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Hernán Cortés

Hernán Cortés de Monroy y Pizarro Altamirano, 1st Marquess of the Valley of Oaxaca (/kɔːrˈtɛs/; Spanish: [eɾˈnaŋ koɾˈtes ðe monˈroj i piˈθaro altamiˈɾano]; 1485 – December 2, 1547) was a Spanish conquistador who led an expedition that caused the fall of the Aztec Empire and brought large portions of what is now mainland Mexico under the rule of the King of Castile in the early 16th century. Cortés was part of the generation of Spanish explorers and conquistadors who began the first phase of the Spanish colonization of the Americas.

Hernán Cortés
18th-century portrait of Cortés based on the one sent by the conqueror to Paolo Giovio, which has served as a model for many of his representations since the 16th century
1st and 3rd Governor of New Spain
In office
13 August 1521 – 24 December 1521
MonarchCharles I of Spain
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byCristóbal de Tapia
In office
30 December 1521 – 12 October 1524
Preceded byCristóbal de Tapia
Succeeded byTriumvirate:
Alonso de Estrada
Rodrigo de Albornoz
Alonso de Zuazo
Personal details
Born
Hernando Cortés de Monroy y Pizarro Altamirano

1485 (1485)
Medellín, Castile
DiedDecember 2, 1547(1547-12-02) (aged 61–62)
Castilleja de la Cuesta, Castile
NationalityCastilian
Spouse(s)
Catalina Suárez
(m. 1516; died 1522)

Juana de Zúñiga
(m. 1529)
Domestic partner(s)La Malinche
Isabel Moctezuma
ChildrenDon Martín Cortés, 2nd Marquess of the Valley of Oaxaca
Doña María Cortés
Doña Catalina Cortés
Doña Juana Cortės
Martín Cortés
Leonor Cortés Moctezuma
OccupationConquistador
Known forSpanish conquest of the Aztec Empire, Spanish conquest of Honduras
Signature

Born in Medellín, Spain, to a family of lesser nobility, Cortés chose to pursue adventure and riches in the New World. He went to Hispaniola and later to Cuba, where he received an encomienda (the right to the labor of certain subjects). For a short time, he served as alcalde (magistrate) of the second Spanish town founded on the island. In 1519, he was elected captain of the third expedition to the mainland, which he partly funded. His enmity with the Governor of Cuba, Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar, resulted in the recall of the expedition at the last moment, an order which Cortés ignored.

Arriving on the continent, Cortés executed a successful strategy of allying with some indigenous people against others. He also used a native woman, Doña Marina, as an interpreter. She later bore his first son. When the Governor of Cuba sent emissaries to arrest Cortés, he fought them and won, using the extra troops as reinforcements.[1] Cortés wrote letters directly to the king asking to be acknowledged for his successes instead of being punished for mutiny. After he overthrew the Aztec Empire, Cortés was awarded the title of Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca, while the more prestigious title of Viceroy was given to a high-ranking nobleman, Antonio de Mendoza. In 1541 Cortés returned to Spain, where he died six years later of natural causes.

Name

Cortés himself used the form "Hernando" or "Fernando" for his first name, as seen in the contemporary archive documents, his signature and the title of an early portrait.[2] William Hickling Prescott's Conquest of Mexico (1843) also refers to him as Hernando Cortés. At some point writers began using the shortened form of "Hernán" more generally.

Physical appearance

 
Weiditz's depiction of Cortés in 1529.
 
Copy of a portrait of Cortés dated to the year 1525.

In addition to the illustration by the German artist Christoph Weiditz in his Trachtenbuch, there are three known portraits of Hernán Cortés which were likely made during his lifetime, though only copies of them have survived. All of these portraits show Cortés in the later years of his life.[3] The account of the conquest of the Aztec Empire written by Bernal Díaz del Castillo, gives a detailed description of Hernán Cortés's physical appearance:

He was of good stature and body, well proportioned and stocky, the color of his face was somewhat grey, not very cheerful, and a longer face would have suited him more. His eyes seemed at times loving and at times grave and serious. His beard was black and sparse, as was his hair, which at the time he sported in the same way as his beard. He had a high chest, a well shaped back and was lean with little belly.[4]

Early life

Cortés was born in 1485 in the town of Medellín, then a village in the Kingdom of Castile, now a municipality of the modern-day province of Badajoz in Extremadura, Spain. His father, Martín Cortés de Monroy, born in 1449 to Rodrigo or Ruy Fernández de Monroy and his wife María Cortés, was an infantry captain of distinguished ancestry but slender means. Hernán's mother was Catalína Pizarro Altamirano.[5]

Through his mother, Hernán was second cousin once removed of Francisco Pizarro, who later conquered the Inca Empire of modern-day Peru, and not to be confused with another Francisco Pizarro, who joined Cortés to conquer the Aztecs. (His maternal grandmother, Leonor Sánchez Pizarro Altamirano, was first cousin of Pizarro's father Gonzalo Pizarro y Rodriguez.)[5] Through his father, Hernán was related to Nicolás de Ovando, the third Governor of Hispaniola. His paternal great-grandfather was Rodrigo de Monroy y Almaraz, 5th Lord of Monroy.

According to his biographer and chaplain, Francisco López de Gómara, Cortés was pale and sickly as a child. At the age of 14, he was sent to study Latin under an uncle in Salamanca. Later historians have misconstrued this personal tutoring as time enrolled at the University of Salamanca.[6]

After two years, Cortés returned home to Medellín, much to the irritation of his parents, who had hoped to see him equipped for a profitable legal career. However, those two years in Salamanca, plus his long period of training and experience as a notary, first in Valladolid and later in Hispaniola, gave him knowledge of the legal codes of Castile that he applied to help justify his unauthorized conquest of Mexico.[7]

At this point in his life, Cortés was described by Gómara as ruthless, haughty, and mischievous.[8] The 16-year-old youth had returned home to feel constrained life in his small provincial town. By this time, news of the exciting discoveries of Christopher Columbus in the New World was streaming back to Spain.

Early career in the New World

Plans were made for Cortés to sail to the Americas with a family acquaintance and distant relative, Nicolás de Ovando, the newly appointed Governor of Hispaniola. (This island is now divided between Haiti and the Dominican Republic). Cortés suffered an injury and was prevented from traveling. He spent the next year wandering the country, probably spending most of his time in Spain's southern ports of Cadiz, Palos, Sanlucar, and Seville. He finally left for Hispaniola in 1504 and became a colonist.[9]

Arrival

Cortés reached Hispaniola in a ship commanded by Alonso Quintero, who tried to deceive his superiors and reach the New World before them in order to secure personal advantages. Quintero's mutinous conduct may have served as a model for Cortés in his subsequent career.

Upon his arrival in 1504 in Santo Domingo, the capital of Hispaniola, the 18-year-old Cortés registered as a citizen; this entitled him to a building plot and land to farm. Soon afterward, Governor Nicolás de Ovando granted him an encomienda and appointed him as a notary of the town of Azua de Compostela. His next five years seemed to help establish him in the colony; in 1506, Cortés took part in the conquests of Hispaniola and Cuba. The expedition leader awarded him a large estate of land and Taíno slaves for his efforts.[10]

Cuba (1511–1519)

In 1511, Cortés accompanied Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar, an aide of the Governor of Hispaniola, in his expedition to conquer Cuba. Velázquez was appointed Governor of New Spain. At the age of 26, Cortés was made clerk to the treasurer with the responsibility of ensuring that the Crown received the quinto, or customary one fifth of the profits from the expedition.

Velázquez was so impressed with Cortés that he secured a high political position for him in the colony. He became secretary for Governor Velázquez. Cortés was twice appointed municipal magistrate (alcalde) of Santiago. In Cuba, Cortés became a man of substance with an encomienda to provide Indian labor for his mines and cattle. This new position of power also made him the new source of leadership, which opposing forces in the colony could then turn to. In 1514, Cortés led a group which demanded that more Indians be assigned to the settlers.

As time went on, relations between Cortés and Governor Velázquez became strained.[11] Cortés found time to become romantically involved with Catalina Xuárez (or Juárez), the sister-in-law of Governor Velázquez. Part of Velázquez's displeasure seems to have been based on a belief that Cortés was trifling with Catalina's affections. Cortés was temporarily distracted by one of Catalina's sisters but finally married Catalina, reluctantly, under pressure from Governor Velázquez. However, by doing so, he hoped to secure the good will of both her family and that of Velázquez.[12]

It was not until he had been almost 15 years in the Indies that Cortés began to look beyond his substantial status as mayor of the capital of Cuba and as a man of affairs in the thriving colony. He missed the first two expeditions, under the orders of Francisco Hernández de Córdoba and then Juan de Grijalva, sent by Diego Velázquez to Mexico in 1518. News reached Velázquez that Juan de Grijalva had established a colony on the mainland where there was a bonanza of silver and gold, and Velázquez decided to send him help. Cortés was appointed Captain-General of this new expedition in October 1518, but was advised to move fast before Velázquez changed his mind.[11]

With Cortés's experience as an administrator, knowledge gained from many failed expeditions, and his impeccable rhetoric he was able to gather six ships and 300 men, within a month. Velázquez's jealousy exploded and he decided to put the expedition in other hands. However, Cortés quickly gathered more men and ships in other Cuban ports.

Conquest of Mexico (1519–1521)

 
A map depicting Cortés's invasion route from the coast to the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan.

In 1518, Velázquez put Cortés in command of an expedition to explore and secure the interior of Mexico for colonization. At the last minute, due to the old argument between the two, Velázquez changed his mind and revoked Cortés's charter. Cortés ignored the orders and, in an act of open mutiny, went anyway in February 1519. He stopped in Trinidad, Cuba, to hire more soldiers and obtain more horses. Accompanied by about 11 ships, 500 men (including seasoned slaves[13]), 13 horses, and a small number of cannons, Cortés landed on the Yucatán Peninsula in Mayan territory.[14] There he encountered Geronimo de Aguilar, a Spanish Franciscan priest who had survived a shipwreck followed by a period in captivity with the Maya, before escaping.[14] Aguilar had learned the Chontal Maya language and was able to translate for Cortés.[15]

Cortés's military experience was almost nonexistent, but he proved to be an effective leader of his small army and won early victories over the coastal Indians.[16] In March 1519, Cortés formally claimed the land for the Spanish crown. Then he proceeded to Tabasco, where he met with resistance and won a battle against the natives. He received twenty young indigenous women from the vanquished natives, and he converted them all to Christianity.[15]

Among these women was La Malinche, his future mistress and mother of his son Martín.[1] Malinche knew both the Nahuatl language and Chontal Maya, thus enabling Cortés to communicate with the Aztecs through Aguilar.[17]: 82, 86–87  At San Juan de Ulúa on Easter Sunday 1519, Cortés met with Moctezuma II's Aztec Empire governors Tendile and Pitalpitoque.[17]: 89 

 
Cortés scuttling his own fleet off the coast of Veracruz in order to eliminate the possibility of retreat.

In July 1519, his men took over Veracruz. By this act, Cortés dismissed the authority of the Governor of Cuba to place himself directly under the orders of King Charles.[14] To eliminate any ideas of retreat, Cortés scuttled his ships.[18]

March on Tenochtitlán

In Veracruz, he met some of the tributaries of the Aztecs and asked them to arrange a meeting with Moctezuma II, the tlatoani (ruler) of the Aztec Empire.[18] Moctezuma repeatedly turned down the meeting, but Cortés was determined. Leaving a hundred men in Veracruz, Cortés marched on Tenochtitlán in mid-August 1519, along with 600 soldiers, 15 horsemen, 15 cannons, and hundreds of indigenous carriers and warriors.[14]

On the way to Tenochtitlán, Cortés made alliances with indigenous peoples such as the Totonacs of Cempoala and the Nahuas of Tlaxcala. The Otomis initially, and then the Tlaxcalans fought with the Spanish in a series of three battles from 2 to 5 September 1519, and at one point, Diaz remarked, "they surrounded us on every side". After Cortés continued to release prisoners with messages of peace, and realizing the Spanish were enemies of Moctezuma, Xicotencatl the Elder and Maxixcatzin persuaded the Tlaxcalan warleader, Xicotencatl the Younger, that it would be better to ally with the newcomers than to kill them.[17]: 143–155, 171 

In October 1519, Cortés and his men, accompanied by about 1,000 Tlaxcalteca,[17]: 188  marched to Cholula, the second-largest city in central Mexico. Cortés, either in a pre-meditated effort to instill fear upon the Aztecs waiting for him at Tenochtitlan or (as he later claimed, when he was being investigated) wishing to make an example when he feared native treachery, massacred thousands of unarmed members of the nobility gathered at the central plaza, then partially burned the city.[17]: 199–200 

 
Cortés and La Malinche meet Moctezuma in Tenochtitlán, November 8, 1519.

By the time he arrived in Tenochtitlán, the Spaniards had a large army. On November 8, 1519, they were peacefully received by Moctezuma II.[19] Moctezuma deliberately let Cortés enter the Aztec capital, the island city of Tenochtitlán, hoping to get to know their weaknesses better and to crush them later.[14]

Moctezuma gave lavish gifts of gold to the Spaniards which, rather than placating them, excited their ambitions for plunder. In his letters to King Charles, Cortés claimed to have learned at this point that he was considered by the Aztecs to be either an emissary of the feathered serpent god Quetzalcoatl or Quetzalcoatl himself – a belief which has been contested by a few modern historians.[20] But quickly Cortés learned that several Spaniards on the coast had been killed by Aztecs while supporting the Totonacs, and decided to take Moctezuma as a hostage in his palace, indirectly ruling Tenochtitlán through him.[21]

 
Cristóbal de Olid leads Spanish soldiers with Tlaxcalan allies in the conquests of Jalisco, 1522.

