious and watched for people trying to sneak supplies to them; many innocent people were slaughtered because they were suspected of helping them.[23] A few days after the great forces of Cortés got into Tenochtitlan, the roads were shut and the causeway bridges were raised. The Aztecs halted any Spanish attacks or attempts to leave the palace. Every Spanish soldier that was not killed was wounded.[2]

Cortés failed to grasp the full extent of the situation, as the attack on the festival was the last straw for the Aztecs, who now were completely against Moctezuma and the Spanish. The military gains of the attack therefore had a serious political cost for Cortés. His new followers were greatly disturbed at the power of the Aztecs, and held Cortés to be a liar since nobody revered them and brought them food and gifts as Cortés had promised.[2]

Cortés attempted to parlay with the Aztecs, and after this failed he sent Moctezuma to tell his people to stop fighting. However, the Aztecs refused.[23] The Spanish asserted that Moctezuma was stoned to death by his own people as he attempted to speak with them. Three stones hit him, one of them on the head, so cerebral hematoma is possible. Moctezuma refused all medical help as well as food, and died soon after the attack.[24] The Aztecs later claimed that Moctezuma had been murdered by the Spanish.[2][23] Two other local rulers were found strangled as well.[25] Moctezuma's younger brother Cuitláhuac, who had been ruler of Ixtlapalapan until then, was chosen as the Tlatoani.[2]

La Noche Triste and the Spanish flight to Tlaxcala edit

 
La Noche Triste – The Sad Night

The flight of the Spanish from Tenochtitlan was a crushing defeat for Cortés that was just short of annihilation. It is still remembered as "La Noche Triste," The Night of Sorrows. Popular tales say Cortés wept under a tree the night of the massacre of his troops at the hands of the Aztecs.[citation needed]

Initially, Cortés resolved to fight the Aztec troops opposed to him and win the city in direct conflict. This stemmed from three errors of judgment:[citation needed]

1. Underestimation of the Aztecs. Cortés fought the Tabascans, the Cempoalans, the Tlaxcalans and found them strong opponents, but always prevailed. He had never fought an Aztec army before and did not expect such resolve and martial skill as he encountered – although all his previous foes warned that the Aztecs were the greatest warriors they had ever seen and could not be withstood within their city.

2. Overrating his forces. Since Cortés won all his battles in Mexico before this while at the head of much inferior forces, being in charge of a nearly full Spanish tercio must have made him feel invincible. In fact, the only serviceable portion of his army were his old followers with great experience of Aztec warfare, who were by this time severely whittled down by wounds and disease. The newly arrived Narvaéz's men did not have experience in local fighting and were worth much less in combat - and eventually perished in much greater numbers than the veterans.

3. Unprepared for enemy tactics. The Aztecs had fought for the lake cities many times before and their tactics were excellent - the use of canoes, the use of flat roofs with prepared missiles, dropping down into the lake when cornered, and destroying bridges. Cavalry could not operate in these conditions and control of the water was crucial, which Cortés did not realize at first.

With this mindset, Cortés launched an attack directly at the chief temple of the city, the Cue of Huichilopotzli. In spite of determined opposition, the Spanish push got them to the top of the temple's 114 steps, but at a great loss. Cortés aimed at routing the Aztecs and by holding both Moctezuma and the great temple - being able to offer peace once again. However, the Spanish attack encountered such fierce resistance and numerous fatalities among his men, that the plan fell apart. The retreat to Spanish quarters was as hard as the attack, and part of their quarters were plundered in the meantime. The direct loss of nearly a hundred men dead and the fierce spirit of the Aztecs who refused to be cowed by his ascent of the temple convinced Cortés that a night escape was now his only option for survival.[citation needed]

Though a flight from the city would make Cortés appear weak before his indigenous allies, it was this or death for the Spanish forces. Cortés and his men were in the center of the city, and would most likely have to fight their way out no matter what direction they took. Cortés wanted to flee to Tlaxcala, so a path directly east would have been most favorable. Nevertheless, this would require hundreds of canoes to move all of Cortés's people and supplies, which he was unable to procure in his position.[2][page needed]

Cortés therefore had to choose among three land routes: north to Tlatelolco, which was the least dangerous path but required the longest trip through the city; south to Coyohuacan and Iztapalapa, two towns that would not welcome the Spanish; or west to Tlacopan, which required the shortest trip through Tenochtitlan, though they would not be welcome there either. Cortés decided on the west causeway to Tlacopan, needing the quickest route out of Tenochtitlan with all his provisions and people.[2][page needed]

Heavy rains and a moonless night provided some cover for the escaping Spanish.[25] On that "Sad Night," July 1, 1520, the Spanish forces exited the palace first with their indigenous allies close behind, bringing as much treasure as possible. Cortés had hoped to go undetected by muffling the horses' hooves and carrying wooden boards to cross the canals. The Spanish forces were able to pass through the first three canals, the Tecpantzinco, Tzapotlan, and Atenchicalco.[23][page needed]

However, they were discovered on the fourth canal at Mixcoatechialtitlan. One account says a woman fetching water saw them and alerted the city, another says it was a sentry. Some Aztecs set out in canoes, others by road to Nonchualco then Tlacopan to cut the Spanish off. The Aztecs attacked the fleeing Spanish on the Tlacopan causeway from canoes, shooting arrows at them. The Spanish fired their crossbows and arquebuses, but were unable to see their attackers or get into formation. Many Spaniards leaped into the water and drowned, weighed down by armor and booty.[23][page needed]

When faced with a gap in the causeway, Alvarado made the famous "leap of Alvarado" using a spear to get to the other side. Approximately a third of the Spaniards succeeded in reaching the mainland, while the remaining ones died in battle or were captured and later sacrificed on Aztec altars - these were reported to be mostly the followers of Narváez, less experienced and more weighted down with gold, which was handed out freely before the escape.[citation needed]

After crossing over the bridge, the surviving Spanish had little reprieve before the Aztecs appeared to attack and chase them towards Tlacopan. When they arrived at Tlacopan, a good number of Spaniards had been killed, as well as most of the indigenous warriors, and some of the horses; all of the cannons and most of the crossbows and other weapons were lost. In all battles with main Aztec forces after that, Spaniards noted their lost arms being used against them.[2][page needed] The Spanish finally found refuge in Otancalpolco, where they were aided by the Teocalhueyacans. The morning after, the Aztecs returned to recover the spoils from the canals.[23][page needed]

To reach Tlaxcala, Cortés had to bring his troops around Lake Texcoco. Though the Spanish were under attack the entire trip, because Cortés took his troops through the northern towns, they were at an advantage. The northern valley was less populous, travel was difficult, and it was still the agricultural season, so the attacks on Cortés's forces were not very heavy. As Cortés arrived in more densely inhabited areas east of the lake, the attacks were more forceful.[2][page needed]

Battle of Otumba edit

 
Battle of Otumba

Before reaching Tlaxcala, the scanty Spanish forces arrived at the plain of Otumba Valley (Otompan), where they were met by a vast Aztec army intent on their destruction. The Aztecs intended to cut short the Spanish retreat from Tenochtitlan and annihilate them. Here, the Aztecs made their own errors of judgement by underestimating the shock value of the Spanish caballeros because all they had seen was the horses traveling gingerly on the wet paved streets of Tenochtitlan. They had never seen them used in open battle on the plains. By marshalling on an open plain, they also allowed experienced Spanish commanders to bring to bear their own tactics, weaponry, and the know-how of European warfare.[25][page needed]

Despite the overwhelming numbers of Aztecs and the generally poor condition of the Spanish survivors, Cortés snatched victory from the jaws of defeat. He spotted the Aztec commander in his ornate and colourful feather tlahuiztli and immediately charged him with several horsemen, killing the Aztec commander and most other leaders as they were clearly marked by their golden plumage and an easy target for a charge. The many Tlaxcalan allies of the Spanish are mentioned as playing an important role in the battle, armed with Spanish swords and shields. The Spanish suffered some losses, but were victorious over the Aztecs, who then retreated and were pursued by cavalry.[25][page needed]

When Cortés finally reached Tlaxcala five days after fleeing Tenochtitlan, he had lost over 860 Spanish soldiers, over a thousand Tlaxcalans, as well as Spanish women who had accompanied Narváez's troops.[2][page needed] Cortés claimed only 15 Spaniards were lost along with 2,000 native allies. Cano, another primary source, gives 1,150 Spaniards dead, though this figure was likely too high and might encompass the total loss from entering Mexico to arriving into Tlaxcala. Cortés' chaplain back in Spain, Francisco López de Gómara, estimated that 450 Spaniards and 4,000 allies had died. Other sources estimate that nearly half of the Spanish and almost all of the natives were killed or wounded.[25][page needed]

The women survivors included Cortés's translator and lover La Malinche, María Estrada, Beatriz de Palacios, and two of Moctezuma's daughters who had been given to Cortés, including the emperor's favorite and reportedly most beautiful daughter Tecuichpotzin (later Doña Isabel Moctezuma). A third daughter died, leaving behind her infant by Cortés, the mysterious second "María" named in his will.

Both sides attempt to recover edit

Shifting alliances edit

 
An encounter between Spanish and Aztec combatants as depicted in the History of Tlaxcala.

Cuitláhuac had been elected as the emperor immediately following Moctezuma's death. It was necessary for him to prove his power and authority to keep the tributaries from revolting. Usually, the new king would take his army on a campaign before coronation; this demonstration would solidify necessary ties. However, Cuitláhuac was not in a position to do this, as it was not yet war season; therefore, allegiance to the Spanish seemed to be an option for many tributaries. The Aztec Empire was very susceptible to division: most of the tributary states were divided internally, and their loyalty to the Aztecs was based either on their own interests or fear of punishment.[citation needed]

It was necessary for Cortés to rebuild his alliances after his escape from Tenochtitlan before he could try again to take the city. He started with the Tlaxcalans. Tlaxcala was an autonomous state, and a fierce enemy of the Aztecs. Another strong motivation to join forces with the Spanish was that Tlaxcala was encircled by Aztec tributaries. The Tlaxcalans could have crushed the Spaniards at this point or turned them over to the Aztecs. In fact, the Aztecs sent emissaries promising peace and prosperity if they would do just that. The Tlaxcalan leaders rebuffed the overtures of the Aztec emissaries, deciding to continue their friendship with Cortés.[citation needed]

Cortés managed to negotiate an alliance; however, the Tlaxcalans required heavy concessions from Cortés for their continued support, which he was to provide after they defeated the Aztecs. They expected the Spanish to pay for their supplies, to have the city of Cholula, an equal share of any of the spoils, the right to build a citadel in Tenochtitlan, and finally, to be exempted from any future tribute. Cortés was willing to promise anything in the name of the King of Spain, and agreed to their demands. The Spanish did complain about having to pay for their food and water with their gold and other jewels with which they had escaped Tenochtitlan. The Spanish authorities would later disown this treaty with the Tlaxcalans after the fall of Tenochtitlan.[citation needed]

Cortés needed to gain other new allies as well. If the Spaniards were able to prove they could protect their new allies from the possibility of Aztec retribution, changing sides would not be too difficult for other tributaries. After Cortés' forces managed to defeat the smaller armies of some Aztec tributary states, Tepeyac, and later, Yauhtepec and Cuauhnahuac were easily won over. Cortés also used political maneuvering to assure the allegiance of other states, such as Tetzcoco. In addition, Cortés replaced kings with those who he knew would be loyal to him. Cortés now controlled many major towns, which simultaneously bolstered Cortés's forces while weakening the Aztecs.[2][page needed]

Though the largest group of indigenous allies were Tlaxcalans, the Huexotzinco, Atlixco, Tliliuhqui-Tepecs, Tetzcocans, Chalca, Alcohua, and Tepanecs were all important allies as well, and had all been previously subjugated by the Aztecs.[2][page needed][25][page needed]

Even the former Triple Alliance member city of Tetzcoco (or Texcoco) became a Spanish ally. As the rebellion attempt led by the Tetzcocan Tlatoani, Cacamatzin, in times of Moctezuma's reclusion was conjured by the Spanish,[26] Cortés named one of Cacamatzin's brothers as new tlatoani. He was Ixtlilxóchitl II, who had disagreed with his brother and always proved friendly to the Spanish. Later, Cortés also occupied the city as base for the construction of brigantines. However, one faction of Tetzcocan warriors remained loyal to the Aztecs.[27]

Cortés had to put down internal struggles among the Spanish troops as well. The remaining Spanish soldiers were somewhat divided; many wanted nothing more than to go home, or at the very least to return to Vera Cruz and wait for reinforcements. Cortés hurriedly quashed this faction, determined to finish what he had started. Not only had he staked everything he had or could borrow on this enterprise, he had completely compromised himself by defying his superior Velázquez. He knew that in defeat he would be considered a traitor to Spain, but that in success he would be its hero. So he argued, cajoled, bullied, and coerced his troops, and they began preparing for the siege of Mexico. In this Cortés showed skill at exploiting the divisions within and between the Aztec states while hiding those of his own troops.[2][page needed]

