Spaniard from the Cortes expedition 11 letters. Return to Europe

Hernan Fernando Cortes was born into a poor family of a minor nobleman in Medellin, Extremadura province. He studied law at the University of Salamanca and received an education rare for the Spanish conquistadors of that era. However, in his homeland he did not see an opportunity to realize his abilities and at the age of 19 he set off on a ship across the Atlantic Ocean to seek wealth and fame in the New World.

In 1504 he found himself in the West Indies. Things were going well for Cortez: he became a landowner and soon received the position of secretary of the governor of the island of Cuba, Diego de Velazquez, winning his favor and trust. Hernán Cortés married his sister and at one time served as alcalde of the city of Santiago de Barracoa. It was a time when the Spanish colonists dreamed of only one thing - the untold riches that the land of the Indians on the other side contained.. But to get to their gold, they first had to conquer these lands.

Diego de Velazquez had already tried twice to conquer the Aztec Empire, but each time his military campaigns ended in failure for various reasons. Velazquez began to equip a new, third military expedition to the mainland, where the Spaniards had visited a year before. Initially, he put his sister’s husband at the head of the expedition, but then reversed his decision because he began to seriously fear the ambitious intentions of Hernan Cortes, who did not hide them. If the expedition under his command was successful, the viceroy could lose his position at the royal court.

Cortez did not obey Velazquez's new decision, and in February 1519, on eleven small ships, he sailed into the Caribbean Sea and headed west, towards sunset. Under his command there were not many people, only four hundred soldiers, and a few cannons, with these small forces he hoped to conquer the Aztec empire.

The flotilla of Hernán Cortés circled the Yucatan Peninsula and entered the mouth of the Rio Tabasco. Having landed on the shore, the Spaniards easily captured the city of Tabasco. The Indians fought with great courage, not even afraid of cannons, but fled from a small cavalry detachment that attacked them from the rear. “The Indians had never seen horses before, and it seemed to them that horse and rider were one creature, powerful and merciless. The meadows and fields were filled with Indians fleeing into the nearby forest,” wrote chronicler Diaz. After a short battle, the Indians had to recognize the authority of the king of Spain and pay tribute.

A few days later, local leaders sent supplies and brought twenty young women. Hernán Cortés ordered them to be baptized immediately, and then distributed the “first Christian women of New Spain” among his commanders. To prevent the possible escape of his soldiers, many of whom were afraid to go to an unknown country, Cortez ordered the ships to be burned.

On the way to the Aztec capital, Cortez easily won victories over several local Indian tribes, including numerous Tlaxcalans. The defeated Indian tribes, dissatisfied with the rule of the Aztecs, willingly joined the conquistador. However, the inhabitants of the city of Cholulu offered strong resistance to the conquerors, and Cortes ordered a bloody massacre against them.

The advance of the Spaniards did not go unnoticed in the capital of Mexico, and the supreme leader of the Aztecs, Montezuma, sent his envoys to the Spaniards. The ambassadors gave Cortes rich gifts: “a lot of jewelry... made of beautiful gold and wonderful workmanship... ten bales of snow-white cotton fabric, amazing items made from bird feathers and many other valuable things...”, thereby Montezuma wanted to bribe the conquistadors, but only fueled his thirst even more gold from the Spaniards.

Soon, Hernan Cortes himself entered the Mexican capital of Tenochtitlan and took Montezuma into custody. He realized too late the danger that the Spaniards posed to his fatherland. Montezuma tried to prevent the conquerors from entering Tenochtitlan, but his actions were characterized by inconsistency that was surprising for a ruler. In addition, the warriors of the Aztecs, as well as other Indian tribes, were terrified of the firearms and horses of the conquerors, about whom they had not the slightest idea.

From that time on, on behalf of Montezuma, Cortes began to arbitrarily rule over the entire country. He forced the Aztec leaders to swear an oath of allegiance to the Spanish king, and then demanded that they, as vassals, pay tribute in gold. Montezuma's treasure was so large that it took three days to view it. All gold, including artistic items, was poured into square bars.

Meanwhile, the royal governor of Cuba, de Velazquez, sent a punitive expedition to the Mexican shores under the command of Panfilo de Narvaez to deal with the rebellious Cortes, who had broken the chain of command and exceeded his authority.. But Hernan was ready for such a turn of events. He left 150 Spanish soldiers in Tenochtitlan under the command of one of his officers, de Alvarado, and with the remaining 250 soldiers hastily marched to Veracruz. At night, the conquistadors attacked the camp of Panfilo de Narvaez and defeated the enemy. Narvaez and most of his warriors were captured. Cortes did not have much difficulty convincing the prisoners to enter his service.