Meanwhile, Velázquez sent another expedition, led by Pánfilo de Narváez, to oppose Cortés, arriving in Mexico in April 1520 with 1,100 men.[14] Cortés left 200 men in Tenochtitlán and took the rest to confront Narváez. He overcame Narváez, despite his numerical inferiority, and convinced the rest of Narváez's men to join him.[14] In Mexico, one of Cortés's lieutenants Pedro de Alvarado, committed the massacre in the Great Temple, triggering a local rebellion.[22]

Cortés speedily returned to Tenochtitlán. On July 1, 1520, Moctezuma was killed (he was stoned to death by his own people, as reported in Spanish accounts; although some claim he was murdered by the Spaniards once they realized his inability to placate the locals). Faced with a hostile population, Cortés decided to flee for Tlaxcala. During the Noche Triste (June 30 – July 1, 1520), the Spaniards managed a narrow escape from Tenochtitlán across the Tlacopan causeway, while their rearguard was being massacred. Much of the treasure looted by Cortés was lost (as well as his artillery) during this panicked escape from Tenochtitlán.[14]

Destruction of Tenochtitlán

After a battle in Otumba, they managed to reach Tlaxcala, having lost 870 men.[14] With the assistance of their allies, Cortés's men finally prevailed with reinforcements arriving from Cuba. Cortés began a policy of attrition towards Tenochtitlán, cutting off supplies and subduing the Aztecs' allied cities. During the siege he would construct brigantines in the lake and slowly destroy blocks of the city to avoid fighting in an urban setting. The Mexicas would fall back to Tlatelolco and even succeed in ambushing the pursuing Spanish forces, inflicting heavy losses, but would ultimately be the last portion of the island that resisted the conquistadores. The siege of Tenochtitlán ended with Spanish victory and the destruction of the city.[1][23]

In January 1521, Cortés countered a conspiracy against him, headed by Antonio de Villafana, who was hanged for the offense.[14] Finally, with the capture of Cuauhtémoc, the tlatoani (ruler) of Tenochtitlán, on August 13, 1521, the Aztec Empire was captured, and Cortés was able to claim it for Spain, thus renaming the city Mexico City. From 1521 to 1524, Cortés personally governed Mexico.[14]

Appointment to governorship of Mexico and internal dissensions

 
A painting from Diego Muñoz Camargo's History of Tlaxcala (Lienzo Tlaxcala), c. 1585, showing La Malinche and Hernán Cortés.

Many historical sources have conveyed an impression that Cortés was unjustly treated by the Spanish Crown, and that he received nothing but ingratitude for his role in establishing New Spain. This picture is the one Cortés presents in his letters and in the later biography written by Francisco López de Gómara. However, there may be more to the picture than this. Cortés's own sense of accomplishment, entitlement, and vanity may have played a part in his deteriorating position with the king:

Cortés personally was not ungenerously rewarded, but he speedily complained of insufficient compensation to himself and his comrades. Thinking himself beyond reach of restraint, he disobeyed many of the orders of the Crown, and, what was more imprudent, said so in a letter to the emperor, dated October 15, 1524 (Ycazbalceta, "Documentos para la Historia de México", Mexico, 1858, I). In this letter Cortés, besides recalling in a rather abrupt manner that the conquest of Mexico was due to him alone, deliberately acknowledges his disobedience in terms which could not fail to create a most unfavourable impression.[24]

King Charles appointed Cortés as governor, captain general and chief justice of the newly conquered territory, dubbed "New Spain of the Ocean Sea". But also, much to the dismay of Cortés, four royal officials were appointed at the same time to assist him in his governing – in effect, submitting him to close observation and administration. Cortés initiated the construction of Mexico City, destroying Aztec temples and buildings and then rebuilding on the Aztec ruins what soon became the most important European city in the Americas.[14]

Cortés managed the founding of new cities and appointed men to extend Spanish rule to all of New Spain, imposing the encomienda system in 1524.[14] He reserved many encomiendas for himself and for his retinue, which they considered just rewards for their accomplishment in conquering central Mexico. However, later arrivals and members of factions antipathetic to Cortés complained of the favoritism that excluded them.[25]

In 1523, the Crown (possibly influenced by Cortés's enemy, Bishop Fonseca),[26] sent a military force under the command of Francisco de Garay to conquer and settle the northern part of Mexico, the region of Pánuco. This was another setback for Cortés who mentioned this in his fourth letter to the King in which he describes himself as the victim of a conspiracy by his archenemies Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar, Diego Columbus and Bishop Fonseca as well as Francisco Garay. The influence of Garay was effectively stopped by this appeal to the King who sent out a decree forbidding Garay to interfere in the politics of New Spain, causing him to give up without a fight.

Royal grant of arms (1525)

 
The coat of arms awarded to Cortés, by King Carlos I of Spain.

Although Cortés had flouted the authority of Diego Velázquez in sailing to the mainland and then leading an expedition of conquest, Cortés's spectacular success was rewarded by the crown with a coat of arms, a mark of high honor, following the conqueror's request. The document granting the coat of arms summarizes Cortés's accomplishments in the conquest of Mexico. The proclamation of the king says in part:

We, respecting the many labors, dangers, and adventures which you underwent as stated above, and so that there might remain a perpetual memorial of you and your services and that you and your descendants might be more fully honored ... it is our will that besides your coat of arms of your lineage, which you have, you may have and bear as your coat of arms, known and recognized, a shield ...[27]: 43 

The grant specifies the iconography of the coat of arms, the central portion divided into quadrants. In the upper portion, there is a "black eagle with two heads on a white field, which are the arms of the empire".[27]: 43  Below that is a "golden lion on a red field, in memory of the fact that you, the said Hernando Cortés, by your industry and effort brought matters to the state described above" (i.e., the conquest).[27]: 43  The specificity of the other two quadrants is linked directly to Mexico, with one quadrant showing three crowns representing the three Aztec emperors of the conquest era, Moctezuma, Cuitlahuac, and Cuauhtemoc[27]: 43  and the other showing the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan.[27]: 43  Encircling the central shield are symbols of the seven city-states around the lake and their lords that Cortés defeated, with the lords "to be shown as prisoners bound with a chain which shall be closed with a lock beneath the shield".[27]: 44–45 

Death of his first wife and remarriage

 
Sculpture of Juana de Zúñiga, second wife of Cortés, for her tomb.

Cortés's wife Catalina Súarez arrived in New Spain around summer 1522, along with her sister and brother.[28] His marriage to Catalina was at this point extremely awkward, since she was a kinswoman of the governor of Cuba, Diego Velázquez, whose authority Cortés had thrown off and who was therefore now his enemy. Catalina lacked the noble title of doña, so at this point his marriage with her no longer raised his status. Their marriage had been childless. Since Cortés had sired children with a variety of indigenous women, including a son around 1522 by his cultural translator, Doña Marina, Cortés knew he was capable of fathering children. Cortés's only male heir at this point was illegitimate, but nonetheless named after Cortés's father, Martín Cortés. This son Martín Cortés was also popularly called "El Mestizo".[29][30]

Catalina Suárez died under mysterious circumstances the night of November 1–2, 1522. There were accusations at the time that Cortés had murdered his wife.[1] There was an investigation into her death, interviewing a variety of household residents and others.[31] The documentation of the investigation was published in the nineteenth century in Mexico and these archival documents were uncovered in the twentieth century.[32][33] The death of Catalina Suárez produced a scandal and investigation, but Cortés was now free to marry someone of high status more appropriate to his wealth and power. In 1526, he built an imposing residence for himself, the Palace of Cortés in Cuernavaca, in a region close to the capital where he had extensive encomienda holdings. In 1529 he had been accorded the noble designation of don, but more importantly was given the noble title of Marquess of the Valley of Oaxaca and married the Spanish noblewoman Doña Juana de Zúñiga. The marriage produced three children, including another son, who was also named Martín. As the first-born legitimate son, Don Martín Cortés y Zúñiga was now Cortés's heir and succeeded him as holder of the title and estate of the Marquessate of the Valley of Oaxaca.[34] Cortés's legitimate daughters were Doña Maria, Doña Catalina, and Doña Juana.[35]

Cortés and the "Spiritual Conquest" of Mexico

Since the conversion to Christianity of indigenous peoples was an essential and integral part of the extension of Spanish power, making formal provisions for that conversion once the military conquest was completed was an important task for Cortés. During the Age of Discovery, the Catholic Church had seen early attempts at conversion in the Caribbean islands by Spanish friars, particularly the mendicant orders. Cortés made a request to the Spanish monarch to send Franciscan and Dominican friars to Mexico to convert the vast indigenous populations to Christianity. In his fourth letter to the king, Cortés pleaded for friars rather than diocesan or secular priests because those clerics were in his view a serious danger to the Indians' conversion.

If these people [Indians] were now to see the affairs of the Church and the service of God in the hands of canons or other dignitaries, and saw them indulge in the vices and profanities now common in Spain, knowing that such men were the ministers of God, it would bring our Faith into much harm that I believe any further preaching would be of no avail.[36]

He wished the mendicants to be the main evangelists. Mendicant friars did not usually have full priestly powers to perform all the sacraments needed for conversion of the Indians and growth of the neophytes in the Christian faith, so Cortés laid out a solution to this to the king.

Your Majesty should likewise beseech His Holiness [the pope] to grant these powers to the two principal persons in the religious orders that are to come here, and that they should be his delegates, one from the Order of St. Francis and the other from the Order of St. Dominic. They should bring the most extensive powers Your Majesty is able to obtain, for, because these lands are so far from the Church of Rome, and we, the Christians who now reside here and shall do so in the future, are so far from the proper remedies of our consciences and, as we are human, so subject to sin, it is essential that His Holiness should be generous with us and grant to these persons most extensive powers, to be handed down to persons actually in residence here whether it be given to the general of each order or to his provincials.[37]

The Franciscans arrived in May 1524, a symbolically powerful group of twelve known as the Twelve Apostles of Mexico, led by Fray Martín de Valencia. Franciscan Geronimo de Mendieta claimed that Cortés's most important deed was the way he met this first group of Franciscans. The conqueror himself was said to have met the friars as they approached the capital, kneeling at the feet of the friars who had walked from the coast. This story was told by Franciscans to demonstrate Cortés piety and humility and was a powerful message to all, including the Indians, that Cortés's earthly power was subordinate to the spiritual power of the friars. However, one of the first twelve Franciscans, Fray Toribio de Benavente Motolinia does not mention it in his history.[38] Cortés and the Franciscans had a particularly strong alliance in Mexico, with Franciscans seeing him as "the new Moses" for conquering Mexico and opening it to Christian evangelization. In Motolinia's 1555 response to Dominican Bartolomé de Las Casas, he praises Cortés.

And as to those who murmur against the Marqués del Valle [Cortés], God rest him, and who try to blacken and obscure his deeds, I believe that before God their deeds are not as acceptable as those of the Marqués. Although as a human he was a sinner, he had faith and works of a good Christian, and a great desire to employ his life and property in widening and augmenting the fair of Jesus Christ, and dying for the conversion of these gentiles ... Who has loved and defended the Indians of this new world like Cortés? ... Through this captain, God opened the door for us to preach his holy gospel and it was he who caused the Indians to revere the holy sacraments and respect the ministers of the church.[39]

In Fray Bernardino de Sahagún's 1585 revision of the conquest narrative first codified as Book XII of the Florentine Codex, there are laudatory references to Cortés that do not appear in the earlier text from the indigenous perspective. Whereas Book XII of the Florentine Codex concludes with an account of Spaniards' search for gold, in Sahagún's 1585 revised account, he ends with praise of Cortés for requesting the Franciscans be sent to Mexico to convert the Indians.[40]

Expedition to Honduras and aftermath (1524–1541)

Expedition to Honduras (1524–1526)

From 1524 to 1526, Cortés headed an expedition to Honduras where he defeated Cristóbal de Olid, who had claimed Honduras as his own under the influence of the Governor of Cuba Diego Velázquez. Fearing that Cuauhtémoc might head an insurrection in Mexico, he brought him with him to Honduras. In a controversial move, Cuauhtémoc was executed during the journey. Raging over Olid's treason, Cortés issued a decree to arrest Velázquez, whom he was sure was behind Olid's treason. This, however, only served to further estrange the Crown of Castile and the Council of Indies, both of which were already beginning to feel anxious about Cortés's rising power.[41]

Cortés's fifth letter to King Charles attempts to justify his conduct, concludes with a bitter attack on "various and powerful rivals and enemies" who have "obscured the eyes of your Majesty".[42] Charles, who was also Holy Roman Emperor, had little time for distant colonies (much of Charles's reign was taken up with wars with France, the German Protestants and the expanding Ottoman Empire),[43] except insofar as they contributed to finance his wars. In 1521, year of the Conquest, Charles was attending to matters in his German domains and Bishop Adrian of Utrecht functioned as regent in Spain.

Velázquez and Fonseca persuaded the regent to appoint a commissioner (a Juez de residencia, Luis Ponce de León) with powers to investigate Cortés's conduct and even arrest him. Cortés was once quoted as saying that it was "more difficult to contend against [his] own countrymen than against the Aztecs."[44] Governor Diego Velázquez continued to be a thorn in his side, teaming up with Bishop Juan Rodríguez de Fonseca, chief of the Spanish colonial department, to undermine him in the Council of the Indies.

A few days after Cortés's return from his expedition, Ponce de León suspended Cortés from his office of governor of New Spain. The Licentiate then fell ill and died shortly after his arrival, appointing Marcos de Aguilar as alcalde mayor. The aged Aguilar also became sick and appointed Alonso de Estrada governor, who was confirmed in his functions by a royal decree in August 1527. Cortés, suspected of poisoning them, refrained from taking over the government.

Estrada sent Diego de Figueroa to the south. De Figueroa raided graveyards and extorted contributions, meeting his end when the ship carrying these treasures sank. Albornoz persuaded Alonso de Estrada to release Gonzalo de Salazar and Chirinos. When Cortés complained angrily after one of his adherents' hands was cut off, Estrada ordered him exiled. Cortés sailed for Spain in 1528 to appeal to King Charles.

First return to Spain (1528) and Marquessate of the Valley of Oaxaca

 
Emperor Charles V with Hound (1532), a painting by the 16th-century artist Jakob Seisenegger.

In 1528, Cortés returned to Spain to appeal to the justice of his master, Charles V. Juan Altamirano and Alonso Valiente stayed in Mexico and acted as Cortés's representatives during his absence. Cortés presented himself with great splendor before Charles V's court. By this time Charles had returned and Cortés forthrightly responded to his enemy's charges. Denying he had held back on gold due the crown, he showed that he had contributed more than the quinto (one-fifth) required. Indeed, he had spent lavishly to build the new capital of Mexico City on the ruins of the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlán, leveled during the siege that brought down the Aztec empire.

He was received by Charles with every distinction, and decorated with the order of Santiago. In return for his efforts in expanding the still young Spanish Empire, Cortés was rewarded in 1529 by being accorded the noble title of don but more importantly named the "Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca" (Marquess of the Valley of Oaxaca) and married the Spanish noblewoman Doña Juana Zúñiga, after the 1522 death of his much less distinguished first wife, Catalina Suárez. The noble title and senorial estate of the Marquesado was passed down to his descendants until 1811. The Oaxaca Valley was one of the wealthiest regions of New Spain, and Cortés had 23,000 vassals in 23 named encomiendas in perpetuity.[14][45]

Although confirmed in his land holdings and vassals, he was not reinstated as governor and was never again given any important office in the administration of New Spain. During his travel to Spain, his property was mismanaged by abusive colonial administrators. He sided with local natives in a lawsuit. The natives documented the abuses in the Huexotzinco Codex.