Smallpox reduces the local population edit

While Cortés was rebuilding his alliances and garnering more supplies, a smallpox epidemic struck the natives of the Valley of Mexico, including Tenochtitlan. The disease was probably carried by a Spanish slave from Narváez's forces, who had been abandoned in the capital during the Spanish flight.[2][page needed] Smallpox played a crucial role in the Spanish success during the Siege of Tenochtitlan from 1519 to 1521, a fact not mentioned in some historical accounts. The disease broke out in Tenochtitlan in late October 1520. The epidemic lasted sixty days, ending by early December.[28][page needed]

It was at this event where firsthand accounts were recorded in the Florentine Codex concerning the adverse effects of the smallpox epidemic of the Aztecs, which stated, "many died from this plague, and many others died of hunger. They could not get up and search for food, and everyone else was too sick to care for them, so they starved to death in their beds. By the time the danger was recognized, the plague was well established that nothing could halt it".[28][page needed] The smallpox epidemic caused not only infection to the Mexica peoples, but it weakened able bodied people who could no longer grow and harvest their crops, which in turn led to mass famine and death from malnutrition.[28][page needed] While the population of Tenochtitlan was recovering, the disease continued to Chalco, a city on the southeast corner of Lake Texcoco that was formerly controlled by the Aztecs but now occupied by the Spanish.[12]

Reproduction and population growth declined since people of child-bearing age either had to fight off the Spanish invasion or died due to famine, malnutrition or other diseases.[29] Diseases like smallpox could travel great distances and spread throughout large populations, which was the case with the Aztecs having lost approximately 50% of its population from smallpox and other diseases.[30] The disease killed an estimated forty percent of the native population in the area within a year. The Aztecs codices give ample depictions of the disease's progression. It was known to them as the huey ahuizotl (great rash).[citation needed]

Cuitlahuac contracted the disease and died after ruling for eighty days. Though the disease also affected the Spanish-aligned forces somewhat, it had more dire consequences for the leadership on the side of the Aztecs, as they were much harder hit by the smallpox than the Spanish leaders, who were largely resistant to the disease.[citation needed]

Aztecs regroup edit

It is often debated why the Aztecs took little action against the Spanish and their allies after they fled the city. One reason was that Tenochtitlan was certainly in a state of disorder: the smallpox disease ravaged the population, killing still more important leaders and nobles, and a new king, Cuauhtémoc, son of King Ahuitzotl, was placed on the throne in February 1521. The people were in the process of mourning the dead and rebuilding their damaged city. It is possible that the Aztecs truly believed that the Spanish were gone for good. In addition, Cortés astutely directed his forces in multiple directions in preparing his encirclement of the Aztec capital, and knew how to use the military initiative that he gained after the battle of Otumba.[2][page needed]

Staying within Tenochtitlan as a defensive tactic may have seemed like a reliable strategy at the time. This would allow them the largest possible army that would be close to its supplies, while affording them the mobility provided by the surrounding lake. Any Spanish assault would have to come through the causeways, where the Aztecs could easily attack them. As the only Aztec victory against the Spanish was won in the city using their peculiar urban warfare tactics, and as they counted on retaining control over the water, it seems natural that they wanted to risk their main army only to defend their capital. However, it would not be correct to infer that the Aztecs were passive observers of their fate - they did send numerous expeditions to aid their allies against Cortés at every point, with 10 to 20 thousand forces risked in every engagement, such as in Chalco and Chapultepec. They were driven back every time, and some of the native allies won their own victories over the Aztecs, as their dread of their invincible overlords faded with every success of Cortés.[2][page needed]

Siege of Tenochtitlan edit

Cortés plans and preparations edit

Cortés's overall plan was to trap and besiege the Aztecs within their capital. Cortés intended to do that primarily by increasing his power and mobility on the lake, while protecting "his flanks while they marched up the causeway", previously one of his main weaknesses. He ordered the construction of thirteen sloops (brigantines) in Tlaxcala, by his master shipbuilder, Martín López. Cortés continued to receive a steady stream of supplies from ships arriving at Veracruz, one ship from Spain loaded with "arms and powder", and two ships intended for Narváez. Cortés also received one hundred and fifty soldiers and twenty horses from the abandoned Panuco River settlement. A large source of succour for Cortés were the misguided expeditions by Francisco de Garay, the Governor of Jamaica, who kept sending ship after ship to aid his original Panuco venture long after it had been destroyed and abandoned; all of these ships and forces ended up reinforcing Cortés before the siege.[31]: 309, 311, 324 

Cortés then decided to move his army to Texcoco, where he could assemble and launch the sloops in the creeks flowing into Lake Texcoco. With his main headquarters in Texcoco, he could stop his forces from being spread too thin around the lake, and there he could contact them where they needed. Xicotencatl the Elder provided Cortés with over ten thousand Tlaxcalan warriors under the command of Chichimecatecle. Cortés departed Tlaxcala on the day after Christmas 1520. When his force arrived at the outskirts of Texcoco, he was met by seven chieftains stating their leader Coanacotzin begs "for your friendship". Cortés quickly replaced that leader with the son of Nezahualpilli, baptized as Don Hernán Cortés.[31]: 311–16 

After winning over Chalco and Tlamanalco, Cortés sent eight Mexican prisoners to Cuauhtemoc stating, "all the towns in the neighborhood were now on our side, as well as the Tlaxcalans". Cortés intended to blockade Mexico and then destroy it. Once Martin López and Chichimecatecle brought the logs and planks to Texcoco, the sloops were built quickly.[31]: 321–25  Cuauhtemoc's forces were defeated four times in March 1521, around Chalco and Huaxtepec, and Cortés received another ship load of arms and men from the Emperor.[31]: 326–32 

On 6 April 1521, Cortés met with the caciques around Chalco, and announced he would "bring peace" and blockade Mexico. He wanted all of their warriors ready the next day when he put thirteen sloops into the lake (misleadingly called "launches" in some translations). He was then joined at Chimaluacan by twenty thousand warriors from Chalco, Texcoco, Huejotzingo, and Tlaxcala.[31]: 333  Cortés fought a major engagement with seventeen thousand of Cuauhtemoc's warriors at Xochimilco, before continuing his march northwestward.[31]: 340–47  Cortés found Coyoacan, Tacuba, Azcapotzalco, and Cuauhitlan deserted.[31]: 347–49 

Returning to Texcoco, which had been guarded by his Captain Gonzalo de Sandoval, Cortés was joined by many more men from Castile.[31]: 349  Cortés then discovered a plot aimed at his murder, for which he had the main conspirator, Antonio de Villafana, hanged. Thereafter, Cortés had a personal guard of six soldiers, under the command of Antonio de Quiñones.[31]: 350–51  The Spaniards also held their third auctioning of branded slaves, Mexican allies captured by Cortés, "who had revolted after giving their obedience to His Majesty."[31]: 308, 352 

Cortés had 84 horsemen, 194 arbalesters and arquebusiers, plus 650 Spanish foot soldiers. He stationed 25 men on every sloop, 12 oarsmen, 12 crossbowmen and musketeers, and a captain. Each sloop had rigging, sails, oars, and spare oars. Additionally, Cortés had 20,000 warriors from Tlaxcala, Huexotzinco, and Cholula. The Tlaxcalans were led by Xicotencatl II and Chichimecatecle. Cortés was ready to start the blockade of Mexico after Corpus Christi (feast).[31]: 353–54 

Cortés put Alvarado in command of 30 horsemen, 18 arbalesters and arquebusiers, 150 Spanish foot soldiers, and 8,000 Tlaxcalan allies, and sent him, accompanied by his brother Jorge de Alvarado, Gutierrez de Badajoz, and Andrés de Monjaraz, to secure Tacuba. Cristóbal de Olid took 30 horsemen, 20 arbalesters and arquebusiers, 175 foot soldiers, and 8,000 Tlaxcalan allies, accompanied by Andrés de Tapia, Francisco Verdugo, and Francisco de Lugo, and secured Coyohuacan. Gonzalo de Sandoval took 24 horsemen, 14 arquebusiers and arbalesters, 150 Spanish foot soldiers, and 8,000 warriors from Chalco and Huexotzinco, accompanied by Luis Marin and Pedro de Ircio, to secure Ixtlapalapan. Cortés commanded the 13 sloops.[31]: 356  Cortés' forces took up these positions on May 22.[2]

The first battles edit

The forces under Alvarado and Olid marched first towards Chapultepec to disconnect the Aztecs from their water supply.[31]: 359  There were springs there that supplied much of the city's water by aqueduct; the rest of the city's water was brought in by canoe. The two generals then tried to bring their forces over the causeway at Tlacopan, resulting in the Battle of Tlacopan.[2] The Aztec forces managed to push back the Spanish and halt this assault on the capital with a determined and hard-fought land and naval counterattack.[23]: 94 [31]: 359–60 

Cortés faced "more than a thousand canoes" after he launched his thirteen sloops from Texcoco. Yet a "favorable breeze sprang up", enabling him to overturn many canoes and kill or capture many. After winning the First Battle on the Lake, Cortés camped with Olid's forces.[23]: 94 [31]: 362 

The Aztec canoe fleets worked well for attacking the Spanish because they allowed the Aztecs to surround the Spanish on both sides of the causeway. Cortés decided to make an opening in the causeway so that his brigantines could help defend his forces from both sides. He then distributed the sloops amongst his attacking forces, four to Alvarado, six for Olid, and two to Sandoval on the Tepeaquilla causeway. After this move, the Aztecs could no longer attack from their canoes on the opposite side of the Spanish brigantines, and "the fighting went very much in our favour", according to Díaz.[31]: 363 

With his brigantines, Cortés could also send forces and supplies to areas he previously could not, which put a kink in Cuauhtémoc's plan. To make it more difficult for the Spanish ships to aid the Spanish soldier's advance along the causeways, the Aztecs dug deep pits in shallow areas of the lakes, into which they hoped the Spaniards would stumble, and fixed concealed stakes into the lake bottom to impale the launches. The Spanish horses were also ineffective on the causeways.[31]: 364 

Cortés was forced to adapt his plans again, as his initial land campaigns were ineffective. He had planned to attack on the causeways during the daytime and retreat to camp at night; however, the Aztecs moved in to occupy the abandoned bridges and barricades as soon as the Spanish forces left. Consequently, Cortés had his forces set up on the causeways at night to defend their positions.[31]: 364–66  Cortés also sent orders to "never on any account to leave a gap unblocked, and that all the horsemen were to sleep on the causeway with their horses saddled and bridled all night long."[31]: 372  This allowed the Spanish to progress closer and closer towards the city.[2]

The Spaniards prevented food and water from reaching Tenochtitlan along the three causeways. They limited the supplies reaching the city from the nine surrounding towns via canoe, by sending out two of their launches on nightly capture missions. However, the Aztecs were successful in setting an ambush with thirty of their pirogues in an area in which they had placed impaling stakes. They captured two Spanish launches, killing Captains Juan de la Portilla and Pedro Barba.[31]: 368–69, 382–83 

The Spanish advance closer edit

 
During the siege of Tenochtitlan, Hernan Cortés narrowly escaped capture by Aztec warriors. Detail of a painting at the Museo de América, Madrid, Spain.

After capturing two chieftains, Cortés learned of another Aztec plot to ambush his launches with forty pirogues. Cortés then organized a counter-ambush with six of his launches, which was successful, "killing many warriors and taking many prisoners." Afterwards, the Aztec "did not dare to lay any more ambuscades, or to bring in food and water as openly as before." Lakeside towns, including Iztapalapa, Churubusco, Culuacan, and Mixquic made peace with the Spaniards.[31]: 374–75  The fighting in Tenochtitlan was described by the American historian Charles Robinson as "desperate" as both sides battled one another in the streets in a ferocious battle where no quarter was given nor asked for.[32]

Cuauhtemoc then attacked all three Spanish camps simultaneously with his entire army on the feast day of St. John. On the Tacuba Causeway across Lake Texcoco connecting Tenochtitlan to the mainland along a street now known as Puente de Alvarado (Alvarado's Bridge) in Mexico City, Pedro de Alvarado made a mad cavalry charge across a gap in the Causeway.[32] As Alvarado and his cavalry emerged on the other side of the gap with the infantry behind, Aztec canoes filled the gap.[32] Pedro de Alvarado was wounded along with eight men in his camp.[31]: 377  Alvarado escaped from the ambush, but five of his men were captured and taken off to the Great Temple to be sacrificed.[32] Much to their horror, the Spanish from their positions could see their captured comrades being sacrificed on the Great Pyramid, which increased their hatred of the Aztecs.[33] At the end of each day, the Spanish gave a prayer: "Oh, thanks be to God that they did not carry me off today to be sacrificed."[33]

 
 
Scenes of the Battle of Colhuacatonco in the Florentine Codex. The scenes at the left depict the beginning of the battle as the Spanish assault force advanced into the city, and the scenes at the right depict the victorious Mexica forces expelling the last assault forces and taking their prisoners to be sacrificed.