After some time, all of Mexico was swept by an uprising under the leadership of the Aztec leader Cuauhtémoc. The capital was rocked by fierce fighting. Hernán Cortés demanded that Montezuma go to the roof of his house and order his “subjects” to stop the assault, since the Spaniards agreed to voluntarily leave the city. The Mexicans responded to this order with a hail of stones and arrows. The supreme leader of the Aztecs was mortally wounded and died in the arms of the Spaniards. Every day the enemy's forces increased and the Spanish forces decreased. Gunpowder supplies were depleted, food supplies and water were completely gone, and in July 1520 the Spaniards decided to leave the capital at night.

Near the village of Otumba, the Aztecs blocked the Spaniards, exhausted after a long retreat, from reaching the sea coast, towards Veracruz. On July 8, 1520, a battle between the troops of Cortes and the army of the rebel Aztecs took place here. Under the command of Cortez, only about 200 Spanish soldiers and several thousand Tlaxcalan warriors remained, and the Aztec army numbered about 200 thousand people. After many hours of battle, the Spanish detachment was on the verge of destruction.

The fate of the Battle of Otumba was decided by the conquistador himself. Cortes, at the head of a small detachment of cavalry, bravely attacked the core of the enemy army, where the Aztec military leaders were located. The Aztecs, at the mere sight of horses galloping on them, became dismayed and fled in disarray. The victory of the Spaniards was complete, and after that they continued unhindered to the Caribbean coast.

A year later, Cortez made a second campaign against the capital of Mexico. On his second campaign, Cortes set out with significant military forces. Cortez learned lessons from recent defeat by the Aztecs. Their capital stood on the shores of Lake Texcoco, on which there was a large flotilla of pirogues. During the uprising and fighting in Tenochtitlan, they quickly transferred large detachments of Indian warriors in the right direction. Hernán Cortés ordered the construction of several small galleys and armed them with cannons. These disassembled galleys were carried by Indian porters behind the Spanish detachment.

Approaching Tenochtitlan, which had prepared for defense, Spanish troops began bombarding the city with artillery guns. The first assault was successfully repulsed by numerous defenders of the city, bringing down a hail of spears, darts and stones on the heads of the attackers. The siege of the Aztec capital lasted three months. Only after destroying most of it did the Spaniards take possession of the city. A large number of Indian warriors and townspeople died during the siege of Tenochtitlan.

The galleys delivered by porters were assembled on the shores of Lake Teskogo and launched. With the help of cannons mounted on galleys, the Spaniards defeated the Aztec pirogue flotilla and finally blocked Tenochtitlan. Now it became difficult for the besieged to destroy bridges across the canals and prevent Spanish troops from moving along the dams.

Soon famine and epidemics began in the besieged city. Cortez knew about this and therefore was in no hurry to storm the Aztec capital. In August 1521, Cuauhtemoc and his family and other leaders tried to escape from Tenochtitlan on pirogues, but were overtaken and captured by a Spanish galley flotilla. Cuauhtemoc was subjected to severe torture, but the Spaniards were never able to find out from him where the Aztec treasures were kept. The leader was thrown into prison and soon killed (in modern Mexico, the Aztec military leader Cuauhtemoc is a national hero).

The besieged, left without their military leaders, stopped resisting. The city was severely destroyed and completely plundered by the conquerors. Hernán Cortés renamed Mexico New Spain and Tenochtitlan Mexico City. He sent the captured Aztec treasures to Spain. The response of the Spanish monarch Charles V was the appointment of Cortes, a former state criminal, as captain general and governor of New Spain. The first thing the governor-general of the new colony began his reign with was the inculcation of Christianity among the Indian tribes by force of arms.

In 1526, the great conqueror arrived in Spain in triumph. There he received from the king the title of Marquis del Valle de Oaxaca. At the royal court he already had many ill-wishers who were not happy with the proud and ambitious marquis. As a result of court intrigues, the king deprived Cortes of his governorship in New Spain. But this did not unbalance the canquistador for long.

In 1533, having received false information about the wealth of the “island” (California, the connection with the mainland of which was discovered later), he successfully reached it. The newly discovered “island” is one of the hottest countries on Earth. Contemporaries said that Cortez himself gave it the name “Calida fornax” (in Latin - hot oven), hence the abbreviated name “California”. Cortes appointed Francisco Ulloa as the head of the “island”. He penetrated in 1539 into the long Gulf of California, which he called the “Sea of ​​Cortez”; but more often the bay was called the “Crimson Sea” - “from the red algae that colors the waters of some bays, or, rather... from the dark red sands bordering its shores” (E. Reclus). Ulloa did not find a way out of the “Crimson Sea” anywhere in the north, although he explored the western coast of the bay for about 1000 kilometers.