The entailed estate and title passed to his legitimate son Don Martín Cortés upon Cortés's death in 1547, who became the Second Marquess. Don Martín's association with the so-called Encomenderos' Conspiracy endangered the entailed holdings, but they were restored and remained the continuing reward for Hernán Cortés's family through the generations.

Return to Mexico (1530) and appointment of a viceroy (1535)

 
 
Two copies of the same protrait, the original was likely made during his lifetime. The left copy is dated to the 17th century and the right copy was made by José Salomé Pina, c. 1879. This portrait is characterized by having a different armor than other portraits.[3]

Cortés returned to Mexico in 1530 with new titles and honors. Although Cortés still retained military authority and permission to continue his conquests, Don Antonio de Mendoza was appointed in 1535 as a viceroy to administer New Spain's civil affairs. This division of power led to continual dissension, and caused the failure of several enterprises in which Cortés was engaged. On returning to Mexico, Cortés found the country in a state of anarchy. There was a strong suspicion in court circles of an intended rebellion by Cortés.

After reasserting his position and reestablishing some sort of order, Cortés retired to his estates at Cuernavaca, about 30 miles (48 km) south of Mexico City. There he concentrated on the building of his palace and on Pacific exploration. Remaining in Mexico between 1530 and 1541, Cortés quarreled with Nuño Beltrán de Guzmán and disputed the right to explore the territory that is today California with Antonio de Mendoza, the first viceroy.

Cortés acquired several silver mines in Zumpango del Rio in 1534. By the early 1540s, he owned 20 silver mines in Sultepec, 12 in Taxco, and 3 in Zacualpan. Earlier, Cortés had claimed the silver in the Tamazula area.[46]

In 1536, Cortés explored the northwestern part of Mexico and discovered the Baja California peninsula. Cortés also spent time exploring the Pacific coast of Mexico. The Gulf of California was originally named the Sea of Cortés by its discoverer Francisco de Ulloa in 1539. This was the last major expedition by Cortés.

Later life and death

Second return to Spain

After his exploration of Baja California, Cortés returned to Spain in 1541, hoping to confound his angry civilians, who had brought many lawsuits against him (for debts, abuse of power, etc.).[14] On his return he went through a crowd to speak to the emperor, who demanded of him who he was. "I am a man," replied Cortés, "who has given you more provinces than your ancestors left you cities."[47][48]

Expedition against Algiers

 
An engraving of a middle aged Cortés by 19th-century artist William Holl.

The emperor finally permitted Cortés to join him and his fleet commanded by Andrea Doria at the great expedition against Algiers in the Barbary Coast in 1541, which was then part of the Ottoman Empire. During this campaign, Cortés was almost drowned in a storm that hit his fleet while he was pursuing the Pasha of Algiers.[49]

Last years, death, and remains

Having spent a great deal of his own money to finance expeditions, he was now heavily in debt. In February 1544 he made a claim on the royal treasury, but was ignored for the next three years. Disgusted, he decided to return to Mexico in 1547. When he reached Seville, he was stricken with dysentery. He died in Castilleja de la Cuesta, Seville province, on December 2, 1547, from a case of pleurisy at the age of 62.

He left his many mestizo and white children well cared for in his will, along with every one of their mothers. He requested in his will that his remains eventually be buried in Mexico. Before he died he had the Pope remove the "natural" status of four of his children (legitimizing them in the eyes of the church), including Martin, the son he had with Doña Marina (also known as La Malinche), said to be his favourite.[citation needed] His daughter, Doña Catalina, however, died shortly after her father's death.

 
Bust Hernán Cortés in the General Archive of the Indies in Seville

After his death, his body was moved more than eight times for several reasons. On December 4, 1547, he was buried in the mausoleum of the Duke of Medina in the church of San Isidoro del Campo, Sevilla. Three years later (1550) due to the space being required by the duke, his body was moved to the altar of Santa Catarina in the same church. In his testament, Cortés asked for his body to be buried in the monastery he had ordered to be built in Coyoacan in México, ten years after his death, but the monastery was never built. So in 1566, his body was sent to New Spain and buried in the church of San Francisco de Texcoco, where his mother and one of his sisters were buried.

 
Tomb of Cortés in the Hospital de Jesús Nazareno, which he founded in Mexico City.

In 1629, Cortes's last male descendant Don Pedro Cortés, fourth Marquez del Valle, died. The viceroy decided to move the bones of Cortés along with those of his descendant to the Franciscan church in México. This was delayed for nine years, while his body stayed in the main room of the palace of the viceroy. Eventually it was moved to the Sagrario of Franciscan church, where it stayed for 87 years. In 1716, it was moved to another place in the same church. In 1794, his bones were moved to the "Hospital de Jesus" (founded by Cortés), where a statue by Tolsá and a mausoleum were made. There was a public ceremony and all the churches in the city rang their bells.[citation needed]

In 1823, after the independence of México, it seemed imminent that his body would be desecrated, so the mausoleum was removed, the statue and the coat of arms were sent to Palermo, Sicily, to be protected by the Duke of Terranova. The bones were hidden, and everyone thought that they had been sent out of México. In 1836, his bones were moved to another place in the same building.[clarification needed]

It was not until November 24, 1946, that they were rediscovered,[50]: 467  thanks to the discovery of a secret document by Lucas Alamán. His bones were put in the charge of the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH). The remains were authenticated by INAH.[50]: 468  They were then restored to the same place, this time with a bronze inscription and his coat of arms.[51] When the bones were first rediscovered, the supporters of the Hispanic tradition in Mexico were excited, but one supporter of an indigenist vision of Mexico "proposed that the remains be publicly burned in front of the statue of Cuauhtemoc, and the ashes flung into the air".[50]: 468  Following the discovery and authentication of Cortés's remains, there was a discovery of what were described as the bones of Cuauhtémoc, resulting in a "battle of the bones".[50]: 468 

On December 16, 1560, the lawsuits related to vassals of the Cortes estate were resolved by a royal order issued by Philip II.[52]

Taxa named after Cortés

Cortés is commemorated in the scientific name of a subspecies of Mexican lizard, Phrynosoma orbiculare cortezii.[53]

Disputed interpretation of his life

There are relatively few sources to the early life of Cortés; his fame arose from his participation in the conquest of Mexico and it was only after this that people became interested in reading and writing about him.

Probably the best source is his letters to the king which he wrote during the campaign in Mexico, but they are written with the specific purpose of putting his efforts in a favourable light and so must be read critically. Another main source is the biography written by Cortés's private chaplain Lopez de Gómara, which was written in Spain several years after the conquest. Gómara never set foot in the Americas and knew only what Cortés had told him, and he had an affinity for knightly romantic stories which he incorporated richly in the biography. The third major source is written as a reaction to what its author calls "the lies of Gomara", the eyewitness account written by the Conquistador Bernal Díaz del Castillo does not paint Cortés as a romantic hero but rather tries to emphasize that Cortés's men should also be remembered as important participants in the undertakings in Mexico.

 
1000 Spanish peseta note issued in 1992

In the years following the conquest more critical accounts of the Spanish arrival in Mexico were written. The Dominican friar Bartolomé de Las Casas wrote his A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies which raises strong accusations of brutality and heinous violence towards the Indians; accusations against both the conquistadors in general and Cortés in particular.[54] The accounts of the conquest given in the Florentine Codex by the Franciscan Bernardino de Sahagún and his native informants are also less than flattering towards Cortés. The scarcity of these sources has led to a sharp division in the description of Cortés's personality and a tendency to describe him as either a vicious and ruthless person or a noble and honorable cavalier.

Representations in Mexico

 
Monument in Mexico City commemorating the encounter of Cortés and Moctezuma at the Hospital de Jesús Nazareno.

In México there are few representations of Cortés. However, many landmarks still bear his name, from the castle Palacio de Cortés in the city of Cuernavaca to some street names throughout the republic.

The pass between the volcanoes Iztaccíhuatl and Popocatépetl where Cortés took his soldiers on their march to Mexico City. It is known as the Paso de Cortés.

The muralist Diego Rivera painted several representation of him but the most famous, depicts him as a powerful and ominous figure along with Malinche in a mural in the National Palace in Mexico City.

 
Monument in Mexico City known as "Monumento al Mestizaje".

In 1981, President Lopez Portillo tried to bring Cortés to public recognition. First, he made public a copy of the bust of Cortés made by Manuel Tolsá in the Hospital de Jesús Nazareno with an official ceremony, but soon a nationalist group tried to destroy it, so it had to be taken out of the public.[55] Today the copy of the bust is in the "Hospital de Jesús Nazareno"[56] while the original is in Naples, Italy, in the Villa Pignatelli.

Later, another monument, known as "Monumento al Mestizaje" by Julián Martínez y M. Maldonado (1982) was commissioned by Mexican president José López Portillo to be put in the "Zócalo" (Main square) of Coyoacan, near the place of his country house, but it had to be removed to a little known park, the Jardín Xicoténcatl, Barrio de San Diego Churubusco, to quell protests. The statue depicts Cortés, Malinche and their son Martín.[57]

There is another statue by Sebastián Aparicio, in Cuernavaca, was in a hotel "El casino de la selva". Cortés is barely recognizable, so it sparked little interest. The hotel was closed to make a commercial center, and the statue was put out of public display by Costco the builder of the commercial center.[55]

Cultural depictions

 
Scene from the opera La Conquista, 2005

Hernán Cortés is a character in the opera La Conquista (2005) by Italian composer Lorenzo Ferrero, which depicts the major episodes of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire in 1521.

Writings: the Cartas de Relación

Cortés's personal account of the conquest of Mexico is narrated in his five letters addressed to Charles V. These five letters, the cartas de relación, are Cortés's only surviving writings. See "Letters and Dispatches of Cortés", translated by George Folsom (New York, 1843); Prescott's "Conquest of Mexico" (Boston, 1843); and Sir Arthur Helps's "Life of Hernando Cortes" (London, 1871).[47]

His first letter was considered lost, and the one from the municipality of Veracruz has to take its place. It was published for the first time in volume IV of "Documentos para la Historia de España", and subsequently reprinted.

The Segunda Carta de Relacion, bearing the date of October 30, 1520, appeared in print at Seville in 1522. The third letter, dated May 15, 1522, appeared at Seville in 1523. The fourth, October 20, 1524, was printed at Toledo in 1525. The fifth, on the Honduras expedition, is contained in volume IV of the Documentos para la Historia de España.[58][59]

Children

Natural children of Don Hernán Cortés

  • doña Catalina Pizarro, born between 1514 and 1515 in Santiago de Cuba or maybe later in Nueva España, daughter of an indigenous woman in Cuba, Leonor Pizarro. Doña Catalina married Juan de Salcedo, a conqueror and encomendero, with whom she had a son, Pedro.[60]
  • don Martín Cortés, born in Coyoacán in 1522, son of doña Marina (La Malinche), called the First Mestizo; about him was written The New World of Martín Cortés; married doña Bernaldina de Porras and had two children:
    • doña Ana Cortés
    • don Fernando Cortés, Principal Judge of Veracruz. Descendants of this line are alive today in Mexico.[61]
  • don Luis Cortés, born in 1525, son of doña Antonia or Elvira Hermosillo, a native of Trujillo (Cáceres)[62]
  • doña Leonor Cortés Moctezuma, born in 1527 or 1528 in Ciudad de Mexico, daughter of Aztec princess Tecuichpotzin (baptized Isabel), born in Tenochtitlan on July 11, 1510, and died on July 9, 1550, the eldest legitimate daughter of Moctezuma II Xocoyotzin and wife doña María Miahuaxuchitl; married to Juan de Tolosa, a Basque merchant and miner.[63]
  • doña María Cortés de Moctezuma, daughter of an Aztec princess; nothing more is known about her except that she probably was born with some deformity.[citation needed]

He married twice: firstly in Cuba to Catalina Suárez Marcaida, who died at Coyoacán in 1522 without issue, and secondly in 1529 to doña Juana Ramírez de Arellano de Zúñiga, daughter of don Carlos Ramírez de Arellano, 2nd Count of Aguilar and wife the Countess doña Juana de Zúñiga, and had:

  • don Luis Cortés y Ramírez de Arellano, born in Texcoco in 1530 and died shortly after his birth.
  • doña Catalina Cortés de Zúñiga, born in Cuernavaca in 1531 and died shortly after her birth.
  • don Martín Cortés y Ramírez de Arellano, 2nd Marquess of the Valley of Oaxaca, born in Cuernavaca in 1532, married at Nalda on February 24, 1548, his twice cousin once removed doña Ana Ramírez de Arellano y Ramírez de Arellano and had issue, currently extinct in male line
  • doña María Cortés de Zúñiga, born in Cuernavaca between 1533 and 1536, married to don Luis de Quiñones y Pimentel, 5th Count of Luna
  • doña Catalina Cortés de Zúñiga, born in Cuernavaca between 1533 and 1536, died unmarried in Sevilla after the funeral of her father
  • doña Juana Cortés de Zúñiga, born in Cuernavaca between 1533 and 1536, married Don Fernando Enríquez de Ribera y Portocarrero, 2nd Duke of Alcalá de los Gazules, 3rd Marquess of Tarifa and 6th Count of Los Molares, and had issue

In popular culture

  • Cortés was portrayed (as "Hernando Cortez") by actor Cesar Romero in the 1947 historical adventure film Captain from Castile.
  • "Cortez the Killer", a 1975 song by Neil Young
  • Cortés is a major villain in the 2000 animated movie The Road to El Dorado, voiced by Jim Cummings
  • Cortes played by Óscar Jaenada, is a morally ambiguous protagonist in the 2019 8 episode TV-series Hernán.
  • In 1986, Polish illustrator Jerzy Wróblewski created a 48-page comic book titled Hernán Cortés i podbój Meksyku (Hernán Cortés and the Conquest of Mexico). The comic book, based on historical chronicles, narrated Cortés's life, concentrating on the titular 1519–1521 period; it was noted for its realistic depictions of violence, unusual in Polish comic books of the era.
  • Cortés features in the 1980 novel Aztec by Gary Jennings as an antagonist.
  • Cortés is the villain of "Idol of Death", an episode of The Time Tunnel.

