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The Spanish Conquistadors Conquer the Aztecs

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Title: The Spanish Conquistadors Conquer the Aztecs


1
The Spanish Conquistadors Conquer the Aztecs
2
The Conquistadors
  • Conquistadors were 15th century Spanish explorers
    and conquerors who sailed across the uncharted
    oceans
  • desire to explore new worlds
  • to gain political power
  • to win fame and fortune
  • The price of conquest was high
  • shipwreck
  • disease
  • starvation
  • warfare
  • death
  • The Conquistadors' mission was to
  • find gold
  • convert new souls to Christianity
  • claim new territories for the King and the glory
    of their country

3
How Did They Get There?New Technologies
  • The conquistadors needed to be able to steer
    their ships and find their way with very
    unreliable maps.
  • the caravel was a lighter, faster ship than the
    ships that the Spanish had used earlier the
    first ocean-going ship able to sail into the wind
    without the use of oars.
  • used a magnetic compass with a magnetized needle
    that always pointed north. That and the North
    Star were their main directional guides.
  • They also needed to be able to measure the
    distance traveled in order to follow their course
    and get back home again.
  • Quadrants were used to measure the angle between
    the horizon and the sun or stars, to get the
    latitude position.
  • The Astrolabe -Another way to figure out latitude
    was to use an astrolabe to measure the height of
    the North Star or the noon sun.
  • Dead Reckoning-To figure out how far east or west
    a ship was from its home port, ship's captains
    calculated by "dead reckoning." They estimated
    and kept a record of their direction (with the
    compass), time (measured by hourglass, which
    10-12 year old boys on ship had to turn every 30
    minutes), and speed (which they mostly guessed

4
Voyage to the Unknown
  • It seems impossible to us in these days of space
    travel, instant communications, and satellite
    mapping to think that there was once a time when
    people in Europe had no idea what most of the
    world was like or how to map it.
  • Even once they had figured out that the world was
    round, they had no idea what lay beyond the
    Atlantic Ocean to the west, or how far the ocean
    even extended.
  • Only by setting off on dangerous expeditions
    could the conquistadors find out and expand their
    knowledge about the Unknown.

5
Hernan Cortes
  • Hernan Cortes was only seven years old when
    Christopher Columbus first sighted the New World.
    In 1506, at the age of 22, he joined a force of
    soldiers and sailed to the port city of Santo
    Domingo on the Spanish-controlled island of
    Hispaniola, in the Caribbean Sea. Cortes was
    given a grant of land with native Indians to
    serve him. Although he would have preferred to go
    off to seek gold and adventure, Cortes was
    persuaded by the Spanish governor to settle down
    and run his estate.
  • He moved to Cuba in 1509 and in 1511 he agreed to
    help Diego Velazquez in the Spanish conquest of
    Cuba. In battles there, he proved to be a
    capable, brave soldier. In return, Governor
    Velazquez rewarded Cortes for his service by
    giving him an even larger grant of land and more
    Indian slaves.When news arrived about the Mayan
    Civilization on the Yucatan peninsula and the
    fact that explorers had found treasures of silver
    and gold there, the atmosphere in Cuba became
    more and more like a "Gold Rush." Governor
    Velazquez decided to send an expedition to
    Yucatan. On October 23, 1518 he chose Cortes as
    its commanding officer.

6
The Cortes Expedition
  • Cortes prepared for his expedition by using his
    own money to buy muskets, ammunition, crossbows,
    navigational instruments and supplies.
  • He pulled together an army of Spaniards,
    promising them gold, land, and Indian slaves.
    After all his money was gone, he borrowed money
    from friends and mortgaged his plantation.
  • Governor Velasquez became concerned that Cortes'
    expedition was becoming larger than was
    originally planned.
  • Velasquez decided to relieve Cortes of his
    command, but Cortes' brother-in-law killed the
    messenger carrying the governor's orders.

7
Helpers
  • On February 18, 1519 Cortes' expedition set sail
    from Cuba. Smooth sailing brought them to
    Cozumel, an island off the coast of Yucatan.
    There, Cortes found Geronimo de Aguilar, a
    Spaniard who had been shipwrecked from a previous
    expedition. Aguilar spoke the local Maya language
    and joined the expedition.
  • Cortes sailed along the coast of Yucatan and
    stopped at a large native settlement by the
    Tabasco River. The native Mayas asked the
    expedition to leave, wanting "neither war nor
    trade." After a battle and an easy victory
    because of Spanish weapons, Cortes was able to
    destroy the local idols. The leaders promised to
    obey Cortes and brought him gifts of fruit,
    birds, ornaments made of gold, and 20 women to
    cook tortillas and serve them, including a woman
    named Malintzin, who would become an important
    key in the conquest of the Aztecs.