Three years after the California Expedition, Cortez tried to obtain royal permission to lead a detachment to search for the legendary Seven Cities of Cibola. But the king rejected this request, choosing Francisco Vázquez de Coronado. Offended, he left New Spain forever and returned to Europe. Cortez settled on an estate near Seville and lived there until the end of his days, in luxury thanks to the treasures looted from the Aztec country.. In 1541, Hernán Cortés participated in the Algerian military expedition of Spanish troops, but did not achieve glory in North Africa.

Despite his life full of dangers, this great conquistador did not find his death in battle; in 1547, at the age of 62, he fell ill with dysentery and soon died, but his body did not find peace for a long time. After 15 years, his remains were transported to Mexico. There they were reburied several times to save them from destruction. Finally, they found the long-awaited peace in 1823 in Naples, in the crypt of the Dukes of Terranzova-Montemon.

Name: Fernando Cortez de Monroy and Pizarro Altamirano (Hernan Cortez)

Years of life: approximately 1485 - approximately 1547

State: Spain

Field of activity: Traveler

Greatest Achievement: He was one of the first conquistadors. Under his leadership, Spain conquered Mexico

Latin America is a long-suffering continent. The local residents were unlucky in the sense that as soon as the Europeans discovered American lands, a stream of conquerors immediately poured in, and not with the most rosy intentions. The Spaniards and Portuguese made special efforts in the southern part of the continent. Thanks to them, all of Central and South America speaks Spanish and Portuguese, and also professes Catholicism, and the population can be considered educated, comparable to the European one.

But behind this seemingly peaceful façade hid an ugly truth - the destruction of indigenous peoples, the eradication of culture, local language, traditions and customs. These lands have seen many conquerors over several centuries, but only a few names remain in history. Not only thanks to his discoveries of uncharted lands, but also to his exorbitant and often unjustified cruelty towards local tribes, who, as a result of the barbaric actions of the conquerors, disappeared from the face of the earth. One of these illustrious names is the Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes. Who was this proud Spaniard? More on this below.

Biography

It is very difficult to accurately indicate Hernan’s date of birth - for some personal reasons, he preferred not to dwell on this topic. Most of the information can be gleaned from the notes of Hernan’s biographer, his spiritual father Francisco de Gomar. It is known that he was born in 1485 in Spain. Cortes was the only son of Martin Cortes de Monroy and Doña Catalina Pizarro Altamarino - both parents came from ancient respected families, the so-called Hidalgos. “They had little wealth, but a lot of honor,” this is how de Gomara described the Cortes family.

The father's fortune was indeed modest, which, however, did not prevent him from sending his son at the age of 14 to study in Salamanca, in western Spain. Gomara described the teenager as ruthless, arrogant, disobedient and quarrelsome (all these qualities would later be felt by the local American tribes). Studying at the university did not attract the young man. In those years, the fame of Christopher Columbus was just booming, about the long voyages he made and about the discoveries of new lands. Hernan was inspired and also wanted to serve his homeland. He went to the east coast port of Valencia with the idea of ​​serving in the Italian Wars, but changed his mind and put his dream on hold for almost a year. Obviously, the southern ports of Spain, with ships full of wealth from India, proved more attractive. He finally sailed to the island of Hispaniola (now Santo Domingo) in 1504. He wanted independence and wealth.

In Hispaniola he became a farmer and a notary in the city council; During the first six years, Hernan tried to make a fortune for himself, but could not - he had more debts than income. In addition, the long-awaited dream of American lands had to be postponed due to the fact that he contracted syphilis and missed the expedition of Diego de Nicueza and Alonso de Ojeda, who went to the South American mainland in 1509. By 1511, he had recovered and, together with Diego Velazquez, set off to conquer Cuba. There Velazquez was appointed governor, and Cortes official treasurer. Cortés received repartimiento (land and Indian slaves) and the first house in the new capital of Santiago. He also became the first mayor of the capital and Velazquez's close associate (also because he married his sister Catalina to his advantage).