Cortés then decided to push forward a simultaneous attack towards the Mexican market square, resulting in what is now known as the Battle of Colhuacatonco. However, he neglected to fill in a channel as he advanced, and when the Aztec counter-attacked, Cortés was wounded and almost captured. Cristóbal de Olea and Cristóbal de Guzmán gave their lives for Cortés, and sixty-five Spanish soldiers were captured alive. Cuauhtemoc then had five of their heads thrown at Alvarado's camp, four thrown at Cortés' camp, six thrown at Sandoval's camp, while ten more were sacrificed to the Huitzilopochtli and Texcatlipoca idols.[31]: 379–83 

Díaz relates, "...the dismal drum of Huichilobos sounded again,...we saw our comrades who had been captured in Cortés' defeat being dragged up the steps to be sacrificed...cutting open their chests, drew out their palpitating hearts which they offered to the idols...the Indian butchers...cut off their arms and legs...then they ate their flesh with a sauce of peppers and tomatoes...throwing their trunks and entrails to the lions and tigers and serpents and snakes." Cuauhtemoc then "sent the hands and feet of our soldiers, and the skin of their faces...to all the towns of our allies..." The Aztec sacrificed a batch of Spanish prisoners each night for ten nights.[31]: 386–87, 391  The Aztec cast off the cooked limbs of their prisoners to the Tlaxcalans, shouting: "Eat the flesh of these teules ["Gods"-a reference to the early belief that Spanish were gods] and of your brothers because we are sated with it".[33]

The Aztec continued to attack the Spaniards on the causeways, "day and night". The Spanish allies in the cities surrounding the lake lost many lives or "went home wounded", and "half their canoes were destroyed". Yet, "they did not help the Aztec any more, for they loathed them." Yet, of the 24,000 allies, only 200 remained in the three Spanish camps, the rest deciding to return home. Ahuaxpitzactzin (later baptized as Don Carlos), the brother of the Texcoco lord Don Fernando, remained in Cortés' camp with forty relatives and friends. The Huejotzinco Cacique remained in Sandoval's camp with fifty men. Alvarado's camp had Chichimecatecle, the two sons of Lorenzo de Vargas, and eighty Tlaxcalans.[31]: 388–89  To maintain the advance, Cortés razed every neighborhood he captured, using the rubble to fill up canals and gaps in the causeways to allow his infantry and cavalry to advance in formation, a fighting tactic that favored the Spanish instead of engaging in hand-to-hand street fighting, which favored the Aztec.[33]

Cortés then concentrated on letting the Aztec "eat up all the provisions they have" and drink brackish water. The Spaniards gradually advanced along the causeways, though without allies. Their launches had freedom of the lake, after devising a method for breaking the impaling stakes the Aztec had placed for them. After twelve days of this, the Spanish allies realized the prophecy by the Aztec idols, that the Spaniards would be dead in ten days, was false. Two thousand warriors returned from Texcoco, as did many Tlaxcan warriors under Tepaneca from Topeyanco, and those from Huejotzingo and Cholula.[31]: 390–91  Cuauhtemoc then enlisted his allies in Matlazingo, Malinalco, and Tulapa, in attacking the Spaniards from the rear. However, Cortés sent Andrés de Tapia, with 20 horsemen and 100 soldiers, and Gonzalo de Sandoval, with 20 horsemen and 80 soldiers, to help his allies attack this new threat. They returned with two of the Matlazingo chieftains as prisoners.[31]: 396 

As the Spanish employed more successful strategies, their stranglehold on Tenochtitlan tightened, and famine began to affect the Aztecs. The Aztecs were cut off from the mainland because of the occupied causeways. Cortés also had the advantage of fighting a mostly defensive battle. Though Cuauhtémoc organized a large-scale attack on Alvarado's forces at Tlacopan, the Aztec forces were pushed back. Throughout the siege, the Aztecs had little aid from outside of Tenochtitlan. The remaining loyal tributaries had difficulty sending forces, because it would leave them vulnerable to Spanish attack. Many of these loyal tributaries were surrounded by the Spanish.[citation needed]

Though the tributaries often went back and forth in their loyalties at any sign of change, the Spanish tried hard not to lose any allies. They feared a "snowball effect": if one tributary left, others might follow. Therefore, they brutally crushed any tributaries who tried to send help to Tenochtitlan. Any shipments of food and water were intercepted, and even those trying to fish in the lake were attacked.[2] The situation inside the city was desperate: because of the famine and the smallpox there were already thousands of victims, women offered to the gods even their children's clothes, so most children were stark naked. Many Aztecs drank dirty, brackish water because of their severe thirst and contracted dysentery. The famine was so severe that the Aztecs ate anything, even wood, leather, and bricks for sustenance.[12]

The Spanish continued to push closer to Tenochtitlan. The Aztecs changed tactics as often as the Spanish did, preventing Cortés's forces from being entirely victorious. However, the Aztecs were severely worn down. They had no new troops, supplies, food, nor water. The Spanish received a large amount of supplies from Vera Cruz, and, somewhat renewed, finally entered the main part of Tenochtitlan.[2][31]: 396 

The Aztecs' last stand edit

Cortés then ordered a simultaneous advance of all three camps towards the Tlatelolco marketplace. Alvarado's company made it there first, and Gutierrez de Badajoz advanced to the top of the Huichilopotzli cu, setting it afire and planting their Spanish banners. Cortés' and Sandoval's men were able to join them there after four more days of fighting.[31]: 396–98 

The Spanish forces and their allies advanced into the city. Despite inflicting heavy casualties, the Aztecs could not halt the Spanish advance. While the fighting in the city raged, the Aztecs cut out and ate the hearts of 70 Spanish prisoners-of-war at the altar to Huitzilopochtli. By August, many of the native inhabitants had fled Tlatelolco.[23] Cortés sent emissaries to negotiate with the Tlatelolcas to join his side, but the Tlatelolcas remained loyal to the Aztecs. Throughout the siege, the Tlaxcalans waged a merciless campaign against the Aztecs who had long oppressed them as for a hundred years the Tlaxcalans had been forced to hand over an annual quota of young men and women to be sacrificed and eaten at the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan, and now the Tlaxcalans saw their chance for revenge.[34] The American historian Charles Robinson wrote: "Centuries of hate and the basic viciousness of Mesoamerican warfare combined in violence that appalled Cortés himself".[34] In letter to the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, Cortés wrote:

"We had more trouble in preventing our allies from killing with such cruelty than we had in fighting the enemy. For no race, however savage, has ever practiced such fierce and unnatural cruelty as the natives of these parts. Our allies also took many spoils that day, which we were unable to prevent, as they numbered more than 150,000 and we Spaniards only some nine hundred. Neither our precautions nor our warnings could stop their looting, though we did all we could...I had posted Spaniards in every street, so that when the people began to come out [to surrender] they might prevent our allies from killing those wretched people, whose numbers was uncountable. I also told the captains of our allies that on no account should any of those people be slain; but there were so many that we could not prevent more than fifteen thousand being killed and sacrificed [by the Tlaxcalans] that day".[34]

Throughout the battles with the Spanish, the Aztecs still practiced their traditional ceremonies and customs. Tlapaltecatl Opochtzin was chosen to be outfitted to wear the quetzal owl costume. He was supplied with darts sacred to Huitzilopochtli, which came with wooden tips and flint tops. When he came, the Spanish soldiers appeared scared and intimidated. They chased the owl-warrior, but he was neither captured nor killed. The Aztecs took this as a good sign, but they could fight no more, and after discussions with the nobles, Cuauhtémoc began talks with the Spanish.[12]

At some point in the final days of the battle, a tornado struck the basin, over Tlatelolco, and then moved out over the lake.[35] This was the first tornado seen by Europeans in the Americas.

After several failed peace overtures to Cuauhtémoc, Cortés ordered Sandoval to attack that part of the city in which Cuauhtémoc had retreated. As hundreds of canoes filled the lake fleeing the doomed city, Cortés sent his brigantines out to intercept them.[34] Cuauhtémoc attempted to flee with his property, gold, jewels, and family in fifty pirogues, but was soon captured by Sandoval's launches, and brought before Cortés.[31]: 401–03 

Surrender edit

 
"The Torture of Cuauhtémoc", a 19th-century painting by Leandro Izaguirre

The Aztec forces were destroyed and the Aztecs surrendered on 13 August 1521, Julian Date.[31]: 404  Cortés demanded the return of the gold lost during La Noche Triste. Under torture, by burning their feet with oil, Cuauhtémoc and the lord of Tacuba confessed to dumping his gold and jewels into the lake. Yet, little gold remained, as earlier, a fifth had been sent to Spain and another kept by Cortés. "In the end...the remaining gold all fell to the King's officials."[31]: 409–10, 412 

Cuauhtémoc was taken prisoner the same day, as related above, and remained the titular leader of Tenochtitlan, under the control of Cortés, until he was hanged for treason in 1525 while accompanying a Spanish expedition to Guatemala.[citation needed]

Casualties and atrocities edit

 
"The Last Days of Tenochtitlan, Conquest of Mexico by Cortez", a 19th-century painting by William de Leftwich Dodge.

100,000[7] to 240,000[8][9] were killed in the campaign overall including warriors and civilians. As many as 40,000 Aztec bodies were floating in the canals or awaiting burial after the siege.[7] Almost all of the Aztec nobility were dead, and the remaining survivors were mostly young women and very young children.[25] At least 40,000 Aztec civilians were killed and captured.[6]

After the Fall of Tenochtitlan the remaining Aztec warriors and civilians fled the city as the Spanish allies, primarily the Tlaxcalans, continued to attack even after the surrender, slaughtering thousands of the remaining civilians and looting the city. The Tlaxcalans did not spare women or children: they entered houses, stealing all precious things they found, raping and then killing women, stabbing children.[23][failed verification] The survivors marched out of the city for the next three days.[2] One source claims 6,000 were massacred in the town of Ixtapalapa alone.[36] Due to the wholesale slaughter after the campaign and the destruction of Aztec culture some sources such as Israel Charney,[37] John C. Cox,[38] and Norman Naimark[36] have likened the siege to a genocide.[citation needed]

Although some reports put the number as low as forty, the Spanish lost over 100 soldiers in the siege, while thousands of Tlaxcalans perished. It is estimated that around 1,800 Spaniards died from all causes during the two-year campaign—from Veracruz to Tenochtitlan. (Thomas, pp. 528–29) The remaining Spanish forces consisted of 800–900 Spaniards, eighty horses, sixteen pieces of artillery, and Cortés' thirteen brigantines.[2] Other sources estimate that around 860 Spanish soldiers and 20,000 Tlaxcalan warriors were killed during all the battles in this region from 1519 to 1521.[citation needed]