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ a b c d Hanson, Victor Davis (2007). Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-307-42518-8.
  2. ^ See information box for his signature and painting.
  3. ^ a b Friede, Juan (1969). "The Coat of Arms of Hernando Cortés". The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress. 26 (2): 64–69. JSTOR 29781347. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
  4. ^ Vélez, Iván (April 5, 2019). "Hechuras de Hernán Cortés". Libertad Digital.
  5. ^ a b Machado, J. T. Montalvão, Dos Pizarros de Espanha aos de Portugal e Brasil, Author's Edition, 1st Edition, Lisbon, 1970.
  6. ^ David A. Boruchoff, "Hernán Cortés," International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, 2nd. ed. (2008), vol. 2, pp. 146–149 Hernán Cortés
  7. ^ Boruchoff, "Hernán Cortés," Hernán Cortés, Encyclopedia
  8. ^ Francisco López de Gómara, "Hernan Cortés", The Latin Library
  9. ^ Crow, John A. The Epic of Latin America. Los Angeles, California: University of California Press, 1992. 4th ed. p. 73
  10. ^ Pemberton, John (2011). Conquistadors : searching for El Dorado : the terrifying Spanish conquest of the Aztec and Inca empires. London: Futura. ISBN 978-1-907795-96-1. OCLC 1132344342.
  11. ^ a b Hassig, Ross. Mexico and the Spanish Conquest. Longman Group UK Limited, 1994, pp. 45–46
  12. ^ Sanderson Beck, "Cortès in Mexico"
  13. ^ Jane Landers, Slaves, Subjects, and Subversives: Blacks in Colonial Latin America, UNM Press, 2006, p. 43
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Bernard Grunberg, "La folle aventure d'Hernan Cortés", in L'Histoire n°322, July–August 2007
  15. ^ a b Crowe, John A. The Epic of Latin America. Los Angeles, California: University of California Press, 1992. 4th ed. p. 75
  16. ^ Gómez, Angel Delgado. "Cortés, Fernando." In The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures. : Oxford University Press, 2001.
  17. ^ a b c d e Diaz, B., 1963, The Conquest of New Spain, London: Penguin Books, ISBN 0140441239
  18. ^ a b Hassig, Ross. Mexico and the Spanish Conquest. Longman Group UK Limited, 1994, pp. 53–54
  19. ^ Hassig, Ross. Mexico and the Spanish Conquest. Longman Group UK Limited, 1994, pp. 82, 86
  20. ^ Restall, Matthew (2003). Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest. Oxford University Press; Townsend, Camilla (2003). "Burying the White Gods: New Perspectives on the Conquest of Mexico." American Historical Review 108, no. 3: 659–687.
  21. ^ Hassig, Ross. Mexico and the Spanish Conquest. Longman Group UK Limited, 1994, pp. 88–89
  22. ^ Hassig, Ross. Mexico and the Spanish Conquest. Longman Group UK Limited, 1994, pp. 91–92
  23. ^ Hassig, Ross. Mexico and the Spanish Conquest. Longman Group UK Limited, 1994, pp. 108–143
  24. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia, Hernan Cortés
  25. ^ Robert Himmerich y Valencia, The Encomenderos of New Spain, 1521–1555. Austin: University of Texas Press 1991.
  26. ^ pp. 30–31 of J.H. Elliot, introductory essay to Anthony Pagden's translation of Cortés's letters "Hernan Cortés" letters from Mexico" 2001 (1971, 1986) Yale University NotaBene books
  27. ^ a b c d e f "Grant of coat of arms to Hernando Cortés, 1525" transcription and translation by J. Benedict Warren. The Harkness Collection in the Library of Congress: Manuscripts concerning Mexico. Washington DC: Library of Congress 1974.
  28. ^ Hugh Thomas, Conquest: Montezuma, Cortés, and the Fall of Old Mexico, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1993, p. 579.
  29. ^ Seaman, Rebecca M. (2013). Conflict in the Early Americas – An Encyclopedia of the Spanish Empire's Aztec, Incan, and Mayan Conquests. ABC-Clio. ISBN 9781598847772.
  30. ^ Muñoz, Victoria (2021). Spanish Romance in the Battle for Global Supremacy Tudor and Stuart Black Legends. Anthem Press. p. 24. ISBN 9781785273315.
  31. ^ Hugh Thomas, Conquest, pp. 580–582.
  32. ^ Hugh Thomas, Conquest, cites documents from the residencia against Cortés published by Ignacio López Rayon, Documentos para la historia de Mexico, Mexico, 1852–53 and the documentation in the Archivo General de Indias (AGI), Justicia, leg. 220, ff. 316–342.
  33. ^ Hugh Thomas, Conquest also included a summary of evidence found in the AGI, Justicia, leg. 224, p. 1 (f. 660v–722r), which is found on p. 635.
  34. ^ Robert Himmerich y Valencia, The Encomenderos of New Spain, 1521–1555, Austin: University of Texas Press 1991, 145–148.
  35. ^ Francisco López de Gómara, Cortés: The Life of the Conqueror by His Secretary, Ed. and trans. Lesley Byrd Simpson. Berkeley: University of California Press 1964, p. 408.
  36. ^ Hernán Cortés, Letters from Mexico, translated and edited by A.R. Pagden. New York: Grossman Publishers, 1971, p. 333.
  37. ^ Hernán Cortés, Letters from Mexico, translated and edited by A.R. Pagden. New York: Grossman Publishers, 1971, p. 334
  38. ^ John Leddy Phelan, The Snake Person Kingdom of the Franciscans in the New World, chapter 3, "Hernán Cortés, the Moses of the New World," Berkeley: University of California Press, second edition, revised, 1971, pp. 33–34.
  39. ^ Toribio de Benavente Motolinia, "The Franciscan reply (to the Dominicans) in Letters and People of the Spanish Indies, Sixteenth Century, translated and edited by James Lockhart and Enrique Otte. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976 pp. 244–246.
  40. ^ Bernardino de Sahagún, Conquest of New Spain, 1585 Revision, translated by Howard F. Cline. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1989.
  41. ^ p. 34 of J.H. Elliot, introductory essay to Anthony Pagdens translation of Cortés's letters "Hernan Cortés" letters from Mexico" 2001 (1971, 1986) Yale University NotaBene books
  42. ^ Cartas y relaciones de Hernan Cortés al emperador Carlos V (in Spanish). Everything2.com. 1866. Retrieved 2009-07-26.
  43. ^ "Charles V". Everything2.com. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  44. ^ Prescott (1898), p. 309.
  45. ^ Robert Himmerich y Valencia, The Encomenderos of New Spain, 1521–1555. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1991, pp. 146–147
  46. ^ West, Robert. Early Silver Mining in New Spain, 1531–1555 (1997). Bakewell, Peter (ed.). Mines of Silver and Gold in the Americas. Aldershot: Variorum, Ashgate Publishing Limited. pp. 59, 61–62.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  47. ^ a b . Virtualology.com. 2001-04-02. Archived from the original on 2009-02-21. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  48. ^ . Students.ou.edu. Archived from the original on 8 August 2008. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  49. ^ Sandra Arlinghaus. "Naval Battle of Preveza, 1538". Personal.umich.edu. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  50. ^ a b c d Keen, Benjamin (1971). The Aztecs' Image in Western Thought. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
  51. ^ "Xavier López Medellín: Los huesos de Hernán Cortés". Motecuhzoma.de. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  52. ^ Riley, G. Micheal. “Fernando Cortés and the Cuernavaca Encomiendas, 1522–1547.” The Americas, vol. 25, no. 1, Cambridge University Press, 1968, pp. 24–25. JSTOR website Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  53. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Cortez", p. 60).
  54. ^ de las Casas, Bartolomé; Gysius, Johannes (1620). Lons, Dirck Eversen; Vinckeboons, David (eds.). "Mirror of the Cruel and Horrible Spanish Tyranny Perpetrated in the Netherlands, by the Tyrant, the Duke of Alba, and Other Commanders of King Philip II". World Digital Library. Library of Congress. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
  55. ^ a b Tarifeño, Leonardo (September 2003). . Letras Libres. Editorial Vuelta. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 23 July 2009.
  56. ^ MariaRosa (5 February 2003). "Recuerdos de España en Mexico: Hernán Cortes". BlogSpot. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
  57. ^ Cascante, Manuel M. (13 October 2006). "Cortés y sus 9 entierros". ABC. Vocento. Retrieved 23 July 2009.
  58. ^ . Famous Hispanics. Coloquio. 2006. Archived from the original on 24 October 2006. Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  59. ^ Knight, Kevin (2017). "Hernando Cortes". Catholic Encyclopedia. Newadvent.org. Retrieved 23 July 2009.
  60. ^ Robert Himmerich y Valencia, The Encomenderos of New Spain,, pp. 147, 235
  61. ^ "The Genealogy of Mexico". garyfelix.tripod.com. Retrieved 2020-04-10.
  62. ^ Robert Himmerich y Valencia, The Encomenderos of New Spain, 1521–1555, Austin: University of Texas Press, 1991, p. 147
  63. ^ Robert Himmerich y Valencia, The Encomenderos of New Spain, 1521–1555, Austin: University of Texas Press, 1991, pp. 195–196.

Further reading

Primary sources

  • Cortés, Hernán. Letters – available as Letters from Mexico translated by Anthony Pagden. Yale University Press, 1986. ISBN 0-300-09094-3. Available online in Spanish from an 1866 edition.
  • Cortés, Hernán. Escritos sueltos de Hernán Cortés. Biblioteca Histórica de la Iberia. vol 12. Mexico 1871.
  • Díaz del Castillo, Bernal. The Conquest of New Spain – available as The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico: 1517–1521 ISBN 0-306-81319-X
  • Díaz del Castillo, Bernal, Carrasco, David, Rolena. Adorno, Sandra Messinger Cypess, and Karen Vieira Powers. The History of the Conquest of New Spain. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2008
  • 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.). Beacon Press. ISBN 978-0-8070-5501-4. (textbook anthology of indigenous primary sources)
  • López de Gómara, Francisco, Cortés: The Life of the Conqueror by His Secretary, Ed. and trans. Lesley Byrd Simpson. Berkeley: University of California Press 1964.
  • López de Gómara, Francisco. 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 University of California Press, 1966
  • Prescott, William H. History of the Conquest of Mexico, with a Preliminary View of Ancient Mexican Civilization, and the Life of the Conqueror, Hernando Cortes
  • Last Will and Testament of Hernán Cortés
  • Letter From Hernán Cortés to Charles the V
  • Hernán Cortés Power of Attorney, 1526 From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress
  • Praeclara Ferdinandi Cortesii de noua maris oceani Hyspania narratio sacratissimo... 1524. From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress

Secondary sources

  • Boruchoff, David A. "Hernán Cortés." International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, 2nd. ed. (2008), vol. 2, pp. 146–149.
  • Brooks, Francis J. "Motecuzoma Xocoyotl, Hernán Cortés, and Bernal Díaz del Castillo: The Construction of an Arrest." Hispanic American Historical Review (1995): 149–183.
  • Chamberlain, Robert S. "Two unpublished documents of Hernán Cortés and New Spain, 1519 and 1524." Hispanic American Historical Review 19 (1939) 120–137.
  • Chamberlain, Robert S. "La controversia entre Cortés y Velázquez sobre la gobernación de Nueva España, 1519–1522" in Anales de la Sociedad de Geografía e Historia de Guatemala, vol XIX 1943.
  • Cline, Howard F. "Hernando Cortés and the Aztec indians in Spain." The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress. Vol. 26. No. 2. Library of Congress, 1969.
  • Denhardt. Robert Moorman. "The equine strategy of Cortés." Hispanic American Historical Review 18 (1938) 550–555.
  • Elliott, J.H., "The mental world of Hernán Cortés." In Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. Fifth Series (1967) 41–58.
  • Frankl, Victor. "Hernán Cortés y la tradición de las Siete Partidas." Revista de Historia de América 53–54 (1962) 9–74.
  • Himmerich y Valencia, Robert. The Encomenderos of New Spain, 1521–1555, Austin: University of Texas Press 1991
  • Jacobs, W.J. Hernando Cortés. New York: Franklin Watts, Inc. 1974.
  • Keen, Benjamin, The Aztecs Image in Western Thought, New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press 1971.
  • Konetzke, Richard. "Hernán Cortés como poblador de la Nueva España." Estudios Cortesianos, pp. 341–381. Madrid 1948.
  • Levy, Buddy. Conquistador: Hernán Cortés, King Montezuma, and the Last Stand of the Aztecs. 2008 ISBN 978-0-553-80538-3
  • Lorenzana, Francisco Antonio. Viaje de Hernán Cortés a la Peninsula de Californias. Mexico 1963
  • MacNutt, F.A. Fernando Cortés and the Conquest of Mexico, 1485–1547. New York and London 1909.
  • Madariaga, Salvador de. Hernán Cortés, Conqueror of Mexico. Mexico 1942.
  • Marks, Richard Lee. Cortés: The Great Adventurer and the Fate of Aztec Mexico. Alfred A. Knopf, 1993.
  • Mathes, W. Michael, ed. The Conquistador in California: 1535. The Voyage of Fernando Cortés to Baja California in Chronicles and Documents. Vol. 31. Dawson's Book Shop, 1973.
  • Maura, Juan Francisco."Cobardía, falsedad y opportunismo español: algunas consideraciones sobre la "verdadera" historia de la conquista de la Nueva España" Lemir (Revista de literatura medieval y del Renacimiento) 7 (2003): 1–29.
  • Medina, José Toribio. Ensayo Bio–bibliográfico sobre Hernán Cortés. Introducción de Guillermo Feliú Cruz. Santiago de Chile 1952.
  • Miller, Robert Ryal. "Cortés and the first attempt to colonize California." Calif Hist QJ Calif Hist Soc 53.1 (1974): 4–16.
  • Petrov, Lisa. For an Audience of Men: Masculinity, Violence and Memory in Hernán Cortés's Las Cartas de Relación and Carlos Fuentes's Fictional Cortés. University of Wisconsin—Madison, 2004.
  • Phelan, John Leddy The Millennial Kingdom of the Franciscans in the New World, chapter 3, "Hernán Cortés, the Moses of the New World," Berkeley: University of California Press, second edition, revised, 1971, pp. 33–34.
  • William H. Prescott (1898). Mexico and the Life of the Conqueror Fernando Cortes. Vol. 2. New York: Peter Fenelon Collier.
  • Restall, Matthew. Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest Oxford University Press (2003) ISBN 0-19-516077-0
  • Silva, José Valerio. El legalismo de Hernán Cortés como instrumento de su conquista. Mexico 1965.
  • Stein, R.C. The World's Greatest Explorers: Hernando Cortés. Illinois: Chicago Press Inc. 1991.
  • Thomas, Hugh (1993). Conquest: Cortés, Montezuma, and the Fall of Old Mexico ISBN 0-671-51104-1
  • Todorov, TzvetanThe Conquest of America (1996) ISBN 0-06-132095-1
  • Toro, Alfonso. Un crimen de Hernán Cortés. La muerte de Doña Catalina Xuárez Marcaida, estudio histórico y medico legal. Mexico 1922
  • Wagner, H.R. "The lost first letter of Cortés." Hispanic American Historical Review. 21 (1941) 669–672.
  • White, Jon Manchip. (1971) Cortés and the Downfall of the Aztec Empire ISBN 0-7867-0271-0