Cortes was twice elected alcalde (mayor) of the city of Santiago. He set himself up as God's true representative on these lands. Therefore, it was to Cortes that Velazquez turned when, after the progress of Juan de Grijalba in establishing a colony on the mainland became known, it was decided to send him help. In October 1518, an agreement was signed appointing Cortes captain of the new expedition. But for this it was necessary to collect the required number of ships and finances. His abilities as an orator brought him six ships and 300 men in less than a month. Velazquez's reaction was predictable, his jealousy was awakened, and he decided to transfer leadership of the expedition to other hands. Cortés, however, hastily put to sea to pick up more people and ships in other Cuban ports.

Expedition to Mexico. Discovery of Hernán Cortés

When Cortés finally sailed for the shores of Yucatan on February 18, 1519, he had 11 ships, 508 soldiers, about 100 sailors, and 16 horses. In March 1519, he landed in the city of Tabasco (now a state in Mexico), where he stayed for some time to obtain information from the local Indians. Cortés also received gifts from them, including about 20 women, one of whom, Marina (Malinche), became his concubine and translator and bore him a son, Martin.

Cortés sailed to another location just above Tabasco on the southeastern coast of Mexico and founded the city of Veracruz (which is now also a state), mainly to ensure that his soldiers would obey only him, thus destroying Velázquez's power. On the mainland, Cortés did what no other expedition leader had done: he trained and disciplined his army, creating a cohesive force. So that the soldiers would not even think about escaping, Hernan ordered all the ships to be burned. Now the Spaniards were left alone with the local peoples.

Cortés often went to explore the Mexican interior, sometimes relying on force, sometimes on friendship with the local Indian peoples, but always trying to keep conflict with them to a minimum. The key to Cortez's subsequent conquests lay in the political crisis in the Aztec empire. For example, the people of Tlaxcala, who were in a state of chronic war with Montezuma II, the ruler of the Mexican Aztec Empire, initially resisted Cortez, but became his most loyal ally.

Rejecting all of Montezuma's threats and entreaties to keep him away from Tenochtitlan or Mexico, the capital (restored as Mexico City after 1521), Cortés entered the city on November 8, 1519 with his small force. In accordance with the diplomatic customs of Mexico, Montezuma received him with great honor. Cortes soon decided to capture Montezuma in order to hold the country through his monarch and achieve not only political conquest, but also a change of religion. Cortez's success was obvious not only because the Spaniards shocked the Aztecs with their appearance on horseback (they had never seen these animals, so they were afraid), but also because he was ideal for the role of the local deity Quetzalcoatl, who wore a beard and had white skin, and who taught the Aztecs the wisdom of agriculture.

After the capture of Montezuma, the Spaniards were surprised to discover that the Aztecs were an incredibly rich people (the Europeans had never seen so much gold and jewelry). And the robbery began - many valuable figurines and objects were melted down into ordinary ingots. Naturally, Cortez kept most of the loot for himself. The Aztecs defended their city, Tenochtitlan, to the last. Cortes tried several times to take it, subjugating neighboring territories. So far he has not succeeded. He laid siege to the city itself, conquering it street by street until Tenochtitlan fell on August 13, 1521. This victory marked the fall of the Aztec empire. Cortes became the sole ruler of a vast territory stretching from the Caribbean Sea to the Pacific Ocean.

Later years

In 1524, his restless desire to explore and conquer led him south into the jungles of Honduras. The two difficult years he spent on this disastrous expedition damaged his health and position. Intrigues began to weave against him - the main one was Velazquez, who did not forgive Cortes for his popularity among the locals and success in the conquest.

In 1528, Cortés traveled to Spain to personally appeal to the king. He brought with him a huge amount of treasures. He was received by Charles at his court in Toledo. He also married again, this time to the Duke's daughter. But Hernan's success was short-lived. Very soon he fell out of favor with the king. Charles removed him as governor of Mexico. He returned to New Spain in 1530 to find the country in a state of anarchy.

Charges were brought against him for the murder of his first wife, Catalina (using poison). Trying to somehow regain his former position, in 1536 Cortez set off on another expedition to the shores of California in search of gold. Hernan tried to persuade the king to finance the entire peninsula, but the king rejected this offer. Cortés retired to his estate in Cuernavaca, about 30 miles (48 km) south of Mexico City. There he concentrated on building his palace and exploring the Pacific Ocean.

In 1540, Cortez returned to Spain. By then he was completely disillusioned and his life had become miserable due to the litigation. In addition, the health of the 62-year-old conquistador was undermined. In 1547, the legendary Aztec conqueror Hernán Cortés died of dysentery on an estate in Seville.