It is well accepted that Cortés' indigenous allies, which may have numbered as many as 200,000 over the three-year period of the conquest, were indispensable to his success.[39]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Teoría de la bandera.Guido Villa.1974 "The companies portentous discovery and conquest of the New World, met under the banners of Castile incarnate". Las portentosas empresas del descubrimiento y la conquista del Nuevo Mundo, se cumplieron bajo los encarnados pendones de Castilla.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Hassig, Ross. Mexico and the Spanish Conquest. New York: Longman, 1994.[page needed]
  3. ^ "PBS : Conquistadors – Cortés". www.pbs.org.
  4. ^ a b Clodfelter, Micheal (2017). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 (4th ed.). McFarland. ISBN 978-1476625850.
  5. ^ Russell, Philip (2015). The Essential History of Mexico: From Pre-Conquest to Present. Routledge. ISBN 978-1135017217.
  6. ^ a b Paulkovich, Michael (2012). No Meek Messiah. Spillix Publishing. p. 117. ISBN 978-0988216112.
  7. ^ a b c Karin Solveig Björnson, Kurt Jonassohn. Genocide and Gross Human Rights Violations: In Comparative Perspective. Transaction Publishers. p. 202. ISBN 978-0415842785.
  8. ^ a b (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2018-07-01.
  9. ^ a b Singer, Gabrielle (2004). A Purple Bull page 68. Vantage Press. ISBN 978-0533148356.
  10. ^ there Conquistadors, with Michael Wood – website for 2001 PBS documentary
  11. ^ The Mexico Reader: History, Culture, Politics. Joseph, Gilbert M. and Henderson, Timothy J. Duke University Press, 2002.[page needed]
  12. ^ a b c d e "General History of The Things of New Spain." de Sahagun, Bernardino. The Human Record: Sources of Global History, Volume II. Andrea, Alfred J. and James H. Overfield. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2005. 128–33.
  13. ^ Visión de los vencidos. León-Portilla, Miguel (Ed.) [1959] (1992). The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico, Ángel María Garibay K. (Nahuatl-Spanish trans.), Lysander Kemp (Spanish-English trans.), Alberto Beltran (illus.), Expanded and updated edition, Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN 0-8070-5501-8.
  14. ^ Camilla Townsend, Malintzin's Choices, University of New Mexico Press, 2006
  15. ^ Cervantes de Salazar, Francisco. Crónica de la Nueva España. Madrid: Linkgua Ediciones, 2007.[page needed]
  16. ^ Hassig (2006, p. 107).
  17. ^ Levy, Buddy, Conquistador: Hernan Cortes, King Montezuma, and the Last Stands of the Aztecs, (New York: Bantam Books, 2008), 163–64.
  18. ^ Diaz del Castillo, Bernal, The True History of the Conquest of New Spain,(Facsimile, 1904)
  19. ^ Levy, Buddy, Conquistador: Hernan Cortes, King Montezuma, and the Last Stands of the Aztecs, (New York: Bantam Books, 2008), 166.
  20. ^ Levy, Buddy, Conquistador: Hernan Cortes, King Montezuma, and the Last Stands of the Aztecs, (New York: Bantam Books, 2008), 168–70.
  21. ^ Levy, Buddy, Conquistador: Hernan Cortes, King Montezuma, and the Last Stands of the Aztecs, (New York: Bantam Books, 2008), 170–71.
  22. ^ Levy, Buddy, Conquistador: Hernan Cortes, King Montezuma, and the Last Stands of the Aztecs, (New York: Bantam Books, 2008), 171.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j *León-Portilla, Miguel (Ed.) (1992) [1959]. The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico. Ángel María Garibay K. (Nahuatl-Spanish trans.), Lysander Kemp (Spanish-English trans.), Alberto Beltran (illus.) (Expanded and updated ed.). Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN 0-8070-5501-8.
  24. ^ Smith 1996, 2003, p. 275.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g Gruzinski, Serge. The Aztecs: Rise and Fall of an Empire, "Abrams Discoveries" series. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1992.[page needed]
  26. ^ "Capitulo cuarenta y cuatro de Historia verdadera de la conquista de la Nueva España, de Bernal Diaz del Castillo. Captura y diseño, Chantal Lopez y Omar Cortes para la Biblioteca Virtual Antorcha". www.antorcha.net.
  27. ^ . 9 February 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-02-09.
  28. ^ a b c León, Portilla Miguel. 2006 The Broken Spears: the Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico. Boston: Beacon
  29. ^ (Leon-Portilla 1962: 117, León, Portilla Miguel. 2006 The Broken Spears: the Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico. Boston: Beacon
  30. ^ (Diamond 1999: 210), Diamond, Jared M. 1999 Guns, Germs, and Steel: the Fates of Human Societies. New York: Norton.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Diaz, B., 1963, The Conquest of New Spain, London: Penguin Books, ISBN 0140441239
  32. ^ a b c d Robinson, Charles The Spanish Invasion of Mexico 1519–1521, London: Osprey, 2004 p. 58.
  33. ^ a b c d Robinson, Charles The Spanish Invasion of Mexico 1519–1521, London: Osprey, 2004 p. 59.
  34. ^ a b c d Robinson, Charles The Spanish Invasion of Mexico 1519–1521, London: Osprey, 2004 p. 60.
  35. ^ Fuentes, Oscar Velasco (1 November 2010). "The Earliest Documented Tornado in the Americas". Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. Jstor.org by Oscar Velasco Fuentes Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 91 (11): 1515–1524. Bibcode:2010BAMS...91.1515F. doi:10.1175/2010BAMS2874.1. JSTOR 26233054.
  36. ^ a b M. Naimak, Norman (2017). Genocide: A World History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199765263.
  37. ^ Charney, Israel W. (1999). Encyclopedia of Genocide, Volumes 1-2. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 278. ISBN 9780874369281.
  38. ^ Cox, John M. In Adam Jones, ed, Evoking Genocide (2009), pp. 5 Diego Rivera, La Gran Tenochtitlán Lost Worlds (PDF).
  39. ^ Black, Jeremy, ed. World History Atlas. London: Dorling Kindersley, 2000.[page needed]

References edit

Primary sources edit

Secondary sources edit

  • Sheppard, Si. Tenochtitlan 1519–21: Clash of Civilizations. Oxford: Osprey, 2018.
  • Andrea, Alfred J. and James H. Overfield. The Human Record: Sources of Global History, Volume II. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2005.
  • Black, Jeremy, ed. World History Atlas. London: Dorling Kindersley, 2000.
  • Gruzinski, Serge. The Aztecs: Rise and Fall of an Empire, "Abrams Discoveries" series. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1992.
  • Hassig, Ross. Mexico and the Spanish Conquest. New York: Longman, 1994.
  • Hassig, Ross. Mexico and the Spanish Conquest. 2nd ed., Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2006. ISBN 0-8061-3793-2 OCLC 64594483
  • Conquest: Cortés, Montezuma, and the Fall of Old Mexico by Hugh Thomas (1993) ISBN 0-671-51104-1
  • Cortés and the Downfall of the Aztec Empire by Jon Manchip White (1971) ISBN 0-7867-0271-0
  • History of the Conquest of Mexico. by William H. Prescott ISBN 0-375-75803-8
  • The Rain God cries over Mexico by László Passuth
  • Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest by Matthew Restall, Oxford University Press (2003) ISBN 0-19-516077-0
  • The Conquest of America by Tzvetan Todorov (1996) ISBN 0-06-132095-1
  • "Hernando Cortés" by Fisher, M. & Richardson K.[ISBN missing]
  • "Hernando Cortés" Crossroads Resource Online.[ISBN missing]
  • "Hernando Cortés" by Jacobs, W.J., New York: Franklin Watts, Inc., 1974.[ISBN missing]
  • "The World's Greatest Explorers: Hernando Cortés." Chicago, by Stein, R.C., Illinois: Chicago Press Inc. 1991.
  • Davis, Paul K. (2003). "Besieged: 100 Great Sieges from Jericho to Sarajevo." Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • History of the Conquest of Mexico, with a Preliminary View of Ancient Mexican Civilization, and the Life of the Conqueror, Hernando Cortes By William H. Prescott [1]
  • The Aztecs by Michael E. Smith (1996, 2003), Blackwell Publishing, ISBN 0-631-23016-5
  • Leibsohn, Dana, and Barbara E. Mundy, "The Political Force of Images," Vistas: Visual Culture in Spanish America, 1520–1820 (2015). http://www.fordham.edu/vistas.

External links edit

  •  – web directory with thumbnail galleries
  • Catholic Encyclopedia (1911)
  • Conquistadors, with Michael Wood – website for 2001 PBS documentary
  • Ibero-American Electronic Text Series presented online by the University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center
  • Página de relación