External links

  • The letters by Cortés, in which Cortés describes the events related to the conquest of Mexico
  • Genealogy of Hernán Cortés
  • – web directory with thumbnail galleries
  • Conquistadors, with Michael Wood – website for 2001 PBS documentary
  • Ibero-American Electronic Text Series presented online by the University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center.
  • Hernan Cortes – The Conquistador of the Aztecs; Informational Link Blog about the History of Cortes, the Aztecs along with a variety of sources, pictures and educational resources
  • Latin American studies center, material on Cortés
  • opera by Gaspare Spontini, Jean-Paul Penin
  • "Cortes, Hernando" Belinda H. Nanney
  • "Hernán Cortés, marqués del Valle de Oaxaca", Encyclopædia Britannica

hernán, cortés, bolivian, olympic, weightlifter, hernán, cortez, weightlifter, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, cortés, monroy, second, maternal, family, name, pizarro, altamirano, monroy, pizarro, altamirano, marquess, valley, oaxaca, ɔːr, spani. For the Bolivian Olympic weightlifter see Hernan Cortez weightlifter In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Cortes de Monroy and the second or maternal family name is Pizarro Altamirano Hernan Cortes de Monroy y Pizarro Altamirano 1st Marquess of the Valley of Oaxaca k ɔːr ˈ t ɛ s Spanish eɾˈnaŋ koɾˈtes de monˈroj i piˈ8aro altamiˈɾano 1485 December 2 1547 was a Spanish conquistador who led an expedition that caused the fall of the Aztec Empire and brought large portions of what is now mainland Mexico under the rule of the King of Castile in the early 16th century Cortes was part of the generation of Spanish explorers and conquistadors who began the first phase of the Spanish colonization of the Americas Hernan Cortes18th century portrait of Cortes based on the one sent by the conqueror to Paolo Giovio which has served as a model for many of his representations since the 16th century1st and 3rd Governor of New SpainIn office 13 August 1521 24 December 1521MonarchCharles I of SpainPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byCristobal de TapiaIn office 30 December 1521 12 October 1524Preceded byCristobal de TapiaSucceeded byTriumvirate Alonso de Estrada Rodrigo de Albornoz Alonso de ZuazoPersonal detailsBornHernando Cortes de Monroy y Pizarro Altamirano1485 1485 Medellin CastileDiedDecember 2 1547 1547 12 02 aged 61 62 Castilleja de la Cuesta CastileNationalityCastilianSpouse s Catalina Suarez m 1516 died 1522 wbr Juana de Zuniga m 1529 wbr Domestic partner s La Malinche Isabel MoctezumaChildrenDon Martin Cortes 2nd Marquess of the Valley of OaxacaDona Maria CortesDona Catalina CortesDona Juana Cortes Martin CortesLeonor Cortes MoctezumaOccupationConquistadorKnown forSpanish conquest of the Aztec Empire Spanish conquest of HondurasSignatureBorn in Medellin Spain to a family of lesser nobility Cortes chose to pursue adventure and riches in the New World He went to Hispaniola and later to Cuba where he received an encomienda the right to the labor of certain subjects For a short time he served as alcalde magistrate of the second Spanish town founded on the island In 1519 he was elected captain of the third expedition to the mainland which he partly funded His enmity with the Governor of Cuba Diego Velazquez de Cuellar resulted in the recall of the expedition at the last moment an order which Cortes ignored Arriving on the continent Cortes executed a successful strategy of allying with some indigenous people against others He also used a native woman Dona Marina as an interpreter She later bore his first son When the Governor of Cuba sent emissaries to arrest Cortes he fought them and won using the extra troops as reinforcements 1 Cortes wrote letters directly to the king asking to be acknowledged for his successes instead of being punished for mutiny After he overthrew the Aztec Empire Cortes was awarded the title of Marques del Valle de Oaxaca while the more prestigious title of Viceroy was given to a high ranking nobleman Antonio de Mendoza In 1541 Cortes returned to Spain where he died six years later of natural causes Contents 1 Name 2 Physical appearance 3 Early life 4 Early career in the New World 4 1 Arrival 4 2 Cuba 1511 1519 5 Conquest of Mexico 1519 1521 5 1 March on Tenochtitlan 5 2 Destruction of Tenochtitlan 6 Appointment to governorship of Mexico and internal dissensions 7 Royal grant of arms 1525 8 Death of his first wife and remarriage 9 Cortes and the Spiritual Conquest of Mexico 10 Expedition to Honduras and aftermath 1524 1541 10 1 Expedition to Honduras 1524 1526 10 2 First return to Spain 1528 and Marquessate of the Valley of Oaxaca 10 3 Return to Mexico 1530 and appointment of a viceroy 1535 11 Later life and death 11 1 Second return to Spain 11 2 Expedition against Algiers 11 3 Last years death and remains 12 Taxa named after Cortes 13 Disputed interpretation of his life 13 1 Representations in Mexico 13 2 Cultural depictions 13 3 Writings the Cartas de Relacion 14 Children 15 In popular culture 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 Further reading 19 1 Primary sources 19 2 Secondary sources 20 External linksNameSee also Spanish naming customs Cortes himself used the form Hernando or Fernando for his first name as seen in the contemporary archive documents his signature and the title of an early portrait 2 William Hickling Prescott s Conquest of Mexico 1843 also refers to him as Hernando Cortes At some point writers began using the shortened form of Hernan more generally Physical appearance Weiditz s depiction of Cortes in 1529 Copy of a portrait of Cortes dated to the year 1525 In addition to the illustration by the German artist Christoph Weiditz in his Trachtenbuch there are three known portraits of Hernan Cortes which were likely made during his lifetime though only copies of them have survived All of these portraits show Cortes in the later years of his life 3 The account of the conquest of the Aztec Empire written by Bernal Diaz del Castillo gives a detailed description of Hernan Cortes s physical appearance He was of good stature and body well proportioned and stocky the color of his face was somewhat grey not very cheerful and a longer face would have suited him more His eyes seemed at times loving and at times grave and serious His beard was black and sparse as was his hair which at the time he sported in the same way as his beard He had a high chest a well shaped back and was lean with little belly 4 Bernal Diaz del CastilloEarly lifeCortes was born in 1485 in the town of Medellin then a village in the Kingdom of Castile now a municipality of the modern day province of Badajoz in Extremadura Spain His father Martin Cortes de Monroy born in 1449 to Rodrigo or Ruy Fernandez de Monroy and his wife Maria Cortes was an infantry captain of distinguished ancestry but slender means Hernan s mother was Catalina Pizarro Altamirano 5 Through his mother Hernan was second cousin once removed of Francisco Pizarro who later conquered the Inca Empire of modern day Peru and not to be confused with another Francisco Pizarro who joined Cortes to conquer the Aztecs His maternal grandmother Leonor Sanchez Pizarro Altamirano was first cousin of Pizarro s father Gonzalo Pizarro y Rodriguez 5 Through his father Hernan was related to Nicolas de Ovando the third Governor of Hispaniola His paternal great grandfather was Rodrigo de Monroy y Almaraz 5th Lord of Monroy According to his biographer and chaplain Francisco Lopez de Gomara Cortes was pale and sickly as a child At the age of 14 he was sent to study Latin under an uncle in Salamanca Later historians have misconstrued this personal tutoring as time enrolled at the University of Salamanca 6 After two years Cortes returned home to Medellin much to the irritation of his parents who had hoped to see him equipped for a profitable legal career However those two years in Salamanca plus his long period of training and experience as a notary first in Valladolid and later in Hispaniola gave him knowledge of the legal codes of Castile that he applied to help justify his unauthorized conquest of Mexico 7 At this point in his life Cortes was described by Gomara as ruthless haughty and mischievous 8 The 16 year old youth had returned home to feel constrained life in his small provincial town By this time news of the exciting discoveries of Christopher Columbus in the New World was streaming back to Spain Early career in the New WorldThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Plans were made for Cortes to sail to the Americas with a family acquaintance and distant relative Nicolas de Ovando the newly appointed Governor of Hispaniola This island is now divided between Haiti and the Dominican Republic Cortes suffered an injury and was prevented from traveling He spent the next year wandering the country probably spending most of his time in Spain s southern ports of Cadiz Palos Sanlucar and Seville He finally left for Hispaniola in 1504 and became a colonist 9 Arrival Cortes reached Hispaniola in a ship commanded by Alonso Quintero who tried to deceive his superiors and reach the New World before them in order to secure personal advantages Quintero s mutinous conduct may have served as a model for Cortes in his subsequent career Upon his arrival in 1504 in Santo Domingo the capital of Hispaniola the 18 year old Cortes registered as a citizen this entitled him to a building plot and land to farm Soon afterward Governor Nicolas de Ovando granted him an encomienda and appointed him as a notary of the town of Azua de Compostela His next five years seemed to help establish him in the colony in 1506 Cortes took part in the conquests of Hispaniola and Cuba The expedition leader awarded him a large estate of land and Taino slaves for his efforts 10 Cuba 1511 1519 In 1511 Cortes accompanied Diego Velazquez de Cuellar an aide of the Governor of Hispaniola in his expedition to conquer Cuba Velazquez was appointed Governor of New Spain At the age of 26 Cortes was made clerk to the treasurer with the responsibility of ensuring that the Crown received the quinto or customary one fifth of the profits from the expedition Velazquez was so impressed with Cortes that he secured a high political position for him in the colony He became secretary for Governor Velazquez Cortes was twice appointed municipal magistrate alcalde of Santiago In Cuba Cortes became a man of substance with an encomienda to provide Indian labor for his mines and cattle This new position of power also made him the new source of leadership which opposing forces in the colony could then turn to In 1514 Cortes led a group which demanded that more Indians be assigned to the settlers As time went on relations between Cortes and Governor Velazquez became strained 11 Cortes found time to become romantically involved with Catalina Xuarez or Juarez the sister in law of Governor Velazquez Part of Velazquez s displeasure seems to have been based on a belief that Cortes was trifling with Catalina s affections Cortes was temporarily distracted by one of Catalina s sisters but finally married Catalina reluctantly under pressure from Governor Velazquez However by doing so he hoped to secure the good will of both her family and that of Velazquez 12 It was not until he had been almost 15 years in the Indies that Cortes began to look beyond his substantial status as mayor of the capital of Cuba and as a man of affairs in the thriving colony He missed the first two expeditions under the orders of Francisco Hernandez de Cordoba and then Juan de Grijalva sent by Diego Velazquez to Mexico in 1518 News reached Velazquez that Juan de Grijalva had established a colony on the mainland where there was a bonanza of silver and gold and Velazquez decided to send him help Cortes was appointed Captain General of this new expedition in October 1518 but was advised to move fast before Velazquez changed his mind 11 With Cortes s experience as an administrator knowledge gained from many failed expeditions and his impeccable rhetoric he was able to gather six ships and 300 men within a month Velazquez s jealousy exploded and he decided to put the expedition in other hands However Cortes quickly gathered more men and ships in other Cuban ports Conquest of Mexico 1519 1521 Main article Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire A map depicting Cortes s invasion route from the coast to the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan In 1518 Velazquez put Cortes in command of an expedition to explore and secure the interior of Mexico for colonization At the last minute due to the old argument between the two Velazquez changed his mind and revoked Cortes s charter Cortes ignored the orders and in an act of open mutiny went anyway in February 1519 He stopped in Trinidad Cuba to hire more soldiers and obtain more horses Accompanied by about 11 ships 500 men including seasoned slaves 13 13 horses and a small number of cannons Cortes landed on the Yucatan Peninsula in Mayan territory 14 There he encountered Geronimo de Aguilar a Spanish Franciscan priest who had survived a shipwreck followed by a period in captivity with the Maya before escaping 14 Aguilar had learned the Chontal Maya language and was able to translate for Cortes 15 Cortes s military experience was almost nonexistent but he proved to be an effective leader of his small army and won early victories over the coastal Indians 16 In March 1519 Cortes formally claimed the land for the Spanish crown Then he proceeded to Tabasco where he met with resistance and won a battle against the natives He received twenty young indigenous women from the vanquished natives and he converted them all to Christianity 15 Among these women was La Malinche his future mistress and mother of his son Martin 1 Malinche knew both the Nahuatl language and Chontal Maya thus enabling Cortes to communicate with the Aztecs through Aguilar 17 82 86 87 At San Juan de Ulua on Easter Sunday 1519 Cortes met with Moctezuma II s Aztec Empire governors Tendile and Pitalpitoque 17 89 Cortes scuttling his own fleet off the coast of Veracruz in order to eliminate the possibility of retreat In July 1519 his men took over Veracruz By this act Cortes dismissed the authority of the Governor of Cuba to place himself directly under the orders of King Charles 14 To eliminate any ideas of retreat Cortes scuttled his ships 18 March on Tenochtitlan In Veracruz he met some of the tributaries of the Aztecs and asked them to arrange a meeting with Moctezuma II the tlatoani ruler of the Aztec Empire 18 Moctezuma repeatedly turned down the meeting but Cortes was determined Leaving a hundred men in Veracruz Cortes marched on Tenochtitlan in mid August 1519 along with 600 soldiers 15 horsemen 15 cannons and hundreds of indigenous carriers and warriors 14 On the way to Tenochtitlan Cortes made alliances with indigenous peoples such as the Totonacs of Cempoala and the Nahuas of Tlaxcala The Otomis initially and then the Tlaxcalans fought with the Spanish in a series of three battles from 2 to 5 September 1519 and at one point Diaz remarked they surrounded us on every side After Cortes continued to release prisoners with messages of peace and realizing the Spanish were enemies of Moctezuma Xicotencatl the Elder and Maxixcatzin persuaded the Tlaxcalan warleader Xicotencatl the Younger that it would be better to ally with the newcomers than to kill them 17 143 155 171 In October 1519 Cortes and his men accompanied by about 1 000 Tlaxcalteca 17 188 marched to Cholula the second largest city in central Mexico Cortes either in a pre meditated effort to instill fear upon the Aztecs waiting for him at Tenochtitlan or as he later claimed when he was being investigated wishing to make an example when he feared native treachery massacred thousands of unarmed members of the nobility gathered at the central plaza then partially burned the city 17 199 200 Cortes and La Malinche meet Moctezuma in Tenochtitlan November 8 1519 By the time he arrived in Tenochtitlan the Spaniards had a large army On November 8 1519 they were peacefully received by Moctezuma II 19 Moctezuma deliberately let Cortes enter the Aztec capital the