Early biography

Expedition to Mexico

The idea of ​​conquering Mexico belonged to Velazquez, who was also the main sponsor of the campaign. In 1518, Cortes was appointed commander, but after another quarrel, the governor of Cuba canceled this order. Cortes, however, possessing great eloquence, hired a crew and soldiers, and sailed from Santiago de Cuba on November 18, 1518. The expedition was poorly supplied with food, so the conquistadors left Cuba on February 10, 1519. The expedition had 11 ships (one of they were commanded by Lieutenant Alvarado, Cortez's deputy).

Cortez's army included 518 infantry, 16 mounted knights (several of whom shared one horse, like Alvarado), 13 arquebusmen, 32 crossbowmen, 110 sailors and 200 slaves - Cuban Indians and blacks, as servants and porters. The equipment included 32 horses, 10 cannons and 4 falconets. Among the officers of Cortez's detachment, the future conquerors of Central America stood out: Alonso Hernandez Portocarero (he initially went to Malinche), Alonso Davila, Francisco de Montejo, Francisco de Salcedo, Juan Velazquez de Leon (a relative of the Cuban governor), Cristobal de Olid, Gonzalo de Sandoval and Pedro de Alvarado. Many of them were experienced soldiers who fought in Italy and the Antilles.

The main helmsman was Anton de Alaminos (participant of the third expedition of Columbus and the expedition of Ponce de Leon, Francisco de Cordoba and Juan de Grijalva).

The expedition set off along the well-known route to the Yucatan coast. The first contact with the high civilization of America took place on the island. Cozumel, home at the time to the Mayan principality of Ekab, center of veneration for the fertility goddess Ix-Chel. The Spaniards tried to destroy the sanctuary, horrified by the ritual of sacrifice. At first, an Indian slave youth served as a translator, from whom information was received about Jeronimo de Aguillar, a Spanish priest who was captured by the Mayans and studied their language. He became the expedition's chief translator. In March 1519, Cortes formally annexed Yucatan to the Spanish possessions (in fact, this only happened in 1535). Then the expedition went along the coast, and on March 14 they reached the mouth of the Tabasco River. The Spaniards attacked the Indian settlement, but found no gold. In Tabasco on March 19, Cortez received gifts from local rulers: a lot of gold, and 20 women, among whom was Malinche, who became Cortez's official translator and concubine. She was immediately baptized, the Spaniards called her “Doña Marina.”

In Tabasco, the Spaniards learned about the great country of Mexico, which lay further to the west, inland, and this is how the name “Mexico” appeared. In July 1519, Cortez's expedition landed on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, and the port of Veracruz was founded, 70 km north of the modern city. By this act, Cortes placed himself under direct subordination to the king. To avoid provoking a riot, Cortez ordered the ships to be burned. Leaving the garrison, Cortes moved inland. His first allies were the Totonac people, whose capital, Sempoala, Cortes entered without a fight. At a meeting of 30 leaders of the people, war was declared on the Aztecs. The majority of Cortez's army was now made up of allied Totonac tribes. A treaty was concluded with the Totonacs, under the terms of which, after the conquest of Mexico, the Totonacs received independence. This agreement was never respected.

On August 16, 1519, the Spaniards marched to Tenochtitlan. Cortes had 500 infantry, 16 knights and about 13 thousand Totonac warriors. The conquistadors found a strong ally in Tlaxcala, an independent mountain principality waging war with the Aztec Confederation. As a sign of the alliance, the leader of Tlaxcala gave Cortes his daughter Xicotencatl, whom the conqueror gave to Alvarado. Under the name of Luis de Tlaxcala, she accompanied Alvarado on all his campaigns. Cortez's army was replenished with approximately 3,000 Tlaxcalans. Tlaxcala became the main support of Spanish rule in Mexico, and its people did not pay taxes until the overthrow of the Spanish colonial regime.

Massacre at Cholula. Indian image

In October 1519, Cortez's army reached Cholula, the second largest city-state of Central Mexico, the sacred center of the local religion. For unknown reasons, Cortez carried out a massacre of the local population in the city, and partially burned the city. Later, in his messages, Cortez explained this act as retaliation for a possible trap set by the Indians.

On the way to the Aztec capital, the Spaniards discovered the Popocatepetl volcano (Nahuatl “Hill that smokes”). Cortez's officer, Diego de Ordaz, decided to conquer the top of the volcano with two squires. Later, King Charles V allowed the inclusion of an image of a volcano in the coat of arms of Ordaz.

The Spaniards entered Tenochtitlan on November 8, 1519, and were kindly greeted by the Aztec Tlatoani, Montezuma II. Montezuma awarded Cortez with many gold jewelry, which only strengthened the Spaniards' desire to take possession of this country. Cortez claimed in his reports that local residents mistook his soldiers and himself for messengers of the god Quetzalcoatl, so at first they did not resist. This version is disputed by modern historians. Soon, Indian messengers reported that the garrison of Veracruz was attacked, after which Cortes apparently decided to take the Aztec ruler hostage.