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fall, tenochtitlan, this, article, cites, sources, does, provide, page, references, help, providing, page, numbers, existing, citations, august, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, fall, tenochtitlan, capital, aztec, empire, important, event, s. This article cites its sources but does not provide page references You can help providing page numbers for existing citations August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The fall of Tenochtitlan the capital of the Aztec Empire was an important event in the Spanish conquest of the empire It occurred in 1521 following extensive manipulation of local factions and exploitation of pre existing political divisions by Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes He was aided by La Malinche his interpreter and companion and by other indigenous allies who Fall of TenochtitlanPart of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire Conquista de Mexico por Cortes An Unknown artist second half of the 17th century Library of Congress Washington DC DateMay 26 August 13 1521 2 months 2 weeks and 4 days LocationTenochtitlan present day Mexico City MexicoResultSpanish and Tlaxcallan victory Fall of the Aztec EmpireBelligerentsSpanish Empire Governorate of Cuba Confederacy of Tlaxcala Tetzcoco Otomis Chalco Mixquic Iztapalapa 1 Triple Alliance Tenochtitlan TlatelolcoCommanders and leadersHernan Cortes Gonzalo de Sandoval Pedro de Alvarado Cristobal de Olid Xicotencatl I Xicotencatl II Chichimecatecle Ixtlilxochitl IICuauhtemoc POW Coanacoch POW Strength200 000 native allies900 1 300 Spanish infantry90 100 cavalry16 cannons 2 13 lake brigantines 2 80 000 warriors 3 400 war canoes 4 Casualties and losses450 860 Spanish 2 20 000 Tlaxcaltecs100 000 killed in action 5 300 war canoes sunk 4 At least 40 000 Aztecs civilians killed and captured 6 other sources claim 100 000 7 to 240 000 8 9 were killed in the campaign overall including warriors and civiliansAlthough numerous battles were fought between the Aztec Empire and the Spanish led coalition which was composed mainly of Tlaxcaltec men it was the siege of Tenochtitlan that directly led to the fall of the Aztec civilization and the ensuing sacking and violence against the survivors The indigenous population at the time was devastated due to a smallpox epidemic which killed much of its leadership Because smallpox had been endemic in Spain for centuries the Spanish had developed an acquired immunity and were affected relatively little in the epidemic The conquest of the Aztec Empire was a critical stage in the Spanish colonization of the Americas With this conquest the Spanish Empire used Tenochtitlan s substantial access to the Pacific Ocean to reach Asian markets clarification needed Contents 1 Early events 1 1 Cortes goes to Tenochtitlan 1 2 Tensions mount between Aztecs and Spaniards 2 Rapid deterioration of relations 2 1 Massacre at the festival of Toxcatl 2 2 Aztec revolt 2 3 La Noche Triste and the Spanish flight to Tlaxcala 2 4 Battle of Otumba 3 Both sides attempt to recover 3 1 Shifting alliances 3 2 Smallpox reduces the local population 3 3 Aztecs regroup 4 Siege of Tenochtitlan 4 1 Cortes plans and preparations 4 2 The first battles 4 3 The Spanish advance closer 4 4 The Aztecs last stand 5 Surrender 5 1 Casualties and atrocities 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Primary sources 8 2 Secondary sources 9 External linksEarly events editMain article Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire Cortes goes to Tenochtitlan edit In April 1519 Hernan Cortes a nobleman recently landed in present day Cuba and the leader of the third Spanish expedition to the coast of what is known as Mexico landed at San Juan de Ulua a high quality harbour on Mexico s east coast with 508 soldiers 100 sailors and 14 small cannons Survivors of the previous two expeditions directed him to this harbour Diego Velazquez de Cuellar the Governor of Cuba called for Cortes to lead an expedition into Mexico after favourable reports from two previous expeditions to Yucatan caught the interest of the Spanish in Cuba 10 Under pressure by his relatives who had a different leader in mind Velazquez revoked Cortes s mandate to lead the expedition before the man left Cuba Thus Cortes had to struggle to persist as expedition leader while still in Cuba twice messengers from Velazquez arrived to depose him and twice they were dissuaded from executing their mission After Cortes sailed Velazquez sent an army led by Panfilo de Narvaez to take him into custody citation needed But after reaching Mexico Cortes used the same legal tactic as had been used by Governor Velazquez when he invaded Cuba years before he created a local government and had himself elected as the magistrate He was thus theoretically responsible only to the King of Spain Cortes followed this tactic when he and his men established the city of Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz also known as Veracruz seven miles from the harbour of San Juan de Ulua on the east coast of the area An inquiry into Cortes action was conducted in Spain in 1529 and no action was taken against him citation needed Cortes happened to land at the borders of Cempoala a vassal state to the Aztecs that had many grievances against them As he encountered several polities who resented Aztec rule Cortes told them he had arrived on orders of his Emperor to improve conditions abolish human sacrifices teach the locals the true faith and stop them from robbing each other citation needed He was successful in enforcing excellent behaviour by his army when among potential allies Cortes clashed with some of these polities among them the Totonac and Tlaxcalan The latter gave him two good day battles and one night battle and kept up a strong defence holding off his army on a hilltop for two weeks His numerically inferior force finally triumphed when the Tlaxcalan began to consider his ceaseless offers of peace Notably Xicotencatl the Elder wanted to form an alliance with the Spaniards against the Aztecs which was the goal of Cortes as well citation needed It once was widely believed that the Aztecs first thought Cortes was Quetzalcoatl a mythical god prophesied to return to Mexico coincidentally in the same year Cortes landed and from the same direction he came This is now believed when to have been a myth of the conquerors and perhaps of natives who wished to rationalize the actions of the Aztec tlatoani Moctezuma II Most scholars who agree that the Aztecs especially the inner circle around Moctezuma did not believe that Cortes was a god in any shape or form 11 Messages between Cortes and Moctezuma however frequently allude to the legend which was widely known across the Aztec dominions to both Aztecs and their subjects It strongly influenced them as Bernal Diaz del Castillo repeatedly attests citation needed Moctezuma sent a group of noblemen and other emissaries to meet Cortes at Quauhtechcac These emissaries brought golden jewelry as a gift which greatly pleased the Spaniards 12 According to the Florentine Codex Lib 12 f 6r Moctezuma also ordered his messengers to carry the highly symbolic penacho headdress of Quetzalcoatl de Tula to Cortes and place it on him As news about the strangers reached the capital city Moctezuma became increasingly fearful and considered fleeing the city He reportedly resigned himself to what he considered to be the fate of his people 13 Cortes continued on his march toward Tenochtitlan Before entering the city on November 8 1519 Cortes and his troops prepared for battle by armoring themselves and their horses and arranging into military rank with four leading horsemen followed by five contingents of foot soldiers The contingents had iron swords and wooden or leather shields horsemen in cuirasses armed with iron lances swords and wooden shields crossbowmen more horsemen soldiers armed with arquebus guns and lastly indigenous soldiers from Tlaxcalan Tliliuhquitepec and Huexotzinco armed with cotton armor and shields and crossbows many of whom carried provisions in baskets or bundles or escorted the cannons on wooden carts citation needed Cortes s army entered the city on the flower covered causeway from Iztapalapa associated with the god Quetzalcoatl Cortes was amicably received by Moctezuma The captive woman Malinalli Tenepal also known as Dona Marina translated from Nahuatl to Chontal Maya the Spaniard Geronimo de Aguilar translated from Chontal Maya to Spanish citation needed The Spanish soon took Moctezuma hostage on November 14 1519 as a safety measure because they were so outnumbered by the Aztec Secondly they learned that Moctezuma had heard from a messenger a few days before Cortes that at least eight hundred more Spaniards in thirteen great ships had arrived on the coast Cortes had been communicating to the Crown that he already had control of the territory and was practically running the city of Tenochtitlan He was at risk of having his commission revoked because the vast new Spanish forces were sent by his enemy Diego Velazquez If they competed for power they could have ended his campaign in Mexico and might have doomed the try for a lightning conquest citation needed Cortes attempted to take Moctezuma hostage in an effort to ensure his cooperation 14 According to all eyewitness accounts Moctezuma initially refused to leave his palace but after a series of threats from and debates with the Spanish captains and assurances from Dona Marina he agreed to move with his retinue to the Axayactal palace The first captain assigned to guard him was Pedro de Alvarado Other Aztec lords were also detained by the Spanish when they started questioning the authority of their captive tlatoani 12 The palace was surrounded by over 100 Spanish soldiers in order to prevent any attempt at rescue 15 Tensions mount between Aztecs and Spaniards edit It is uncertain why Moctezuma cooperated with the Spaniards It is possible he feared losing his life or political power however one of the effective threats wielded by Cortes was the destruction of the city in the case of fighting between Spaniards and Aztecs which ultimately came to pass This Moctezuma at all costs wanted to avoid vacillating and deferring the rupture until this policy claimed his life From the perspective of the tlatoani the Spaniards might have been assigned some decisive role by fate It could also have been a tactical move Moctezuma may have wanted to gather more information on the Spaniards or to wait for the end of the agricultural season and strike at the beginning of the war season clarification needed However he did not carry out either of these actions even though high ranking military leaders such as his brother Cuitlahuac and nephew Cacamatzin urged him to do so 2 page needed With Moctezuma as his captive Cortes did not need to worry about being cut off from supplies or being attacked although some of his captains had such concerns He also assumed that he could control the Aztecs through Moctezuma However Cortes had little knowledge of the ruling system of the Aztecs Moctezuma was not all powerful as Cortes imagined Being appointed to and maintaining the position of tlatoani was based on the ability to rule decisively he could be replaced by another noble if he failed to do so At any sign of weakness Aztec nobles within Tenochtitlan and in other Aztec tributaries were liable to rebel As Moctezuma complied with orders issued by Cortes such as commanding tribute to be gathered and given to the Spaniards his authority was slipping and quickly his people began to turn against him 2 page needed Cortes and his army were permitted to stay in the Palace of Axayacatl and tensions continued to grow While the Spaniards were in Tenochtitlan Velazquez assembled a force of nineteen ships more than 1400 soldiers with twenty cannons eighty horsemen one hundred and twenty crossbowmen and eighty arquebusiers under the command of Panfilo de Narvaez to capture Cortes and return him to Cuba Velazquez felt that Cortes had exceeded his authority and had been aware of Cortes s misconduct for nearly a year He had to wait for favorable winds though and was unable to send any forces until spring Narvaez s troops landed at San Juan de Ulua on the Gulf of Mexico coast around April 20 1520 16 After Cortes became aware of their arrival he left Pedro de Alvarado in charge in Tenochtitlan with 80 soldiers and brought all his forces about two hundred and forty men by quick marches to Narvaez s camp in Cempohuallan on May 27 Several negotiations between the two Spaniards took place on the way in which Cortes was able to persuade many persons of weight in Narvaez s camp to incline to his side Cortes attacked Narvaez s camp late at night his men much superior in experience and organization wounded Narvaez in the eye and took him as a hostage quickly also taken were his principal adherents de Salvatierra and Diego Velasquez the nephew of the Governor of Cuba Evidence suggests that the two were in the midst of negotiations at the time and Narvaez was not expecting an attack Cortes then completed winning over Narvaez s captains with promises of the vast wealth in Tenochtitlan inducing them to follow him back to the Aztec capital Narvaez was imprisoned in Vera Cruz and his army was integrated into Cortes s forces 2 page needed Rapid deterioration of relations editMassacre at the festival of Toxcatl edit Main article Massacre in the Great Temple of Tenochtitlan nbsp Conquistador Pedro de Alvarado During Cortes s absence Pedro de Alvarado was left in command in Tenochtitlan with 80 soldiers citation needed At this time the Mexica Aztecs began to prepare for the annual festival of Toxcatl in early May in honor of Tezcatlipoca otherwise known as the Smoking Mirror or the Omnipotent Power They honored this god during the onset of the dry season so that the god would fill dry streambeds and cause rain to fall on crops Moctezuma secured the consent of Cortes to hold the festival and again confirmed permission with Alvarado 17 Alvarado was commissioned by Cortes to take over his post and to foresee everything related to interactions among Spaniards and the Mexica right at the time when the Toxcatl festival was to occur Cortes expressly instructed Alvarado to not perform any military action during his absence Alvarado however had an unstable temperament and engaged in inquiring where the gold of the nobility was stored 18 He tortured priests and nobles and discovered that the Aztecs were planning a revolt Unable to assert control over events he sequestered Moctezuma and increased the guards around the tlatoani 19 By the day of the festival the Aztecs had gathered on the Patio of Dances Alvarado had sixty of his men as well as many of his Tlaxcalan allies into positions around the patio The Aztecs initiated the Serpent Dance The euphoric dancing as well as the accompanying flute and drum playing disturbed Alvarado about the potential for revolt He ordered the gates closed and initiated the killing of many thousands of Aztec nobles warriors and priests 20 Alvarado the conquistadors and the Tlaxcalans retreated to their base in the Palace of Axayacatl and secured the entrances Alvarado ordered his men to shoot their cannons crossbows and arquebuses into the gathering crowd The result either preempted or triggered the Aztec revolt which was however inevitable from the moment of Moctezuma s capture and was accelerated by the split of the Spanish forces Alvarado forced Moctezuma to appeal to the crowd outside the Palace and this appeal temporarily calmed them 21 The massacre had the result of resolutely turning all the Aztecs against the Spanish and completely undermining Moctezuma s authority 22 Aztec revolt edit Alvarado sent word to Cortes of the events and Cortes hurried back to Tenochtitlan on June 24 with 1 300 soldiers 96 horses 80 crossbowmen and 80 arquebusiers Cortes also came with 2 000 Tlaxcalan warriors on the journey 2 Cortes entered the palace unscathed as the hostilities had not started yet although the Aztecs had probably planned to ambush him The Aztecs had already stopped sending food and supplies to the Spaniards They became suspicious and watched for people trying to sneak supplies to them many innocent people were slaughtered because they were suspected