island city of Tenochtitlan hoping to get to know their weaknesses better and to crush them later 14 Moctezuma gave lavish gifts of gold to the Spaniards which rather than placating them excited their ambitions for plunder In his letters to King Charles Cortes claimed to have learned at this point that he was considered by the Aztecs to be either an emissary of the feathered serpent god Quetzalcoatl or Quetzalcoatl himself a belief which has been contested by a few modern historians 20 But quickly Cortes learned that several Spaniards on the coast had been killed by Aztecs while supporting the Totonacs and decided to take Moctezuma as a hostage in his palace indirectly ruling Tenochtitlan through him 21 Cristobal de Olid leads Spanish soldiers with Tlaxcalan allies in the conquests of Jalisco 1522 Meanwhile Velazquez sent another expedition led by Panfilo de Narvaez to oppose Cortes arriving in Mexico in April 1520 with 1 100 men 14 Cortes left 200 men in Tenochtitlan and took the rest to confront Narvaez He overcame Narvaez despite his numerical inferiority and convinced the rest of Narvaez s men to join him 14 In Mexico one of Cortes s lieutenants Pedro de Alvarado committed the massacre in the Great Temple triggering a local rebellion 22 Cortes speedily returned to Tenochtitlan On July 1 1520 Moctezuma was killed he was stoned to death by his own people as reported in Spanish accounts although some claim he was murdered by the Spaniards once they realized his inability to placate the locals Faced with a hostile population Cortes decided to flee for Tlaxcala During the Noche Triste June 30 July 1 1520 the Spaniards managed a narrow escape from Tenochtitlan across the Tlacopan causeway while their rearguard was being massacred Much of the treasure looted by Cortes was lost as well as his artillery during this panicked escape from Tenochtitlan 14 Destruction of Tenochtitlan After a battle in Otumba they managed to reach Tlaxcala having lost 870 men 14 With the assistance of their allies Cortes s men finally prevailed with reinforcements arriving from Cuba Cortes began a policy of attrition towards Tenochtitlan cutting off supplies and subduing the Aztecs allied cities During the siege he would construct brigantines in the lake and slowly destroy blocks of the city to avoid fighting in an urban setting The Mexicas would fall back to Tlatelolco and even succeed in ambushing the pursuing Spanish forces inflicting heavy losses but would ultimately be the last portion of the island that resisted the conquistadores The siege of Tenochtitlan ended with Spanish victory and the destruction of the city 1 23 In January 1521 Cortes countered a conspiracy against him headed by Antonio de Villafana who was hanged for the offense 14 Finally with the capture of Cuauhtemoc the tlatoani ruler of Tenochtitlan on August 13 1521 the Aztec Empire was captured and Cortes was able to claim it for Spain thus renaming the city Mexico City From 1521 to 1524 Cortes personally governed Mexico 14 Appointment to governorship of Mexico and internal dissensions A painting from Diego Munoz Camargo s History of Tlaxcala Lienzo Tlaxcala c 1585 showing La Malinche and Hernan Cortes Many historical sources have conveyed an impression that Cortes was unjustly treated by the Spanish Crown and that he received nothing but ingratitude for his role in establishing New Spain This picture is the one Cortes presents in his letters and in the later biography written by Francisco Lopez de Gomara However there may be more to the picture than this Cortes s own sense of accomplishment entitlement and vanity may have played a part in his deteriorating position with the king Cortes personally was not ungenerously rewarded but he speedily complained of insufficient compensation to himself and his comrades Thinking himself beyond reach of restraint he disobeyed many of the orders of the Crown and what was more imprudent said so in a letter to the emperor dated October 15 1524 Ycazbalceta Documentos para la Historia de Mexico Mexico 1858 I In this letter Cortes besides recalling in a rather abrupt manner that the conquest of Mexico was due to him alone deliberately acknowledges his disobedience in terms which could not fail to create a most unfavourable impression 24 King Charles appointed Cortes as governor captain general and chief justice of the newly conquered territory dubbed New Spain of the Ocean Sea But also much to the dismay of Cortes four royal officials were appointed at the same time to assist him in his governing in effect submitting him to close observation and administration Cortes initiated the construction of Mexico City destroying Aztec temples and buildings and then rebuilding on the Aztec ruins what soon became the most important European city in the Americas 14 Cortes managed the founding of new cities and appointed men to extend Spanish rule to all of New Spain imposing the encomienda system in 1524 14 He reserved many encomiendas for himself and for his retinue which they considered just rewards for their accomplishment in conquering central Mexico However later arrivals and members of factions antipathetic to Cortes complained of the favoritism that excluded them 25 In 1523 the Crown possibly influenced by Cortes s enemy Bishop Fonseca 26 sent a military force under the command of Francisco de Garay to conquer and settle the northern part of Mexico the region of Panuco This was another setback for Cortes who mentioned this in his fourth letter to the King in which he describes himself as the victim of a conspiracy by his archenemies Diego Velazquez de Cuellar Diego Columbus and Bishop Fonseca as well as Francisco Garay The influence of Garay was effectively stopped by this appeal to the King who sent out a decree forbidding Garay to interfere in the politics of New Spain causing him to give up without a fight Royal grant of arms 1525 The coat of arms awarded to Cortes by King Carlos I of Spain Although Cortes had flouted the authority of Diego Velazquez in sailing to the mainland and then leading an expedition of conquest Cortes s spectacular success was rewarded by the crown with a coat of arms a mark of high honor following the conqueror s request The document granting the coat of arms summarizes Cortes s accomplishments in the conquest of Mexico The proclamation of the king says in part We respecting the many labors dangers and adventures which you underwent as stated above and so that there might remain a perpetual memorial of you and your services and that you and your descendants might be more fully honored it is our will that besides your coat of arms of your lineage which you have you may have and bear as your coat of arms known and recognized a shield 27 43 The grant specifies the iconography of the coat of arms the central portion divided into quadrants In the upper portion there is a black eagle with two heads on a white field which are the arms of the empire 27 43 Below that is a golden lion on a red field in memory of the fact that you the said Hernando Cortes by your industry and effort brought matters to the state described above i e the conquest 27 43 The specificity of the other two quadrants is linked directly to Mexico with one quadrant showing three crowns representing the three Aztec emperors of the conquest era Moctezuma Cuitlahuac and Cuauhtemoc 27 43 and the other showing the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan 27 43 Encircling the central shield are symbols of the seven city states around the lake and their lords that Cortes defeated with the lords to be shown as prisoners bound with a chain which shall be closed with a lock beneath the shield 27 44 45 Death of his first wife and remarriage Sculpture of Juana de Zuniga second wife of Cortes for her tomb Cortes s wife Catalina Suarez arrived in New Spain around summer 1522 along with her sister and brother 28 His marriage to Catalina was at this point extremely awkward since she was a kinswoman of the governor of Cuba Diego Velazquez whose authority Cortes had thrown off and who was therefore now his enemy Catalina lacked the noble title of dona so at this point his marriage with her no longer raised his status Their marriage had been childless Since Cortes had sired children with a variety of indigenous women including a son around 1522 by his cultural translator Dona Marina Cortes knew he was capable of fathering children Cortes s only male heir at this point was illegitimate but nonetheless named after Cortes s father Martin Cortes This son Martin Cortes was also popularly called El Mestizo 29 30 Catalina Suarez died under mysterious circumstances the night of November 1 2 1522 There were accusations at the time that Cortes had murdered his wife 1 There was an investigation into her death interviewing a variety of household residents and others 31 The documentation of the investigation was published in the nineteenth century in Mexico and these archival documents were uncovered in the twentieth century 32 33 The death of Catalina Suarez produced a scandal and investigation but Cortes was now free to marry someone of high status more appropriate to his wealth and power In 1526 he built an imposing residence for himself the Palace of Cortes in Cuernavaca in a region close to the capital where he had extensive encomienda holdings In 1529 he had been accorded the noble designation of don but more importantly was given the noble title of Marquess of the Valley of Oaxaca and married the Spanish noblewoman Dona Juana de Zuniga The marriage produced three children including another son who was also named Martin As the first born legitimate son Don Martin Cortes y Zuniga was now Cortes s heir and succeeded him as holder of the title and estate of the Marquessate of the Valley of Oaxaca 34 Cortes s legitimate daughters were Dona Maria Dona Catalina and Dona Juana 35 Cortes and the Spiritual Conquest of MexicoSince the conversion to Christianity of indigenous peoples was an essential and integral part of the extension of Spanish power making formal provisions for that conversion once the military conquest was completed was an important task for Cortes During the Age of Discovery the Catholic Church had seen early attempts at conversion in the Caribbean islands by Spanish friars particularly the mendicant orders Cortes made a request to the Spanish monarch to send Franciscan and Dominican friars to Mexico to convert the vast indigenous populations to Christianity In his fourth letter to the king Cortes pleaded for friars rather than diocesan or secular priests because those clerics were in his view a serious danger to the Indians conversion If these people Indians were now to see the affairs of the Church and the service of God in the hands of canons or other dignitaries and saw them indulge in the vices and profanities now common in Spain knowing that such men were the ministers of God it would bring our Faith into much harm that I believe any further preaching would be of no avail 36 He wished the mendicants to be the main evangelists Mendicant friars did not usually have full priestly powers to perform all the sacraments needed for conversion of the Indians and growth of the neophytes in the Christian faith so Cortes laid out a solution to this to the king Your Majesty should likewise beseech His Holiness the pope to grant these powers to the two principal persons in the religious orders that are to come here and that they should be his delegates one from the Order of St Francis and the other from the Order of St Dominic They should bring the most extensive powers Your Majesty is able to obtain for because these lands are so far from the Church of Rome and we the Christians who now reside here and shall do so in the future are so far from the proper remedies of our consciences and as we are human so subject to sin it is essential that His Holiness should be generous with us and grant to these persons most extensive powers to be handed down to persons actually in residence here whether it be given to the general of each order or to his provincials 37 The Franciscans arrived in May 1524 a symbolically powerful group of twelve known as the Twelve Apostles of Mexico led by Fray Martin de Valencia Franciscan Geronimo de Mendieta claimed that Cortes s most important deed was the way he met this first group of Franciscans The conqueror himself was said to have met the friars as they approached the capital kneeling at the feet of the friars who had walked from the coast This story was told by Franciscans to demonstrate Cortes piety and humility and was a powerful message to all including the Indians that Cortes s earthly power was subordinate to the spiritual power of the friars However one of the first twelve Franciscans Fray Toribio de Benavente Motolinia does not mention it in his history 38 Cortes and the Franciscans had a particularly strong alliance in Mexico with Franciscans seeing him as the new Moses for conquering Mexico and opening it to Christian evangelization In Motolinia s 1555 response to Dominican Bartolome de Las Casas he praises Cortes And as to those who murmur against the Marques del Valle Cortes God rest him and who try to blacken and obscure his deeds I believe that before God their deeds are not as acceptable as those of the Marques Although as a human he was a sinner he had faith and works of a good Christian and a great desire to employ his life and property in widening and augmenting the fair of Jesus Christ and dying for the conversion of these gentiles Who has loved and defended the Indians of this new world like Cortes Through this captain God opened the door for us to preach his holy gospel and it was he who caused the Indians to revere the holy sacraments and respect the ministers of the church 39 In Fray Bernardino de Sahagun s 1585 revision of the conquest narrative first codified as Book XII of the Florentine Codex there are laudatory references to Cortes that do not appear in the earlier text from the indigenous perspective Whereas Book XII of the Florentine Codex concludes with an account of Spaniards search for gold in Sahagun s 1585 revised account he ends with praise of Cortes for requesting the Franciscans be sent to Mexico to convert the Indians 40 Expedition to Honduras and aftermath 1524 1541 See also Spanish conquest of Yucatan Hernan Cortes in the Maya lowlands 1524 25 Spanish conquest of Honduras Spanish conquest of Guatemala Cortes in Peten and Spanish conquest of Peten Cortes in Peten Expedition to Honduras 1524 1526 From 1524 to 1526 Cortes headed an expedition to Honduras where he defeated Cristobal de Olid who had claimed Honduras as his own under the influence of the Governor of Cuba Diego Velazquez Fearing that Cuauhtemoc might head an insurrection in Mexico he brought him with him to Honduras In a controversial move Cuauhtemoc was executed during the journey Raging over Olid s treason Cortes issued a decree to arrest Velazquez whom he was sure was behind Olid s treason This however only served to further estrange the Crown of Castile and the Council of Indies both of which were already beginning to feel anxious about Cortes s rising power 41 Cortes s fifth letter to King Charles attempts to justify his conduct concludes with a bitter attack on various and powerful rivals and enemies who have obscured the eyes of your Majesty 42 Charles who was also Holy Roman Emperor had little time for distant colonies much of Charles s reign was taken up with wars with France the German Protestants and the expanding Ottoman Empire 43 except insofar as they contributed to finance his wars In 1521 year of the Conquest Charles was attending to matters in his German domains and Bishop Adrian of Utrecht functioned as regent in Spain Velazquez and Fonseca persuaded the regent to appoint a commissioner a Juez de residencia Luis Ponce de Leon with powers to investigate Cortes s conduct and even arrest him Cortes was once quoted as saying that it was more difficult to contend against his own countrymen than against the Aztecs 44 Governor Diego Velazquez continued to be a thorn in his side teaming up with Bishop Juan Rodriguez de Fonseca chief of the Spanish colonial department to undermine him in the Council of