The Spaniards and Tlaxcalan allies settled in one of the royal residences, where the state treasury was soon discovered. Montezuma was persuaded to take an oath of allegiance to Charles V, leaving him in the Spanish residence. After six months of uncertainty, Cortez received news that Velazquez had sent a detachment of Panfilo de Narvaez to Mexico on 18 ships with orders to arrest Cortez and take him to Cuba. The situation was becoming critical: Cortes left Lieutenant Alvarado as commandant of the city with a hundred soldiers, and he himself went to Veracruz with a detachment of 300 people. (Spanish chroniclers did not like to indicate the number of allied Indians.) He managed to bribe the warriors of Narvaez, and with a significantly strengthened army, the conquerors returned to the Valley of Mexico City.

"Night of Sorrow" and the fall of Tenochtitlan

Alvarado, in the absence of Cortes, pursued a very tough policy, killing many representatives of the Aztec aristocracy during a religious holiday for no apparent reason. The traditional version - robbery - does not stand up to criticism. The Aztecs chose a new tlatoani - Cuitlahuaca, and began to prepare for war with the Spaniards. On June 24, 1520, Cortes returned to the city. At the height of the crisis, under unclear circumstances, Montezuma died (June 27 or 30, 1520). The Spaniards claimed that Montezuma was killed by rebel Indians; Indian sources and modern authors believe that Montezuma, no longer needed by the Spaniards as a hostage, was killed by them.

The bloody retreat of the Spaniards on the night of July 1 was called the “Night of Sorrow.” All artillery was lost, all the gold looted in Tenochtitlan. The exact scale of losses is difficult to establish: the maximum figures were given by Bernal Diaz - about 1000 Spaniards died, according to Cortez - no more than 150 people. Cortez writes very little about the “Night of Sorrow” in his report: one gets the impression that he was unpleasant to remember these events. Lieutenant Alvarado showed particular heroism.

A very controversial point of the conquest is the so-called. “Battle of Otumba” July 7, 1520, which modern historians tend to attribute to the mythology of the conquest. According to the official version, the Aztecs organized a pursuit, but the Spaniards defeated the Indian army. Cortez's bloodless detachment was warmly received in Tlaxcala, where preparations began for a proper siege of Tenochtitlan. The position of the Spaniards was greatly strengthened by the epidemics of influenza and smallpox brought by the Spaniards to Mexico. Cuitlauac died of smallpox, and Cuauhtémoc (Descent Eagle - Nahuatl) was elected the last ruler of the Aztecs. In Tlaxcala, reinforcements arrived from Cuba to Cortes, artillery appeared, and the construction of a fleet began. Disassembled ships were delivered by Indian porters to the coast of Lake Texcoco. In May 1521, the siege of Tenochtitlan began, cut off from food supplies and sources of fresh water. The help of Indian allies from Tlaxcala, Texcoco, Huexotzinco, Cholula and other places played an invaluable role: Cortes himself indicates in the “Third Letter of Message” that their number reached 150 thousand: “We were about nine hundred Spaniards, and there were more than one hundred and fifty thousand of them.” " At the same time, the city-states of the Valley of Mexico, allied with the Aztecs, were subjugated. During this period, Cortés discovered the plot of Villafana, who was forced to hang himself. In August 1521, the assault on the city began. On August 13, after the capture of the last Tlatoani, Cuauhtémoc, the Aztec state fell. Until 1524, Cortes ruled Mexico alone.

Ruler of Mexico

In the messages of Cortez and the biography written from his words by Gomara, there are numerous complaints about the injustice of the king and those around him, who allegedly underestimated Cortez. In fact, Cortes during this period desired sole power, and greatly damaged relations with his companions.

As a result of a fierce struggle with Velazquez and his patron Bishop Fonseca, Cortes won, and in October 1522 he was awarded the rank of captain general of the newly formed colony of New Spain Sea-Ocean (the corresponding documents, signed in Valladolid, were announced in Cuba in May of the following year ). Along with the royal decree in the summer of 1523, four royal officials arrived, designed to organize the administrative system and limit Cortez's ambitions. During this period, Cortes supervised extensive construction: the new city of Mexico City was built on the ruins of Tenochtitlan, which became the main center of Spanish possessions in the New World. Large church construction was carried out: according to rumors transmitted by Gomara, Cortes vowed to build 365 temples on the ruins of pagan pyramids so that they could be used all year round. Cortes began to send his officers to conquer other peoples and states of Central America: for example, Alvarado was sent to Guatemala. Cortez began the production of cane sugar in Mexico and began to import African blacks to work on the plantations.