of helping them 23 A few days after the great forces of Cortes got into Tenochtitlan the roads were shut and the causeway bridges were raised The Aztecs halted any Spanish attacks or attempts to leave the palace Every Spanish soldier that was not killed was wounded 2 Cortes failed to grasp the full extent of the situation as the attack on the festival was the last straw for the Aztecs who now were completely against Moctezuma and the Spanish The military gains of the attack therefore had a serious political cost for Cortes His new followers were greatly disturbed at the power of the Aztecs and held Cortes to be a liar since nobody revered them and brought them food and gifts as Cortes had promised 2 Cortes attempted to parlay with the Aztecs and after this failed he sent Moctezuma to tell his people to stop fighting However the Aztecs refused 23 The Spanish asserted that Moctezuma was stoned to death by his own people as he attempted to speak with them Three stones hit him one of them on the head so cerebral hematoma is possible Moctezuma refused all medical help as well as food and died soon after the attack 24 The Aztecs later claimed that Moctezuma had been murdered by the Spanish 2 23 Two other local rulers were found strangled as well 25 Moctezuma s younger brother Cuitlahuac who had been ruler of Ixtlapalapan until then was chosen as the Tlatoani 2 La Noche Triste and the Spanish flight to Tlaxcala edit Main article La Noche Triste nbsp La Noche Triste The Sad NightThe flight of the Spanish from Tenochtitlan was a crushing defeat for Cortes that was just short of annihilation It is still remembered as La Noche Triste The Night of Sorrows Popular tales say Cortes wept under a tree the night of the massacre of his troops at the hands of the Aztecs citation needed Initially Cortes resolved to fight the Aztec troops opposed to him and win the city in direct conflict This stemmed from three errors of judgment citation needed 1 Underestimation of the Aztecs Cortes fought the Tabascans the Cempoalans the Tlaxcalans and found them strong opponents but always prevailed He had never fought an Aztec army before and did not expect such resolve and martial skill as he encountered although all his previous foes warned that the Aztecs were the greatest warriors they had ever seen and could not be withstood within their city 2 Overrating his forces Since Cortes won all his battles in Mexico before this while at the head of much inferior forces being in charge of a nearly full Spanish tercio must have made him feel invincible In fact the only serviceable portion of his army were his old followers with great experience of Aztec warfare who were by this time severely whittled down by wounds and disease The newly arrived Narvaez s men did not have experience in local fighting and were worth much less in combat and eventually perished in much greater numbers than the veterans 3 Unprepared for enemy tactics The Aztecs had fought for the lake cities many times before and their tactics were excellent the use of canoes the use of flat roofs with prepared missiles dropping down into the lake when cornered and destroying bridges Cavalry could not operate in these conditions and control of the water was crucial which Cortes did not realize at first With this mindset Cortes launched an attack directly at the chief temple of the city the Cue of Huichilopotzli In spite of determined opposition the Spanish push got them to the top of the temple s 114 steps but at a great loss Cortes aimed at routing the Aztecs and by holding both Moctezuma and the great temple being able to offer peace once again However the Spanish attack encountered such fierce resistance and numerous fatalities among his men that the plan fell apart The retreat to Spanish quarters was as hard as the attack and part of their quarters were plundered in the meantime The direct loss of nearly a hundred men dead and the fierce spirit of the Aztecs who refused to be cowed by his ascent of the temple convinced Cortes that a night escape was now his only option for survival citation needed Though a flight from the city would make Cortes appear weak before his indigenous allies it was this or death for the Spanish forces Cortes and his men were in the center of the city and would most likely have to fight their way out no matter what direction they took Cortes wanted to flee to Tlaxcala so a path directly east would have been most favorable Nevertheless this would require hundreds of canoes to move all of Cortes s people and supplies which he was unable to procure in his position 2 page needed Cortes therefore had to choose among three land routes north to Tlatelolco which was the least dangerous path but required the longest trip through the city south to Coyohuacan and Iztapalapa two towns that would not welcome the Spanish or west to Tlacopan which required the shortest trip through Tenochtitlan though they would not be welcome there either Cortes decided on the west causeway to Tlacopan needing the quickest route out of Tenochtitlan with all his provisions and people 2 page needed Heavy rains and a moonless night provided some cover for the escaping Spanish 25 On that Sad Night July 1 1520 the Spanish forces exited the palace first with their indigenous allies close behind bringing as much treasure as possible Cortes had hoped to go undetected by muffling the horses hooves and carrying wooden boards to cross the canals The Spanish forces were able to pass through the first three canals the Tecpantzinco Tzapotlan and Atenchicalco 23 page needed However they were discovered on the fourth canal at Mixcoatechialtitlan One account says a woman fetching water saw them and alerted the city another says it was a sentry Some Aztecs set out in canoes others by road to Nonchualco then Tlacopan to cut the Spanish off The Aztecs attacked the fleeing Spanish on the Tlacopan causeway from canoes shooting arrows at them The Spanish fired their crossbows and arquebuses but were unable to see their attackers or get into formation Many Spaniards leaped into the water and drowned weighed down by armor and booty 23 page needed When faced with a gap in the causeway Alvarado made the famous leap of Alvarado using a spear to get to the other side Approximately a third of the Spaniards succeeded in reaching the mainland while the remaining ones died in battle or were captured and later sacrificed on Aztec altars these were reported to be mostly the followers of Narvaez less experienced and more weighted down with gold which was handed out freely before the escape citation needed After crossing over the bridge the surviving Spanish had little reprieve before the Aztecs appeared to attack and chase them towards Tlacopan When they arrived at Tlacopan a good number of Spaniards had been killed as well as most of the indigenous warriors and some of the horses all of the cannons and most of the crossbows and other weapons were lost In all battles with main Aztec forces after that Spaniards noted their lost arms being used against them 2 page needed The Spanish finally found refuge in Otancalpolco where they were aided by the Teocalhueyacans The morning after the Aztecs returned to recover the spoils from the canals 23 page needed To reach Tlaxcala Cortes had to bring his troops around Lake Texcoco Though the Spanish were under attack the entire trip because Cortes took his troops through the northern towns they were at an advantage The northern valley was less populous travel was difficult and it was still the agricultural season so the attacks on Cortes s forces were not very heavy As Cortes arrived in more densely inhabited areas east of the lake the attacks were more forceful 2 page needed Battle of Otumba edit Further information Battle of Otumba nbsp Battle of OtumbaBefore reaching Tlaxcala the scanty Spanish forces arrived at the plain of Otumba Valley Otompan where they were met by a vast Aztec army intent on their destruction The Aztecs intended to cut short the Spanish retreat from Tenochtitlan and annihilate them Here the Aztecs made their own errors of judgement by underestimating the shock value of the Spanish caballeros because all they had seen was the horses traveling gingerly on the wet paved streets of Tenochtitlan They had never seen them used in open battle on the plains By marshalling on an open plain they also allowed experienced Spanish commanders to bring to bear their own tactics weaponry and the know how of European warfare 25 page needed Despite the overwhelming numbers of Aztecs and the generally poor condition of the Spanish survivors Cortes snatched victory from the jaws of defeat He spotted the Aztec commander in his ornate and colourful feather tlahuiztli and immediately charged him with several horsemen killing the Aztec commander and most other leaders as they were clearly marked by their golden plumage and an easy target for a charge The many Tlaxcalan allies of the Spanish are mentioned as playing an important role in the battle armed with Spanish swords and shields The Spanish suffered some losses but were victorious over the Aztecs who then retreated and were pursued by cavalry 25 page needed When Cortes finally reached Tlaxcala five days after fleeing Tenochtitlan he had lost over 860 Spanish soldiers over a thousand Tlaxcalans as well as Spanish women who had accompanied Narvaez s troops 2 page needed Cortes claimed only 15 Spaniards were lost along with 2 000 native allies Cano another primary source gives 1 150 Spaniards dead though this figure was likely too high and might encompass the total loss from entering Mexico to arriving into Tlaxcala Cortes chaplain back in Spain Francisco Lopez de Gomara estimated that 450 Spaniards and 4 000 allies had died Other sources estimate that nearly half of the Spanish and almost all of the natives were killed or wounded 25 page needed The women survivors included Cortes s translator and lover La Malinche Maria Estrada Beatriz de Palacios and two of Moctezuma s daughters who had been given to Cortes including the emperor s favorite and reportedly most beautiful daughter Tecuichpotzin later Dona Isabel Moctezuma A third daughter died leaving behind her infant by Cortes the mysterious second Maria named in his will Both sides attempt to recover editShifting alliances edit nbsp An encounter between Spanish and Aztec combatants as depicted in the History of Tlaxcala Cuitlahuac had been elected as the emperor immediately following Moctezuma s death It was necessary for him to prove his power and authority to keep the tributaries from revolting Usually the new king would take his army on a campaign before coronation this demonstration would solidify necessary ties However Cuitlahuac was not in a position to do this as it was not yet war season therefore allegiance to the Spanish seemed to be an option for many tributaries The Aztec Empire was very susceptible to division most of the tributary states were divided internally and their loyalty to the Aztecs was based either on their own interests or fear of punishment citation needed It was necessary for Cortes to rebuild his alliances after his escape from Tenochtitlan before he could try again to take the city He started with the Tlaxcalans Tlaxcala was an autonomous state and a fierce enemy of the Aztecs Another strong motivation to join forces with the Spanish was that Tlaxcala was encircled by Aztec tributaries The Tlaxcalans could have crushed the Spaniards at this point or turned them over to the Aztecs In fact the Aztecs sent emissaries promising peace and prosperity if they would do just that The Tlaxcalan leaders rebuffed the overtures of the Aztec emissaries deciding to continue their friendship with Cortes citation needed Cortes managed to negotiate an alliance however the Tlaxcalans required heavy concessions from Cortes for their continued support which he was to provide after they defeated the Aztecs They expected the Spanish to pay for their supplies to have the city of Cholula an equal share of any of the spoils the right to build a citadel in Tenochtitlan and finally to be exempted from any future tribute Cortes was willing to promise anything in the name of the King of Spain and agreed to their demands The Spanish did complain about having to pay for their food and water with their gold and other jewels with which they had escaped Tenochtitlan The Spanish authorities would later disown this treaty with the Tlaxcalans after the fall of Tenochtitlan citation needed Cortes needed to gain other new allies as well If the Spaniards were able to prove they could protect their new allies from the possibility of Aztec retribution changing sides would not be too difficult for other tributaries After Cortes forces managed to defeat the smaller armies of some Aztec tributary states Tepeyac and later Yauhtepec and Cuauhnahuac were easily won over Cortes also used political maneuvering to assure the allegiance of other states such as Tetzcoco In addition Cortes replaced kings with those who he knew would be loyal to him Cortes now controlled many major towns which simultaneously bolstered Cortes s forces while weakening the Aztecs 2 page needed Though the largest group of indigenous allies were Tlaxcalans the Huexotzinco Atlixco Tliliuhqui Tepecs Tetzcocans Chalca Alcohua and Tepanecs were all important allies as well and had all been previously subjugated by the Aztecs 2 page needed 25 page needed Even the former Triple Alliance member city of Tetzcoco or Texcoco became a Spanish ally As the rebellion attempt led by the Tetzcocan Tlatoani Cacamatzin in times of Moctezuma s reclusion was conjured by the Spanish 26 Cortes named one of Cacamatzin s brothers as new tlatoani He was Ixtlilxochitl II who had disagreed with his brother and always proved friendly to the Spanish Later Cortes also occupied the city as base for the construction of brigantines However one faction of Tetzcocan warriors remained loyal to the Aztecs 27 Cortes had to put down internal struggles among the Spanish troops as well The remaining Spanish soldiers were somewhat divided many wanted nothing more than to go home or at the very least to return to Vera Cruz and wait for reinforcements Cortes hurriedly quashed this faction determined to finish what he had started Not only had he staked everything he had or could borrow on this enterprise he had completely compromised himself by defying his superior Velazquez He knew that in defeat he would be considered a traitor to Spain but that in success he would be its hero So he argued cajoled bullied and coerced his troops and they began preparing for the siege of Mexico In this Cortes showed skill at exploiting the divisions within and between the Aztec states while hiding those of his own troops 2 page needed Smallpox reduces the local population edit While Cortes was rebuilding his alliances and garnering more supplies a smallpox epidemic struck the natives of the Valley of Mexico including Tenochtitlan The disease was probably carried by a Spanish slave from Narvaez s forces who had been abandoned in the capital during the Spanish flight 2 page needed Smallpox played a crucial role in the Spanish success during the Siege of Tenochtitlan from 1519 to 1521 a fact not mentioned in some historical accounts The disease broke out in Tenochtitlan in late October 1520 The epidemic lasted sixty days ending by early December 28 page needed It was at this event where firsthand accounts were recorded in the Florentine Codex concerning the adverse effects of the smallpox epidemic of the Aztecs which stated many died from this plague and many others died of hunger They could not get up and search for food and everyone else was too sick to care for them so they starved to death in their beds By the time the danger was recognized the plague was well established that nothing could halt it 28 page needed The smallpox epidemic caused not only infection to the Mexica peoples but it weakened able bodied people who could no longer grow and harvest their crops which in turn led to mass famine and death from malnutrition 28 page needed While the population of Tenochtitlan was recovering the disease continued to Chalco a city on the southeast corner of Lake Texcoco that was formerly controlled by the Aztecs but now occupied by the Spanish 12 Reproduction and population growth