the Indies A few days after Cortes s return from his expedition Ponce de Leon suspended Cortes from his office of governor of New Spain The Licentiate then fell ill and died shortly after his arrival appointing Marcos de Aguilar as alcalde mayor The aged Aguilar also became sick and appointed Alonso de Estrada governor who was confirmed in his functions by a royal decree in August 1527 Cortes suspected of poisoning them refrained from taking over the government Estrada sent Diego de Figueroa to the south De Figueroa raided graveyards and extorted contributions meeting his end when the ship carrying these treasures sank Albornoz persuaded Alonso de Estrada to release Gonzalo de Salazar and Chirinos When Cortes complained angrily after one of his adherents hands was cut off Estrada ordered him exiled Cortes sailed for Spain in 1528 to appeal to King Charles First return to Spain 1528 and Marquessate of the Valley of Oaxaca Emperor Charles V with Hound 1532 a painting by the 16th century artist Jakob Seisenegger In 1528 Cortes returned to Spain to appeal to the justice of his master Charles V Juan Altamirano and Alonso Valiente stayed in Mexico and acted as Cortes s representatives during his absence Cortes presented himself with great splendor before Charles V s court By this time Charles had returned and Cortes forthrightly responded to his enemy s charges Denying he had held back on gold due the crown he showed that he had contributed more than the quinto one fifth required Indeed he had spent lavishly to build the new capital of Mexico City on the ruins of the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan leveled during the siege that brought down the Aztec empire He was received by Charles with every distinction and decorated with the order of Santiago In return for his efforts in expanding the still young Spanish Empire Cortes was rewarded in 1529 by being accorded the noble title of don but more importantly named the Marques del Valle de Oaxaca Marquess of the Valley of Oaxaca and married the Spanish noblewoman Dona Juana Zuniga after the 1522 death of his much less distinguished first wife Catalina Suarez The noble title and senorial estate of the Marquesado was passed down to his descendants until 1811 The Oaxaca Valley was one of the wealthiest regions of New Spain and Cortes had 23 000 vassals in 23 named encomiendas in perpetuity 14 45 Although confirmed in his land holdings and vassals he was not reinstated as governor and was never again given any important office in the administration of New Spain During his travel to Spain his property was mismanaged by abusive colonial administrators He sided with local natives in a lawsuit The natives documented the abuses in the Huexotzinco Codex The entailed estate and title passed to his legitimate son Don Martin Cortes upon Cortes s death in 1547 who became the Second Marquess Don Martin s association with the so called Encomenderos Conspiracy endangered the entailed holdings but they were restored and remained the continuing reward for Hernan Cortes s family through the generations Return to Mexico 1530 and appointment of a viceroy 1535 This section relies largely or entirely upon a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources at this section November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Two copies of the same protrait the original was likely made during his lifetime The left copy is dated to the 17th century and the right copy was made by Jose Salome Pina c 1879 This portrait is characterized by having a different armor than other portraits 3 Cortes returned to Mexico in 1530 with new titles and honors Although Cortes still retained military authority and permission to continue his conquests Don Antonio de Mendoza was appointed in 1535 as a viceroy to administer New Spain s civil affairs This division of power led to continual dissension and caused the failure of several enterprises in which Cortes was engaged On returning to Mexico Cortes found the country in a state of anarchy There was a strong suspicion in court circles of an intended rebellion by Cortes After reasserting his position and reestablishing some sort of order Cortes retired to his estates at Cuernavaca about 30 miles 48 km south of Mexico City There he concentrated on the building of his palace and on Pacific exploration Remaining in Mexico between 1530 and 1541 Cortes quarreled with Nuno Beltran de Guzman and disputed the right to explore the territory that is today California with Antonio de Mendoza the first viceroy Cortes acquired several silver mines in Zumpango del Rio in 1534 By the early 1540s he owned 20 silver mines in Sultepec 12 in Taxco and 3 in Zacualpan Earlier Cortes had claimed the silver in the Tamazula area 46 In 1536 Cortes explored the northwestern part of Mexico and discovered the Baja California peninsula Cortes also spent time exploring the Pacific coast of Mexico The Gulf of California was originally named the Sea of Cortes by its discoverer Francisco de Ulloa in 1539 This was the last major expedition by Cortes Later life and deathSecond return to Spain After his exploration of Baja California Cortes returned to Spain in 1541 hoping to confound his angry civilians who had brought many lawsuits against him for debts abuse of power etc 14 On his return he went through a crowd to speak to the emperor who demanded of him who he was I am a man replied Cortes who has given you more provinces than your ancestors left you cities 47 48 Expedition against Algiers Main article Algiers expedition 1541 An engraving of a middle aged Cortes by 19th century artist William Holl The emperor finally permitted Cortes to join him and his fleet commanded by Andrea Doria at the great expedition against Algiers in the Barbary Coast in 1541 which was then part of the Ottoman Empire During this campaign Cortes was almost drowned in a storm that hit his fleet while he was pursuing the Pasha of Algiers 49 Last years death and remains Having spent a great deal of his own money to finance expeditions he was now heavily in debt In February 1544 he made a claim on the royal treasury but was ignored for the next three years Disgusted he decided to return to Mexico in 1547 When he reached Seville he was stricken with dysentery He died in Castilleja de la Cuesta Seville province on December 2 1547 from a case of pleurisy at the age of 62 He left his many mestizo and white children well cared for in his will along with every one of their mothers He requested in his will that his remains eventually be buried in Mexico Before he died he had the Pope remove the natural status of four of his children legitimizing them in the eyes of the church including Martin the son he had with Dona Marina also known as La Malinche said to be his favourite citation needed His daughter Dona Catalina however died shortly after her father s death Bust Hernan Cortes in the General Archive of the Indies in Seville After his death his body was moved more than eight times for several reasons On December 4 1547 he was buried in the mausoleum of the Duke of Medina in the church of San Isidoro del Campo Sevilla Three years later 1550 due to the space being required by the duke his body was moved to the altar of Santa Catarina in the same church In his testament Cortes asked for his body to be buried in the monastery he had ordered to be built in Coyoacan in Mexico ten years after his death but the monastery was never built So in 1566 his body was sent to New Spain and buried in the church of San Francisco de Texcoco where his mother and one of his sisters were buried Tomb of Cortes in the Hospital de Jesus Nazareno which he founded in Mexico City In 1629 Cortes s last male descendant Don Pedro Cortes fourth Marquez del Valle died The viceroy decided to move the bones of Cortes along with those of his descendant to the Franciscan church in Mexico This was delayed for nine years while his body stayed in the main room of the palace of the viceroy Eventually it was moved to the Sagrario of Franciscan church where it stayed for 87 years In 1716 it was moved to another place in the same church In 1794 his bones were moved to the Hospital de Jesus founded by Cortes where a statue by Tolsa and a mausoleum were made There was a public ceremony and all the churches in the city rang their bells citation needed In 1823 after the independence of Mexico it seemed imminent that his body would be desecrated so the mausoleum was removed the statue and the coat of arms were sent to Palermo Sicily to be protected by the Duke of Terranova The bones were hidden and everyone thought that they had been sent out of Mexico In 1836 his bones were moved to another place in the same building clarification needed It was not until November 24 1946 that they were rediscovered 50 467 thanks to the discovery of a secret document by Lucas Alaman His bones were put in the charge of the Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia INAH The remains were authenticated by INAH 50 468 They were then restored to the same place this time with a bronze inscription and his coat of arms 51 When the bones were first rediscovered the supporters of the Hispanic tradition in Mexico were excited but one supporter of an indigenist vision of Mexico proposed that the remains be publicly burned in front of the statue of Cuauhtemoc and the ashes flung into the air 50 468 Following the discovery and authentication of Cortes s remains there was a discovery of what were described as the bones of Cuauhtemoc resulting in a battle of the bones 50 468 On December 16 1560 the lawsuits related to vassals of the Cortes estate were resolved by a royal order issued by Philip II 52 Taxa named after CortesCortes is commemorated in the scientific name of a subspecies of Mexican lizard Phrynosoma orbiculare cortezii 53 Disputed interpretation of his lifeThere are relatively few sources to the early life of Cortes his fame arose from his participation in the conquest of Mexico and it was only after this that people became interested in reading and writing about him Probably the best source is his letters to the king which he wrote during the campaign in Mexico but they are written with the specific purpose of putting his efforts in a favourable light and so must be read critically Another main source is the biography written by Cortes s private chaplain Lopez de Gomara which was written in Spain several years after the conquest Gomara never set foot in the Americas and knew only what Cortes had told him and he had an affinity for knightly romantic stories which he incorporated richly in the biography The third major source is written as a reaction to what its author calls the lies of Gomara the eyewitness account written by the Conquistador Bernal Diaz del Castillo does not paint Cortes as a romantic hero but rather tries to emphasize that Cortes s men should also be remembered as important participants in the undertakings in Mexico 1000 Spanish peseta note issued in 1992 In the years following the conquest more critical accounts of the Spanish arrival in Mexico were written The Dominican friar Bartolome de Las Casas wrote his A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies which raises strong accusations of brutality and heinous violence towards the Indians accusations against both the conquistadors in general and Cortes in particular 54 The accounts of the conquest given in the Florentine Codex by the Franciscan Bernardino de Sahagun and his native informants are also less than flattering towards Cortes The scarcity of these sources has led to a sharp division in the description of Cortes s personality and a tendency to describe him as either a vicious and ruthless person or a noble and honorable cavalier Representations in Mexico Monument in Mexico City commemorating the encounter of Cortes and Moctezuma at the Hospital de Jesus Nazareno In Mexico there are few representations of Cortes However many landmarks still bear his name from the castle Palacio de Cortes in the city of Cuernavaca to some street names throughout the republic The pass between the volcanoes Iztaccihuatl and Popocatepetl where Cortes took his soldiers on their march to Mexico City It is known as the Paso de Cortes The muralist Diego Rivera painted several representation of him but the most famous depicts him as a powerful and ominous figure along with Malinche in a mural in the National Palace in Mexico City Monument in Mexico City known as Monumento al Mestizaje In 1981 President Lopez Portillo tried to bring Cortes to public recognition First he made public a copy of the bust of Cortes made by Manuel Tolsa in the Hospital de Jesus Nazareno with an official ceremony but soon a nationalist group tried to destroy it so it had to be taken out of the public 55 Today the copy of the bust is in the Hospital de Jesus Nazareno 56 while the original is in Naples Italy in the Villa Pignatelli Later another monument known as Monumento al Mestizaje by Julian Martinez y M Maldonado 1982 was commissioned by Mexican president Jose Lopez Portillo to be put in the Zocalo Main square of Coyoacan near the place of his country house but it had to be removed to a little known park the Jardin Xicotencatl Barrio de San Diego Churubusco to quell protests The statue depicts Cortes Malinche and their son Martin 57 There is another statue by Sebastian Aparicio in Cuernavaca was in a hotel El casino de la selva Cortes is barely recognizable so it sparked little interest The hotel was closed to make a commercial center and the statue was put out of public display by Costco the builder of the commercial center 55 Cultural depictions Scene from the opera La Conquista 2005 Hernan Cortes is a character in the opera La Conquista 2005 by Italian composer Lorenzo Ferrero which depicts the major episodes of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire in 1521 Writings the Cartas de Relacion Cortes s personal account of the conquest of Mexico is narrated in his five letters addressed to Charles V These five letters the cartas de relacion are Cortes s only surviving writings See Letters and Dispatches of Cortes translated by George Folsom New York 1843 Prescott s Conquest of Mexico Boston 1843 and Sir Arthur Helps s Life of Hernando Cortes London 1871 47 His first letter was considered lost and the one from the municipality of Veracruz has to take its place It was published for the first time in volume IV of Documentos para la Historia de Espana and subsequently reprinted The Segunda Carta de Relacion bearing the date of October 30 1520 appeared in print at Seville in 1522 The third letter dated May 15 1522 appeared at Seville in 1523 The fourth October 20 1524 was printed at Toledo in 1525 The fifth on the Honduras expedition is contained in volume IV of the Documentos para la Historia de Espana 58 59 ChildrenNatural children of Don Hernan Cortes dona Catalina Pizarro born between 1514 and 1515 in Santiago de Cuba or maybe later in Nueva Espana daughter of an indigenous woman in Cuba Leonor Pizarro Dona Catalina married Juan de Salcedo a conqueror and encomendero with whom she had a son Pedro 60 don Martin Cortes born in Coyoacan in 1522 son of dona Marina La Malinche called the First Mestizo about him was written The New World of Martin Cortes married dona Bernaldina de Porras and had two children dona Ana Cortes don Fernando Cortes Principal Judge of Veracruz Descendants of this line are alive today in Mexico 61 don Luis Cortes born in 1525 son of dona Antonia or Elvira Hermosillo a native of Trujillo Caceres 62 dona Leonor Cortes Moctezuma born in 1527 or 1528 in Ciudad de Mexico daughter of Aztec princess Tecuichpotzin baptized Isabel born in Tenochtitlan on July 11 1510 and died on July 9 1550 the eldest legitimate daughter of Moctezuma II Xocoyotzin and wife dona Maria Miahuaxuchitl married to Juan de Tolosa a Basque merchant and miner 63 dona Maria Cortes de Moctezuma daughter of an Aztec princess nothing more is known about her except that she probably was born with some deformity citation needed He married twice firstly in Cuba to Catalina Suarez Marcaida who died at Coyoacan in 1522 without issue and secondly in 1529 to dona Juana Ramirez de Arellano de Zuniga