In 1523, the king sent Juan de Garay to conquer Northern Mexico without informing Cortez about it. Cortez forced Garay to abandon his conquests (during negotiations with Cortez in Mexico City in December 1523, Garay died allegedly from pneumonia, although Cortez was accused of this murder), nevertheless, Cortez decided to leave Mexico City, going on an expedition to punish Cristobal de Olida, who had been sent earlier by Cortes to conquer Honduras, but, having conspired with the Cuban governor Velazquez, withdrew from submission to Cortes (1524-1526). Due to the constant military danger and conspiracies arising among his inner circle, Cortes showed increasing cruelty. He ordered the torture and execution of Cuauhtemoc, the last ruler of the Aztecs, in 1525, and also intended to march on Cuba and deal with Velazquez (he died in 1524). Such ill-considered decisions prompted King Charles V to remove Cortez from office, and just a month after returning from a campaign in Honduras, at the end of June 1526, Juan Ponce de Leon II (son of the discoverer of Florida), who had previously exposed the crimes of Cortez, arrived in Mexico City. At one time he secured an appointment to the post of governor of New Spain. However, after a very short time the new governor died (later Cortez was accused of poisoning him), the next rulers, Marcos de Aguilar and Alonso de Estrada, also treated Cortez with hostility, and at the end of 1527 Cortez was forced to leave Mexico to go to Spain and report on its activities.

Map of California in the 17th century. The territory is depicted as an island

Visit to Spain and return to Mexico

Cortes in 1528 appeared before the king's court and brilliantly acquitted himself. The main arguments of his opponents were based on the fact that he sent much less gold and silver from Mexico than was required when paying the royal nickel. The king honored Cortes with an audience and granted him membership in the knightly order of Santiago de Compostela. In 1529, Cortes and his descendants were granted the title of Marquis of Oaxaca, which existed until 1811. Cortes was granted the right to keep 23,000 vassals in Oaxaca, but he was not restored to the governorship, and was not given any other position in return.

In the absence of Cortes, a serious political crisis occurred in Mexico: members of the Audiencia shared power, and the commander-in-chief Nuño de Guzman ruined the Indians. In 1528, an Indian delegation arrived in Spain with complaints about the colonists, and Cortez took their side! In 1530, Cortes was appointed military governor of Mexico, he had to share power with Don Antonio de Mendoza, appointed civilian governor. Cortez soon appeared in court again, accused of conspiracy to seize power and the murder of his first wife. The court materials were classified and have not been preserved, so it is unknown what verdict was reached. Until 1541, Cortes lived on his estate in Cuernavaca (48 km south of Mexico City). In 1536, he undertook an expedition to California, hoping to increase the possessions of the Spanish crown, as well as to find a passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean (which he never found in Honduras). This campaign, despite the high costs, did not bring him wealth and power.

In 1539, de Ulloa called the Gulf of California the Sea of ​​Cortez, but this name was not established.

Return to Europe. last years of life

In 1541, another trial related to abuse of power forced Cortes to return to Spain. His position changed: he barely managed to achieve a royal audience. Legend has it that, overwhelmed by the crowd of courtiers, Cortez broke through and hung on the running board of the royal carriage. To the king’s indignant question: “Who are you?”, Cortes replied: “I am the man who gave Your Majesty more countries than your ancestors left you cities!”

In 1541, by order of the king, Cortes joined the campaign of the Genoese admiral Andrea Doria to conquer Algeria. Cortés attempted to capture the Algerian Pasha Hayretdin Barbarossa, but a strong storm nearly killed the entire Spanish force. The campaign turned out to be extremely unsuccessful militarily, and left Cortes with many debts, for he equipped the expedition with his own funds. In 1544, Cortes even filed a lawsuit with the royal treasury, but the legal proceedings dragged on until 1547 and did not produce results. Cortés tried to return to Mexico, but contracted dysentery and died near Seville on December 2, 1547 in the town of Castilleja de la Cuesta at the age of approximately 62 years. All these years, Cortes was accompanied by the priest Francisco Lopez de Gomara, who became his confessor and recorded the memories of the conqueror and the guests who visited him.

In his will, Cortez asked to be buried in Mexico, and also expressed a desire to give legal status to his mestizo children from Indian concubines, including his first-born, Martin Cortez, born of Malinche. It was done.