declined since people of child bearing age either had to fight off the Spanish invasion or died due to famine malnutrition or other diseases 29 Diseases like smallpox could travel great distances and spread throughout large populations which was the case with the Aztecs having lost approximately 50 of its population from smallpox and other diseases 30 The disease killed an estimated forty percent of the native population in the area within a year The Aztecs codices give ample depictions of the disease s progression It was known to them as the huey ahuizotl great rash citation needed Cuitlahuac contracted the disease and died after ruling for eighty days Though the disease also affected the Spanish aligned forces somewhat it had more dire consequences for the leadership on the side of the Aztecs as they were much harder hit by the smallpox than the Spanish leaders who were largely resistant to the disease citation needed Aztecs regroup edit It is often debated why the Aztecs took little action against the Spanish and their allies after they fled the city One reason was that Tenochtitlan was certainly in a state of disorder the smallpox disease ravaged the population killing still more important leaders and nobles and a new king Cuauhtemoc son of King Ahuitzotl was placed on the throne in February 1521 The people were in the process of mourning the dead and rebuilding their damaged city It is possible that the Aztecs truly believed that the Spanish were gone for good In addition Cortes astutely directed his forces in multiple directions in preparing his encirclement of the Aztec capital and knew how to use the military initiative that he gained after the battle of Otumba 2 page needed Staying within Tenochtitlan as a defensive tactic may have seemed like a reliable strategy at the time This would allow them the largest possible army that would be close to its supplies while affording them the mobility provided by the surrounding lake Any Spanish assault would have to come through the causeways where the Aztecs could easily attack them As the only Aztec victory against the Spanish was won in the city using their peculiar urban warfare tactics and as they counted on retaining control over the water it seems natural that they wanted to risk their main army only to defend their capital However it would not be correct to infer that the Aztecs were passive observers of their fate they did send numerous expeditions to aid their allies against Cortes at every point with 10 to 20 thousand forces risked in every engagement such as in Chalco and Chapultepec They were driven back every time and some of the native allies won their own victories over the Aztecs as their dread of their invincible overlords faded with every success of Cortes 2 page needed Siege of Tenochtitlan editCortes plans and preparations edit Cortes s overall plan was to trap and besiege the Aztecs within their capital Cortes intended to do that primarily by increasing his power and mobility on the lake while protecting his flanks while they marched up the causeway previously one of his main weaknesses He ordered the construction of thirteen sloops brigantines in Tlaxcala by his master shipbuilder Martin Lopez Cortes continued to receive a steady stream of supplies from ships arriving at Veracruz one ship from Spain loaded with arms and powder and two ships intended for Narvaez Cortes also received one hundred and fifty soldiers and twenty horses from the abandoned Panuco River settlement A large source of succour for Cortes were the misguided expeditions by Francisco de Garay the Governor of Jamaica who kept sending ship after ship to aid his original Panuco venture long after it had been destroyed and abandoned all of these ships and forces ended up reinforcing Cortes before the siege 31 309 311 324 Cortes then decided to move his army to Texcoco where he could assemble and launch the sloops in the creeks flowing into Lake Texcoco With his main headquarters in Texcoco he could stop his forces from being spread too thin around the lake and there he could contact them where they needed Xicotencatl the Elder provided Cortes with over ten thousand Tlaxcalan warriors under the command of Chichimecatecle Cortes departed Tlaxcala on the day after Christmas 1520 When his force arrived at the outskirts of Texcoco he was met by seven chieftains stating their leader Coanacotzin begs for your friendship Cortes quickly replaced that leader with the son of Nezahualpilli baptized as Don Hernan Cortes 31 311 16 After winning over Chalco and Tlamanalco Cortes sent eight Mexican prisoners to Cuauhtemoc stating all the towns in the neighborhood were now on our side as well as the Tlaxcalans Cortes intended to blockade Mexico and then destroy it Once Martin Lopez and Chichimecatecle brought the logs and planks to Texcoco the sloops were built quickly 31 321 25 Cuauhtemoc s forces were defeated four times in March 1521 around Chalco and Huaxtepec and Cortes received another ship load of arms and men from the Emperor 31 326 32 On 6 April 1521 Cortes met with the caciques around Chalco and announced he would bring peace and blockade Mexico He wanted all of their warriors ready the next day when he put thirteen sloops into the lake misleadingly called launches in some translations He was then joined at Chimaluacan by twenty thousand warriors from Chalco Texcoco Huejotzingo and Tlaxcala 31 333 Cortes fought a major engagement with seventeen thousand of Cuauhtemoc s warriors at Xochimilco before continuing his march northwestward 31 340 47 Cortes found Coyoacan Tacuba Azcapotzalco and Cuauhitlan deserted 31 347 49 Returning to Texcoco which had been guarded by his Captain Gonzalo de Sandoval Cortes was joined by many more men from Castile 31 349 Cortes then discovered a plot aimed at his murder for which he had the main conspirator Antonio de Villafana hanged Thereafter Cortes had a personal guard of six soldiers under the command of Antonio de Quinones 31 350 51 The Spaniards also held their third auctioning of branded slaves Mexican allies captured by Cortes who had revolted after giving their obedience to His Majesty 31 308 352 Cortes had 84 horsemen 194 arbalesters and arquebusiers plus 650 Spanish foot soldiers He stationed 25 men on every sloop 12 oarsmen 12 crossbowmen and musketeers and a captain Each sloop had rigging sails oars and spare oars Additionally Cortes had 20 000 warriors from Tlaxcala Huexotzinco and Cholula The Tlaxcalans were led by Xicotencatl II and Chichimecatecle Cortes was ready to start the blockade of Mexico after Corpus Christi feast 31 353 54 Cortes put Alvarado in command of 30 horsemen 18 arbalesters and arquebusiers 150 Spanish foot soldiers and 8 000 Tlaxcalan allies and sent him accompanied by his brother Jorge de Alvarado Gutierrez de Badajoz and Andres de Monjaraz to secure Tacuba Cristobal de Olid took 30 horsemen 20 arbalesters and arquebusiers 175 foot soldiers and 8 000 Tlaxcalan allies accompanied by Andres de Tapia Francisco Verdugo and Francisco de Lugo and secured Coyohuacan Gonzalo de Sandoval took 24 horsemen 14 arquebusiers and arbalesters 150 Spanish foot soldiers and 8 000 warriors from Chalco and Huexotzinco accompanied by Luis Marin and Pedro de Ircio to secure Ixtlapalapan Cortes commanded the 13 sloops 31 356 Cortes forces took up these positions on May 22 2 The first battles edit nbsp Cortes builds the brigantines nbsp A battle in the shores of Lake Texcoco during the Siege of Tenochtitlan nbsp Naval assault upon the city The forces under Alvarado and Olid marched first towards Chapultepec to disconnect the Aztecs from their water supply 31 359 There were springs there that supplied much of the city s water by aqueduct the rest of the city s water was brought in by canoe The two generals then tried to bring their forces over the causeway at Tlacopan resulting in the Battle of Tlacopan 2 The Aztec forces managed to push back the Spanish and halt this assault on the capital with a determined and hard fought land and naval counterattack 23 94 31 359 60 Cortes faced more than a thousand canoes after he launched his thirteen sloops from Texcoco Yet a favorable breeze sprang up enabling him to overturn many canoes and kill or capture many After winning the First Battle on the Lake Cortes camped with Olid s forces 23 94 31 362 The Aztec canoe fleets worked well for attacking the Spanish because they allowed the Aztecs to surround the Spanish on both sides of the causeway Cortes decided to make an opening in the causeway so that his brigantines could help defend his forces from both sides He then distributed the sloops amongst his attacking forces four to Alvarado six for Olid and two to Sandoval on the Tepeaquilla causeway After this move the Aztecs could no longer attack from their canoes on the opposite side of the Spanish brigantines and the fighting went very much in our favour according to Diaz 31 363 With his brigantines Cortes could also send forces and supplies to areas he previously could not which put a kink in Cuauhtemoc s plan To make it more difficult for the Spanish ships to aid the Spanish soldier s advance along the causeways the Aztecs dug deep pits in shallow areas of the lakes into which they hoped the Spaniards would stumble and fixed concealed stakes into the lake bottom to impale the launches The Spanish horses were also ineffective on the causeways 31 364 Cortes was forced to adapt his plans again as his initial land campaigns were ineffective He had planned to attack on the causeways during the daytime and retreat to camp at night however the Aztecs moved in to occupy the abandoned bridges and barricades as soon as the Spanish forces left Consequently Cortes had his forces set up on the causeways at night to defend their positions 31 364 66 Cortes also sent orders to never on any account to leave a gap unblocked and that all the horsemen were to sleep on the causeway with their horses saddled and bridled all night long 31 372 This allowed the Spanish to progress closer and closer towards the city 2 The Spaniards prevented food and water from reaching Tenochtitlan along the three causeways They limited the supplies reaching the city from the nine surrounding towns via canoe by sending out two of their launches on nightly capture missions However the Aztecs were successful in setting an ambush with thirty of their pirogues in an area in which they had placed impaling stakes They captured two Spanish launches killing Captains Juan de la Portilla and Pedro Barba 31 368 69 382 83 The Spanish advance closer edit See also Battle of Colhuacatonco nbsp During the siege of Tenochtitlan Hernan Cortes narrowly escaped capture by Aztec warriors Detail of a painting at the Museo de America Madrid Spain After capturing two chieftains Cortes learned of another Aztec plot to ambush his launches with forty pirogues Cortes then organized a counter ambush with six of his launches which was successful killing many warriors and taking many prisoners Afterwards the Aztec did not dare to lay any more ambuscades or to bring in food and water as openly as before Lakeside towns including Iztapalapa Churubusco Culuacan and Mixquic made peace with the Spaniards 31 374 75 The fighting in Tenochtitlan was described by the American historian Charles Robinson as desperate as both sides battled one another in the streets in a ferocious battle where no quarter was given nor asked for 32 Cuauhtemoc then attacked all three Spanish camps simultaneously with his entire army on the feast day of St John On the Tacuba Causeway across Lake Texcoco connecting Tenochtitlan to the mainland along a street now known as Puente de Alvarado Alvarado s Bridge in Mexico City Pedro de Alvarado made a mad cavalry charge across a gap in the Causeway 32 As Alvarado and his cavalry emerged on the other side of the gap with the infantry behind Aztec canoes filled the gap 32 Pedro de Alvarado was wounded along with eight men in his camp 31 377 Alvarado escaped from the ambush but five of his men were captured and taken off to the Great Temple to be sacrificed 32 Much to their horror the Spanish from their positions could see their captured comrades being sacrificed on the Great Pyramid which increased their hatred of the Aztecs 33 At the end of each day the Spanish gave a prayer Oh thanks be to God that they did not carry me off today to be sacrificed 33 nbsp nbsp Scenes of the Battle of Colhuacatonco in the Florentine Codex The scenes at the left depict the beginning of the battle as the Spanish assault force advanced into the city and the scenes at the right depict the victorious Mexica forces expelling the last assault forces and taking their prisoners to be sacrificed Cortes then decided to push forward a simultaneous attack towards the Mexican market square resulting in what is now known as the Battle of Colhuacatonco However he neglected to fill in a channel as he advanced and when the Aztec counter attacked Cortes was wounded and almost captured Cristobal de Olea and Cristobal de Guzman gave their lives for Cortes and sixty five Spanish soldiers were captured alive Cuauhtemoc then had five of their heads thrown at Alvarado s camp four thrown at Cortes camp six thrown at Sandoval s camp while ten more were sacrificed to the Huitzilopochtli and Texcatlipoca idols 31 379 83 Diaz relates the dismal drum of Huichilobos sounded again we saw our comrades who had been captured in Cortes defeat being dragged up the steps to be sacrificed cutting open their chests drew out their palpitating hearts which they offered to the idols the Indian butchers cut off their arms and legs then they ate their flesh with a sauce of peppers and tomatoes throwing their trunks and entrails to the lions and tigers and serpents and snakes Cuauhtemoc then sent the hands and feet of our soldiers and the skin of their faces to all the towns of our allies The Aztec sacrificed a batch of Spanish prisoners each night for ten nights 31 386 87 391 The Aztec cast off the cooked limbs of their prisoners to the Tlaxcalans shouting Eat the flesh of these teules Gods a reference to the early belief that Spanish were gods and of your brothers because we are sated with it 33 The Aztec continued to attack the Spaniards on the causeways day and night The Spanish allies in the cities surrounding the lake lost many lives or went home wounded and half their canoes were destroyed Yet they did not help the Aztec any more for they loathed them Yet of the 24 000 allies only 200 remained in the three Spanish camps the rest deciding to return home Ahuaxpitzactzin later baptized as Don Carlos the brother of the Texcoco lord Don Fernando remained in Cortes camp with forty relatives and friends The Huejotzinco Cacique remained in Sandoval s camp with fifty men Alvarado s camp had Chichimecatecle the two sons of Lorenzo de Vargas and eighty Tlaxcalans 31 388 89 To maintain the advance Cortes razed every neighborhood he captured using the rubble to fill up canals and gaps in the causeways to allow his infantry and cavalry to advance in formation a fighting tactic that favored the Spanish instead of engaging in hand to hand street fighting which favored the Aztec 33 Cortes then concentrated on letting the Aztec eat up all the provisions they have and drink brackish water The Spaniards gradually advanced along the causeways though without allies Their launches had freedom of the lake after devising a method for breaking the impaling stakes the Aztec had placed for them After twelve days of this the Spanish allies realized the prophecy by the Aztec idols that the Spaniards would be dead in ten days was false Two thousand warriors returned from Texcoco as did many Tlaxcan warriors under Tepaneca from Topeyanco and those from Huejotzingo and Cholula 31 390 91 Cuauhtemoc then enlisted his allies in Matlazingo Malinalco and Tulapa in attacking the Spaniards from the rear However Cortes sent Andres de Tapia with 20 horsemen and 100 soldiers and Gonzalo de Sandoval with 20 horsemen and 80 soldiers to help his allies attack this new threat They returned with two of the Matlazingo chieftains as prisoners 31 396 As the Spanish employed more successful strategies their stranglehold on Tenochtitlan tightened and famine began to affect the Aztecs The Aztecs were cut off from the mainland because of the occupied causeways Cortes