daughter of don Carlos Ramirez de Arellano 2nd Count of Aguilar and wife the Countess dona Juana de Zuniga and had don Luis Cortes y Ramirez de Arellano born in Texcoco in 1530 and died shortly after his birth dona Catalina Cortes de Zuniga born in Cuernavaca in 1531 and died shortly after her birth don Martin Cortes y Ramirez de Arellano 2nd Marquess of the Valley of Oaxaca born in Cuernavaca in 1532 married at Nalda on February 24 1548 his twice cousin once removed dona Ana Ramirez de Arellano y Ramirez de Arellano and had issue currently extinct in male line dona Maria Cortes de Zuniga born in Cuernavaca between 1533 and 1536 married to don Luis de Quinones y Pimentel 5th Count of Luna dona Catalina Cortes de Zuniga born in Cuernavaca between 1533 and 1536 died unmarried in Sevilla after the funeral of her father dona Juana Cortes de Zuniga born in Cuernavaca between 1533 and 1536 married Don Fernando Enriquez de Ribera y Portocarrero 2nd Duke of Alcala de los Gazules 3rd Marquess of Tarifa and 6th Count of Los Molares and had issueIn popular cultureCortes was portrayed as Hernando Cortez by actor Cesar Romero in the 1947 historical adventure film Captain from Castile Cortez the Killer a 1975 song by Neil Young Cortes is a major villain in the 2000 animated movie The Road to El Dorado voiced by Jim Cummings Cortes played by oscar Jaenada is a morally ambiguous protagonist in the 2019 8 episode TV series Hernan In 1986 Polish illustrator Jerzy Wroblewski created a 48 page comic book titled Hernan Cortes i podboj Meksyku Hernan Cortes and the Conquest of Mexico The comic book based on historical chronicles narrated Cortes s life concentrating on the titular 1519 1521 period it was noted for its realistic depictions of violence unusual in Polish comic books of the era Cortes features in the 1980 novel Aztec by Gary Jennings as an antagonist Cortes is the villain of Idol of Death an episode of The Time Tunnel See also Spain portal Mexico portal Biography portalHistory of Mexico History of Mexico City New Spain Palace of Cortes Cuernavaca Spanish conquest of the Aztec empire Spanish EmpireNotesReferences a b c d Hanson Victor Davis 2007 Carnage and Culture Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 42518 8 See information box for his signature and painting a b Friede Juan 1969 The Coat of Arms of Hernando Cortes The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 26 2 64 69 JSTOR 29781347 Retrieved 7 September 2022 Velez Ivan April 5 2019 Hechuras de Hernan Cortes Libertad Digital a b Machado J T Montalvao Dos Pizarros de Espanha aos de Portugal e Brasil Author s Edition 1st Edition Lisbon 1970 David A Boruchoff Hernan Cortes International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences 2nd ed 2008 vol 2 pp 146 149 Hernan Cortes Boruchoff Hernan Cortes Hernan Cortes Encyclopedia Francisco Lopez de Gomara Hernan Cortes The Latin Library Crow John A The Epic of Latin America Los Angeles California University of California Press 1992 4th ed p 73 Pemberton John 2011 Conquistadors searching for El Dorado the terrifying Spanish conquest of the Aztec and Inca empires London Futura ISBN 978 1 907795 96 1 OCLC 1132344342 a b Hassig Ross Mexico and the Spanish Conquest Longman Group UK Limited 1994 pp 45 46 Sanderson Beck Cortes in Mexico Jane Landers Slaves Subjects and Subversives Blacks in Colonial Latin America UNM Press 2006 p 43 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Bernard Grunberg La folle aventure d Hernan Cortes in L Histoire n 322 July August 2007 a b Crowe John A The Epic of Latin America Los Angeles California University of California Press 1992 4th ed p 75 Gomez Angel Delgado Cortes Fernando In The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures Oxford University Press 2001 a b c d e Diaz B 1963 The Conquest of New Spain London Penguin Books ISBN 0140441239 a b Hassig Ross Mexico and the Spanish Conquest Longman Group UK Limited 1994 pp 53 54 Hassig Ross Mexico and the Spanish Conquest Longman Group UK Limited 1994 pp 82 86 Restall Matthew 2003 Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest Oxford University Press Townsend Camilla 2003 Burying the White Gods New Perspectives on the Conquest of Mexico American Historical Review 108 no 3 659 687 Hassig Ross Mexico and the Spanish Conquest Longman Group UK Limited 1994 pp 88 89 Hassig Ross Mexico and the Spanish Conquest Longman Group UK Limited 1994 pp 91 92 Hassig Ross Mexico and the Spanish Conquest Longman Group UK Limited 1994 pp 108 143 Catholic Encyclopedia Hernan Cortes Robert Himmerich y Valencia The Encomenderos of New Spain 1521 1555 Austin University of Texas Press 1991 pp 30 31 of J H Elliot introductory essay to Anthony Pagden s translation of Cortes s letters Hernan Cortes letters from Mexico 2001 1971 1986 Yale University NotaBene books a b c d e f Grant of coat of arms to Hernando Cortes 1525 transcription and translation by J Benedict Warren The Harkness Collection in the Library of Congress Manuscripts concerning Mexico Washington DC Library of Congress 1974 Hugh Thomas Conquest Montezuma Cortes and the Fall of Old Mexico New York Simon amp Schuster 1993 p 579 Seaman Rebecca M 2013 Conflict in the Early Americas An Encyclopedia of the Spanish Empire s Aztec Incan and Mayan Conquests ABC Clio ISBN 9781598847772 Munoz Victoria 2021 Spanish Romance in the Battle for Global Supremacy Tudor and Stuart Black Legends Anthem Press p 24 ISBN 9781785273315 Hugh Thomas Conquest pp 580 582 Hugh Thomas Conquest cites documents from the residencia against Cortes published by Ignacio Lopez Rayon Documentos para la historia de Mexico Mexico 1852 53 and the documentation in the Archivo General de Indias AGI Justicia leg 220 ff 316 342 Hugh Thomas Conquest also included a summary of evidence found in the AGI Justicia leg 224 p 1 f 660v 722r which is found on p 635 Robert Himmerich y Valencia The Encomenderos of New Spain 1521 1555 Austin University of Texas Press 1991 145 148 Francisco Lopez de Gomara Cortes The Life of the Conqueror by His Secretary Ed and trans Lesley Byrd Simpson Berkeley University of California Press 1964 p 408 Hernan Cortes Letters from Mexico translated and edited by A R Pagden New York Grossman Publishers 1971 p 333 Hernan Cortes Letters from Mexico translated and edited by A R Pagden New York Grossman Publishers 1971 p 334 John Leddy Phelan The Snake Person Kingdom of the Franciscans in the New World chapter 3 Hernan Cortes the Moses of the New World Berkeley University of California Press second edition revised 1971 pp 33 34 Toribio de Benavente Motolinia The Franciscan reply to the Dominicans in Letters and People of the Spanish Indies Sixteenth Century translated and edited by James Lockhart and Enrique Otte Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1976 pp 244 246 Bernardino de Sahagun Conquest of New Spain 1585 Revision translated by Howard F Cline Salt Lake City University of Utah Press 1989 p 34 of J H Elliot introductory essay to Anthony Pagdens translation of Cortes s letters Hernan Cortes letters from Mexico 2001 1971 1986 Yale University NotaBene books Cartas y relaciones de Hernan Cortes al emperador Carlos V in Spanish Everything2 com 1866 Retrieved 2009 07 26 Charles V Everything2 com Retrieved 2009 07 23 Prescott 1898 p 309 Robert Himmerich y Valencia The Encomenderos of New Spain 1521 1555 Austin University of Texas Press 1991 pp 146 147 West Robert Early Silver Mining in New Spain 1531 1555 1997 Bakewell Peter ed Mines of Silver and Gold in the Americas Aldershot Variorum Ashgate Publishing Limited pp 59 61 62 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Hernan Cortes Virtualology com 2001 04 02 Archived from the original on 2009 02 21 Retrieved 2009 07 23 spanishtreasure Students ou edu Archived from the original on 8 August 2008 Retrieved 2009 07 23 Sandra Arlinghaus Naval Battle of Preveza 1538 Personal umich edu Retrieved 2009 07 23 a b c d Keen Benjamin 1971 The Aztecs Image in Western Thought New Brunswick Rutgers University Press Xavier Lopez Medellin Los huesos de Hernan Cortes Motecuhzoma de Retrieved 2009 07 23 Riley G Micheal Fernando Cortes and the Cuernavaca Encomiendas 1522 1547 The Americas vol 25 no 1 Cambridge University Press 1968 pp 24 25 JSTOR website Retrieved 18 March 2022 Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Cortez p 60 de las Casas Bartolome Gysius Johannes 1620 Lons Dirck Eversen Vinckeboons David eds Mirror of the Cruel and Horrible Spanish Tyranny Perpetrated in the Netherlands by the Tyrant the Duke of Alba and Other Commanders of King Philip II World Digital Library Library of Congress Retrieved 25 August 2013 a b Tarifeno Leonardo September 2003 Reconocer a Cortes Letras Libres Editorial Vuelta Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 23 July 2009 MariaRosa 5 February 2003 Recuerdos de Espana en Mexico Hernan Cortes BlogSpot Retrieved 19 February 2011 Cascante Manuel M 13 October 2006 Cortes y sus 9 entierros ABC Vocento Retrieved 23 July 2009 Hernan Cortes 1485 1547 Conqueror Spain Famous Hispanics Coloquio 2006 Archived from the original on 24 October 2006 Retrieved 12 March 2019 Knight Kevin 2017 Hernando Cortes Catholic Encyclopedia Newadvent org Retrieved 23 July 2009 Robert Himmerich y Valencia The Encomenderos of New Spain pp 147 235 The Genealogy of Mexico garyfelix tripod com Retrieved 2020 04 10 Robert Himmerich y Valencia The Encomenderos of New Spain 1521 1555 Austin University of Texas Press 1991 p 147 Robert Himmerich y Valencia The Encomenderos of New Spain 1521 1555 Austin University of Texas Press 1991 pp 195 196 Further readingPrimary sources Cortes Hernan Letters available as Letters from Mexico translated by Anthony Pagden Yale University Press 1986 ISBN 0 300 09094 3 Available online in Spanish from an 1866 edition Cortes Hernan Escritos sueltos de Hernan Cortes Biblioteca Historica de la Iberia vol 12 Mexico 1871 Diaz del Castillo Bernal The Conquest of New Spain available as The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico 1517 1521 ISBN 0 306 81319 X Diaz del Castillo Bernal Carrasco David Rolena Adorno Sandra Messinger Cypess and Karen Vieira Powers The History of the Conquest of New Spain Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2008 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 Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 5501 4 textbook anthology of indigenous primary sources Lopez de Gomara Francisco Cortes The Life of the Conqueror by His Secretary Ed and trans Lesley Byrd Simpson Berkeley University of California Press 1964 Lopez de Gomara Francisco 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 University of California Press 1966 Prescott William H History of the Conquest of Mexico with a Preliminary View of Ancient Mexican Civilization and the Life of the Conqueror Hernando Cortes Last Will and Testament of Hernan Cortes Letter From Hernan Cortes to Charles the V Hernan Cortes Power of Attorney 1526 From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress Praeclara Ferdinandi Cortesii de noua maris oceani Hyspania narratio sacratissimo 1524 From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress Secondary sources Boruchoff David A Hernan Cortes International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences 2nd ed 2008 vol 2 pp 146 149 Brooks Francis J Motecuzoma Xocoyotl Hernan Cortes and Bernal Diaz del Castillo The Construction of an Arrest Hispanic American Historical Review 1995 149 183 Chamberlain Robert S Two unpublished documents of Hernan Cortes and New Spain 1519 and 1524 Hispanic American Historical Review 19 1939 120 137 Chamberlain Robert S La controversia entre Cortes y Velazquez sobre la gobernacion de Nueva Espana 1519 1522 in Anales de la Sociedad de Geografia e Historia de Guatemala vol XIX 1943 Cline Howard F Hernando Cortes and the Aztec indians in Spain The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress Vol 26 No 2 Library of Congress 1969 Denhardt Robert Moorman The equine strategy of Cortes Hispanic American Historical Review 18 1938 550 555 Elliott J H The mental world of Hernan Cortes In Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Fifth Series 1967 41 58 Frankl Victor Hernan Cortes y la tradicion de las Siete Partidas Revista de Historia de America 53 54 1962 9 74 Himmerich y Valencia Robert The Encomenderos of New Spain 1521 1555 Austin University of Texas Press 1991 Jacobs W J Hernando Cortes New York Franklin Watts Inc 1974 Keen Benjamin The Aztecs Image in Western Thought New Brunswick Rutgers University Press 1971 Konetzke Richard Hernan Cortes como poblador de la Nueva Espana Estudios Cortesianos pp 341 381 Madrid 1948 Levy Buddy Conquistador Hernan Cortes King Montezuma and the Last Stand of the Aztecs 2008 ISBN 978 0 553 80538 3 Lorenzana Francisco Antonio Viaje de Hernan Cortes a la Peninsula de Californias Mexico 1963 MacNutt F A Fernando Cortes and the Conquest of Mexico 1485 1547 New York and London 1909 Madariaga Salvador de Hernan Cortes Conqueror of Mexico Mexico 1942 Marks Richard Lee Cortes The Great Adventurer and the Fate of Aztec Mexico Alfred A Knopf 1993 Mathes W Michael ed The Conquistador in California 1535 The Voyage of Fernando Cortes to Baja California in Chronicles and Documents Vol 31 Dawson s Book Shop 1973 Maura Juan Francisco Cobardia falsedad y opportunismo espanol algunas consideraciones sobre la verdadera historia de la conquista de la Nueva Espana Lemir Revista de literatura medieval y del Renacimiento 7 2003 1 29 Medina Jose Toribio Ensayo Bio bibliografico sobre Hernan Cortes Introduccion de Guillermo Feliu Cruz Santiago de Chile 1952 Miller Robert Ryal Cortes and the first attempt to colonize California Calif Hist QJ Calif Hist Soc 53 1 1974 4 16 Petrov Lisa For an Audience of Men Masculinity Violence and Memory in Hernan Cortes s Las Cartas de Relacion and Carlos Fuentes s Fictional Cortes University of Wisconsin Madison 2004 Phelan John Leddy The Millennial Kingdom of the Franciscans in the New World chapter 3 Hernan Cortes the Moses of the New World Berkeley University of California Press second edition revised 1971 pp 33 34 William H Prescott 1898 Mexico and the Life of the Conqueror Fernando Cortes Vol 2 New York Peter Fenelon Collier Restall Matthew Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest Oxford University Press 2003 ISBN 0 19 516077 0 Silva Jose Valerio El legalismo de Hernan Cortes como instrumento de su conquista Mexico 1965 Stein R C The World s Greatest Explorers Hernando Cortes Illinois Chicago Press Inc 1991 Thomas Hugh 1993 Conquest Cortes Montezuma and the Fall of Old Mexico ISBN 0 671 51104 1 Todorov TzvetanThe Conquest of America 1996 ISBN 0 06 132095 1 Toro Alfonso Un crimen de Hernan Cortes La muerte de Dona Catalina Xuarez Marcaida estudio historico y medico legal Mexico 1922 Wagner H R The lost first letter of Cortes Hispanic American Historical Review 21 1941 669 672 White Jon Manchip 1971 Cortes and the Downfall of the Aztec Empire ISBN 0 7867 0271 0External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hernan Cortes Wikisource has the text of the 1900 Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography article Cortes Hernan The letters by Cortes in which Cortes describes the events related to the conquest of Mexico Genealogy of Hernan Cortes Origin of the Surname Cortes The change of Hernan Cortes s self image by means of the conquest Hernando Cortes on the Web web directory with thumbnail galleries Conquistadors with Michael Wood website for 2001 PBS documentary Ibero American Electronic Text Series presented online by the University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center Hernan Cortes The Conquistador of the Aztecs Informational Link Blog about the History of Cortes the Aztecs along with a variety of sources pictures and educational resources Latin American studies center material on Cortes Fernand Cortez opera by Gaspare Spontini Jean Paul Penin Cortes Hernando Belinda H Nanney Hernan Cortes marques del Valle de Oaxaca Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hernan Cortes amp oldid 1151779412, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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