8
The Two Worlds Meet
  • "A ball of stone comes out shooting sparks and
    raining fire. It makes smoke that smells of
    rotten mud. When the ball of stone hits a tree,
    the trunk splits into splinters, as if it has
    exploded from the inside. They cover their heads
    and bodies with metal. Their swords are metal,
    their bows are metal, their shields and spears
    are metal. Their deer carry them on their backs,
    making them as tall as the roof of a houseWe are
    powerless against him. We are nothing compared to
    these strangers." Anonymous Aztec Eyewitness   
  • Cortes and his expedition set off to meet
    Montezuma. The expedition marched over 400 miles
    inland. They scaled two mountain ranges and
    crossed a plain with stagnant water. Constantly
    threatened by native people who vowed to kill
    them and eat their flesh with chili peppers, the
    Spanish soldiers begged Cortes to turn back.

9
Early Victories
  • Cortes' expedition entered the Tlaxcalan region.
    Over 50,000 Tlaxcalans fought the 400 Spaniards
    and were defeated as a result of the superior
    Spanish weapons and horses. Cortes rewarded the
    Tlaxcalans, who offered to provide Cortes with
    10,000 warriors for his march on Tenochtitlan.

10
The First Occupation of Tenochtitlan
  • The Spanish entered the city of Tenochtitlan to
    meet Montezuma. Coincidentally.Montezuma greeted
    the Spanish with an elaborate ceremony and
    thousands of attendants. "This is what our kings
    and those who ruled this city told us that you
    would come to assume your rightful place. Welcome
    to your kingdom, lords!" Montezuma said on first
    meeting Cortes.
  • The Aztecs housed the Spanish in a wondrous
    palace. When Montezuma asked Cortes what it would
    take to make the Spanish leave his empire, Cortes
    replied, "We Spanish suffer from a disease of the
    heart, which can be cured only by gold." Cortes
    decided to take Montezuma hostage, falsely
    claiming that the emperor had ordered an attack
    on his forces on the coast. 
  • When Governor Velazquez of Cuba realized that
    Cortes was no longer following his orders, he
    sent a large army to arrest him. Cortes took 100
    of his men and returned to the coast, where he
    easily defeated Velazquez's army, ensuring his
    free reign in Mexico.
  • Back in Tenochtitlan, Cortes' captain, Pedro de
    Alvarado, gave permission for the Aztecs to
    celebrate a festival. As the unarmed worshippers
    danced and sang, the Spaniards suddenly attacked
    the Aztecs. Alvarado later explained the attack
    by stating that he thought the Aztecs were going
    to try to free Montezuma.

11
The Aztecs Fight Back
  • The Aztecs quickly cut off supplies of food from
    the Spanish and attacked the palace where they
    were holding Montezuma. When Cortes received news
    that the Aztecs had attacked and imprisoned his
    soldiers, he returned from the coast to
    Tenochtitlan.
  • In a desperate move, the Spanish and their
    Tlaxcalan allies decided to take advantage of a
    dark, rainy night to escape from Tenochtitlan.
    Cortes loaded seven horses and 80 Tlaxcalan
    porters with gold from the treasure house and
    gave the rest of the heavy gold to his soldiers.
  • A woman getting water from the lake spotted the
    escaping Spaniards and the Aztecs quickly
    launched a surprise attack. To prevent the
    Spaniards from escaping, the Aztecs removed the
    drawbridges on the causeway, but Cortes'
    carpenters had built portable bridges

12
Cortes' Return to Tenochtitlan
  • Cortes retreated to Tlaxcala, where he gained new
    troops and supplies from Cuba, trained new
    Tlaxcalan allies, and planned an attack by water
    on Tenochtitlan. Cortes gained control of the
    towns around the lakeshore. After Christmas 1520,
    Cortes led an army of 16,000 men back to
    Tenochtitlan.
  • The Aztecs, under their new leader Cuauhtemoc,
    were ready and had built barricades of rubble and
    removed the bridges in the causeways. They had
    also put sharpened stakes underwater in the
    canals. As the Aztecs prepared for war, smallpox
    continued to devastate the native population of
    Tenochtitlan.  

13
The Final Battle
  • Cortes attacked Tenochtitlan from three
    directions at once with 13 new ships. The Aztecs
    had more than 200,000 canoes. It took Cortes
    three months to reach the sacred center of
    Tenochtitlan.
  • The fighting was so fierce that the lake water
    turned red with blood. Aztec soldiers sacrificed
    Spanish soldiers and rolled their heads along the
    causeways. The Spanish could not move "without
    treading on the bodies and heads of dead
    Indians.
  • In the final all-out attack on the center of the
    city, 15,000 Aztecs died that day alone. Emperor
    Cuauhtemoc and his last few supporters tried to
    escape in a canoe, but were captured by the
    Spaniards. The siege of Tenochtitlan was over. In
    the Aztec calendar, this was the first day of the
    Great Feast of the Dead, a month of traditional
    lamentation and remembrance.
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