also had the advantage of fighting a mostly defensive battle Though Cuauhtemoc organized a large scale attack on Alvarado s forces at Tlacopan the Aztec forces were pushed back Throughout the siege the Aztecs had little aid from outside of Tenochtitlan The remaining loyal tributaries had difficulty sending forces because it would leave them vulnerable to Spanish attack Many of these loyal tributaries were surrounded by the Spanish citation needed Though the tributaries often went back and forth in their loyalties at any sign of change the Spanish tried hard not to lose any allies They feared a snowball effect if one tributary left others might follow Therefore they brutally crushed any tributaries who tried to send help to Tenochtitlan Any shipments of food and water were intercepted and even those trying to fish in the lake were attacked 2 The situation inside the city was desperate because of the famine and the smallpox there were already thousands of victims women offered to the gods even their children s clothes so most children were stark naked Many Aztecs drank dirty brackish water because of their severe thirst and contracted dysentery The famine was so severe that the Aztecs ate anything even wood leather and bricks for sustenance 12 The Spanish continued to push closer to Tenochtitlan The Aztecs changed tactics as often as the Spanish did preventing Cortes s forces from being entirely victorious However the Aztecs were severely worn down They had no new troops supplies food nor water The Spanish received a large amount of supplies from Vera Cruz and somewhat renewed finally entered the main part of Tenochtitlan 2 31 396 The Aztecs last stand edit Cortes then ordered a simultaneous advance of all three camps towards the Tlatelolco marketplace Alvarado s company made it there first and Gutierrez de Badajoz advanced to the top of the Huichilopotzli cu setting it afire and planting their Spanish banners Cortes and Sandoval s men were able to join them there after four more days of fighting 31 396 98 The Spanish forces and their allies advanced into the city Despite inflicting heavy casualties the Aztecs could not halt the Spanish advance While the fighting in the city raged the Aztecs cut out and ate the hearts of 70 Spanish prisoners of war at the altar to Huitzilopochtli By August many of the native inhabitants had fled Tlatelolco 23 Cortes sent emissaries to negotiate with the Tlatelolcas to join his side but the Tlatelolcas remained loyal to the Aztecs Throughout the siege the Tlaxcalans waged a merciless campaign against the Aztecs who had long oppressed them as for a hundred years the Tlaxcalans had been forced to hand over an annual quota of young men and women to be sacrificed and eaten at the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan and now the Tlaxcalans saw their chance for revenge 34 The American historian Charles Robinson wrote Centuries of hate and the basic viciousness of Mesoamerican warfare combined in violence that appalled Cortes himself 34 In letter to the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V Cortes wrote We had more trouble in preventing our allies from killing with such cruelty than we had in fighting the enemy For no race however savage has ever practiced such fierce and unnatural cruelty as the natives of these parts Our allies also took many spoils that day which we were unable to prevent as they numbered more than 150 000 and we Spaniards only some nine hundred Neither our precautions nor our warnings could stop their looting though we did all we could I had posted Spaniards in every street so that when the people began to come out to surrender they might prevent our allies from killing those wretched people whose numbers was uncountable I also told the captains of our allies that on no account should any of those people be slain but there were so many that we could not prevent more than fifteen thousand being killed and sacrificed by the Tlaxcalans that day 34 Throughout the battles with the Spanish the Aztecs still practiced their traditional ceremonies and customs Tlapaltecatl Opochtzin was chosen to be outfitted to wear the quetzal owl costume He was supplied with darts sacred to Huitzilopochtli which came with wooden tips and flint tops When he came the Spanish soldiers appeared scared and intimidated They chased the owl warrior but he was neither captured nor killed The Aztecs took this as a good sign but they could fight no more and after discussions with the nobles Cuauhtemoc began talks with the Spanish 12 At some point in the final days of the battle a tornado struck the basin over Tlatelolco and then moved out over the lake 35 This was the first tornado seen by Europeans in the Americas After several failed peace overtures to Cuauhtemoc Cortes ordered Sandoval to attack that part of the city in which Cuauhtemoc had retreated As hundreds of canoes filled the lake fleeing the doomed city Cortes sent his brigantines out to intercept them 34 Cuauhtemoc attempted to flee with his property gold jewels and family in fifty pirogues but was soon captured by Sandoval s launches and brought before Cortes 31 401 03 Surrender edit nbsp The Torture of Cuauhtemoc a 19th century painting by Leandro IzaguirreThe Aztec forces were destroyed and the Aztecs surrendered on 13 August 1521 Julian Date 31 404 Cortes demanded the return of the gold lost during La Noche Triste Under torture by burning their feet with oil Cuauhtemoc and the lord of Tacuba confessed to dumping his gold and jewels into the lake Yet little gold remained as earlier a fifth had been sent to Spain and another kept by Cortes In the end the remaining gold all fell to the King s officials 31 409 10 412 Cuauhtemoc was taken prisoner the same day as related above and remained the titular leader of Tenochtitlan under the control of Cortes until he was hanged for treason in 1525 while accompanying a Spanish expedition to Guatemala citation needed Casualties and atrocities edit nbsp The Last Days of Tenochtitlan Conquest of Mexico by Cortez a 19th century painting by William de Leftwich Dodge 100 000 7 to 240 000 8 9 were killed in the campaign overall including warriors and civilians As many as 40 000 Aztec bodies were floating in the canals or awaiting burial after the siege 7 Almost all of the Aztec nobility were dead and the remaining survivors were mostly young women and very young children 25 At least 40 000 Aztec civilians were killed and captured 6 After the Fall of Tenochtitlan the remaining Aztec warriors and civilians fled the city as the Spanish allies primarily the Tlaxcalans continued to attack even after the surrender slaughtering thousands of the remaining civilians and looting the city The Tlaxcalans did not spare women or children they entered houses stealing all precious things they found raping and then killing women stabbing children 23 failed verification The survivors marched out of the city for the next three days 2 One source claims 6 000 were massacred in the town of Ixtapalapa alone 36 Due to the wholesale slaughter after the campaign and the destruction of Aztec culture some sources such as Israel Charney 37 John C Cox 38 and Norman Naimark 36 have likened the siege to a genocide citation needed Although some reports put the number as low as forty the Spanish lost over 100 soldiers in the siege while thousands of Tlaxcalans perished It is estimated that around 1 800 Spaniards died from all causes during the two year campaign from Veracruz to Tenochtitlan Thomas pp 528 29 The remaining Spanish forces consisted of 800 900 Spaniards eighty horses sixteen pieces of artillery and Cortes thirteen brigantines 2 Other sources estimate that around 860 Spanish soldiers and 20 000 Tlaxcalan warriors were killed during all the battles in this region from 1519 to 1521 citation needed It is well accepted that Cortes indigenous allies which may have numbered as many as 200 000 over the three year period of the conquest were indispensable to his success 39 See also editHistory of Mexico History of the Aztecs QualpopocaNotes edit Teoria de la bandera Guido Villa 1974 The companies portentous discovery and conquest of the New World met under the banners of Castile incarnate Las portentosas empresas del descubrimiento y la conquista del Nuevo Mundo se cumplieron bajo los encarnados pendones de Castilla a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Hassig Ross Mexico and the Spanish Conquest New York Longman 1994 page needed PBS Conquistadors Cortes www pbs org a b Clodfelter Micheal 2017 Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures 1492 2015 4th ed McFarland ISBN 978 1476625850 Russell Philip 2015 The Essential History of Mexico From Pre Conquest to Present Routledge ISBN 978 1135017217 a b Paulkovich Michael 2012 No Meek Messiah Spillix Publishing p 117 ISBN 978 0988216112 a b c Karin Solveig Bjornson Kurt Jonassohn Genocide and Gross Human Rights Violations In Comparative Perspective Transaction Publishers p 202 ISBN 978 0415842785 a b Victimario Historico Militar Capitulo IX in Spanish Archived from the original on 2018 07 01 a b Singer Gabrielle 2004 A Purple Bull page 68 Vantage Press ISBN 978 0533148356 there Conquistadors with Michael Wood website for 2001 PBS documentary The Mexico Reader History Culture Politics Joseph Gilbert M and Henderson Timothy J Duke University Press 2002 page needed a b c d e General History of The Things of New Spain de Sahagun Bernardino The Human Record Sources of Global History Volume II Andrea Alfred J and James H Overfield Boston Houghton Mifflin 2005 128 33 Vision de los vencidos Leon Portilla Miguel Ed 1959 1992 The Broken Spears The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico Angel Maria Garibay K Nahuatl Spanish trans Lysander Kemp Spanish English trans Alberto Beltran illus Expanded and updated edition Boston Beacon Press ISBN 0 8070 5501 8 Camilla Townsend Malintzin s Choices University of New Mexico Press 2006 Cervantes de Salazar Francisco Cronica de la Nueva Espana Madrid Linkgua Ediciones 2007 page needed Hassig 2006 p 107 Levy Buddy Conquistador Hernan Cortes King Montezuma and the Last Stands of the Aztecs New York Bantam Books 2008 163 64 Diaz del Castillo Bernal The True History of the Conquest of New Spain Facsimile 1904 Levy Buddy Conquistador Hernan Cortes King Montezuma and the Last Stands of the Aztecs New York Bantam Books 2008 166 Levy Buddy Conquistador Hernan Cortes King Montezuma and the Last Stands of the Aztecs New York Bantam Books 2008 168 70 Levy Buddy Conquistador Hernan Cortes King Montezuma and the Last Stands of the Aztecs New York Bantam Books 2008 170 71 Levy Buddy Conquistador Hernan Cortes King Montezuma and the Last Stands of the Aztecs New York Bantam Books 2008 171 a b c d e f g h i j Leon Portilla Miguel Ed 1992 1959 The Broken Spears The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico Angel Maria Garibay K Nahuatl Spanish trans Lysander Kemp Spanish English trans Alberto Beltran illus Expanded and updated ed Boston Beacon Press ISBN 0 8070 5501 8 Smith 1996 2003 p 275 a b c d e f g Gruzinski Serge The Aztecs Rise and Fall of an Empire Abrams Discoveries series New York Harry N Abrams 1992 page needed Capitulo cuarenta y cuatro de Historia verdadera de la conquista de la Nueva Espana de Bernal Diaz del Castillo Captura y diseno Chantal Lopez y Omar Cortes para la Biblioteca Virtual Antorcha www antorcha net Identidad Mexiquense 9 February 2007 Archived from the original on 2007 02 09 a b c Leon Portilla Miguel 2006 The Broken Spears the Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico Boston Beacon Leon Portilla 1962 117 Leon Portilla Miguel 2006 The Broken Spears the Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico Boston Beacon Diamond 1999 210 Diamond Jared M 1999 Guns Germs and Steel the Fates of Human Societies New York Norton a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Diaz B 1963 The Conquest of New Spain London Penguin Books ISBN 0140441239 a b c d Robinson Charles The Spanish Invasion of Mexico 1519 1521 London Osprey 2004 p 58 a b c d Robinson Charles The Spanish Invasion of Mexico 1519 1521 London Osprey 2004 p 59 a b c d Robinson Charles The Spanish Invasion of Mexico 1519 1521 London Osprey 2004 p 60 Fuentes Oscar Velasco 1 November 2010 The Earliest Documented Tornado in the Americas Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Jstor org by Oscar Velasco Fuentes Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 91 11 1515 1524 Bibcode 2010BAMS 91 1515F doi 10 1175 2010BAMS2874 1 JSTOR 26233054 a b M Naimak Norman 2017 Genocide A World History Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199765263 Charney Israel W 1999 Encyclopedia of Genocide Volumes 1 2 Bloomsbury Academic p 278 ISBN 9780874369281 Cox John M In Adam Jones ed Evoking Genocide 2009 pp 5 Diego Rivera La Gran Tenochtitlan Lost Worlds PDF Black Jeremy ed World History Atlas London Dorling Kindersley 2000 page needed References editPrimary sources edit Cervantes de Salazar Francisco Cronica de la Nueva Espana Madrid Linkgua Ediciones 2007 ISBN 84 9816 211 4 Hernan Cortes Letters available as Letters from Mexico translated by Anthony Pagden 1986 ISBN 0 300 09094 3 Francisco Lopez de Gomara Hispania Victrix First and Second Parts of the General History of the Indies with the whole discovery and notable things that have happened since they were acquired until the year 1551 with the conquest of Mexico and New Spain Bernal Diaz del Castillo The Conquest of New Spain available as The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico 1517 1521 ISBN 0 306 81319 X Leon Portilla Miguel Ed 1992 1959 The Broken Spears The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico Angel Maria Garibay K Nahuatl Spanish trans Lysander Kemp Spanish English trans Alberto Beltran illus Expanded and updated ed Boston Beacon Press ISBN 0 8070 5501 8 Secondary sources edit Sheppard Si Tenochtitlan 1519 21 Clash of Civilizations Oxford Osprey 2018 Andrea Alfred J and James H Overfield The Human Record Sources of Global History Volume II Boston Houghton Mifflin 2005 Black Jeremy ed World History Atlas London Dorling Kindersley 2000 Gruzinski Serge The Aztecs Rise and Fall of an Empire Abrams Discoveries series New York Harry N Abrams 1992 Hassig Ross Mexico and the Spanish Conquest New York Longman 1994 Hassig Ross Mexico and the Spanish Conquest 2nd ed Norman University of Oklahoma Press 2006 ISBN 0 8061 3793 2 OCLC 64594483 Conquest Cortes Montezuma and the Fall of Old Mexico by Hugh Thomas 1993 ISBN 0 671 51104 1 Cortes and the Downfall of the Aztec Empire by Jon Manchip White 1971 ISBN 0 7867 0271 0 History of the Conquest of Mexico by William H Prescott ISBN 0 375 75803 8 The Rain God cries over Mexico by Laszlo Passuth Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest by Matthew Restall Oxford University Press 2003 ISBN 0 19 516077 0 The Conquest of America by Tzvetan Todorov 1996 ISBN 0 06 132095 1 Hernando Cortes by Fisher M amp Richardson K ISBN missing Hernando Cortes Crossroads Resource Online ISBN missing Hernando Cortes by Jacobs W J New York Franklin Watts Inc 1974 ISBN missing The World s Greatest Explorers Hernando Cortes Chicago by Stein R C Illinois Chicago Press Inc 1991 Davis Paul K 2003 Besieged 100 Great Sieges from Jericho to Sarajevo Oxford Oxford University Press History of the Conquest of Mexico with a Preliminary View of Ancient Mexican Civilization and the Life of the Conqueror Hernando Cortes By William H Prescott 1 The Aztecs by Michael E Smith 1996 2003 Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 23016 5 Leibsohn Dana and Barbara E Mundy The Political Force of Images Vistas Visual Culture in Spanish America 1520 1820 2015 http www fordham edu vistas External links editHernando Cortes on the Web web directory with thumbnail galleries Catholic Encyclopedia 1911 Conquistadors with Michael Wood website for 2001 PBS documentary Ibero American Electronic Text Series presented online by the University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center Pagina de relacion 19 26 06 N 99 07 52 W 19 435 N 99 131 W 19 435 99 131 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fall of Tenochtitlan amp oldid 1185521188, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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