Personal life

Cortez had many affairs in Spain, and many Indian concubines in Mexico. His relationship with Malinche was highly romanticized in the 19th century.

Cortes was officially married twice: in Cuba he married Catalina Suarez Marzaida, who died in 1522 in Coyoacan. Their marriage was childless. In 1529, Cortés married Doña Juana Ramirez de Orellano de Zúñiga, daughter of Carlos Ramirez de Orellano, second Count of Aguillar. In this marriage he had six children:

  • Don Luis Cortes y Ramirez de Orellano, died in infancy in 1530.
  • Doña Catalina Cortes de Zúñiga, died after birth in 1531.
  • Don Martin Cortes y Ramirez de Orellana, born in 1532. He was married to his cousin de Orellana, this marriage was childless. It was Martin Cortes who inherited the title of Marquis del Valle. The work of Francisco Lopez de Gomar was dedicated to him.
  • Doña Maria de Cortes y Zúñiga, born between 1533 and 1537. She was married to the fifth Earl of Luna.
  • Doña Catalina de Cortes y Zúñiga, born between 1533 and 1536, died shortly after the death of her father in Seville.
  • Doña Juana de Cortes y Zúñiga, born between 1533 and 1536. She was married to the second Duke of Alcalá, and had issue.

Cortés left behind the following illegitimate descendants:

  • Don Martin Cortez, son of Malinche, originally adopted by Juan de Zúñiga, one of Cortez's officers. He was nicknamed “The First Mestizos”. His descendants still live in Mexico.
  • Don Luis Cortes, illegitimate son of Dona Antonia Hermosillo.
  • Doña Catalina Pizarro, daughter of Cortez's relative, Doña Leonor Pizarro.
  • Doña Leonor, mestizo, born from Montezuma’s eldest daughter, Doña Isabel de Montezuma (her descendants until the 19th century received a pension from the Spanish government).

Special mention should be made:

  • Doña Maria Cortes de Montezuma (b. 1510?), adopted by Cortes, daughter of Montezuma II.

Memory

Burial

Cortez bequeathed to bury him in Mexico, in the Hospital of Jesus of Nazareth in Mexico City. In total, his remains were reburied at least 8 times. From 1547 to 1550 he rested in Seville, in the monastery of San Isidoro, in the crypt of the Dukes of Medina Sidonia. In 1550 the remains were moved, but remained in the monastery. In 1566, Cortez's ashes were transferred to Mexico, to Texcoco, where, together with the remains of his daughter, they rested until 1629. From 1629 to 1716, Cortez rested in the monastery of San Francisco on the main square of Mexico City. Due to repair work, the ashes were also transferred in 1716, and only in 1794 was Cortez’s will fulfilled. In 1823, a campaign was launched in Mexico City to destroy the remains of Cortez, and on September 15, 1823, the tombstone was dismantled, but the ashes remained in place. In 1836, the remains were transferred to a special crypt in the same place. In 1947, the remains were opened and examined, which confirmed their authenticity. It was last reburied in 1981, after an Indian nationalist group threatened to destroy the remains. Since then, by order of President López Portillo, Cortés's burial place has been kept secret.

Controversial issues

Cortes did not stand out in any way until his conquest of Mexico, and only then did researchers become interested in his biography. The best source is Cortes's own letters, sent in the form of reports to the King of Spain, so the events described there are tendentiously covered. A fairly reliable source is the chronicle of Francisco Lopez de Gomar, written from the words of Cortes and his entourage in Spain. However, Gomara was a fan of chivalric romances and had never been to Mexico. The third most important source is the monumental work of an old soldier of Cortez's army - Bernal Diaz del Castillo, and it was written as a refutation of the work of Gomar, who overly idealized Cortez.

Bartolomé de las Casas, with whom Cortes communicated in Spain, wrote sharply negatively about Cortez and considered him an excellent interlocutor. It was de Las Casas who laid the foundation for the “black legend”, which accused the conquistadors of every conceivable crime against humanity. Indian sources cited in the chronicle of Bernardino de Sahagun also do not describe Cortes in the best light. As a result, all modern works about Cortez are clearly divided into two directions: in the first, he appears as a romantic hero-conqueror, in the second type of research - almost a fiend of hell.

The attitude towards Cortez in modern Mexico is extremely contradictory: although he is cursed by the natives of America, he is nevertheless revered. There are many monuments to Cortes in the country; at least two settlements bear his name.

It is hardly possible at the present time to write an impartial portrait of the conquistador. However, one should take into account Cortez's generally respectful attitude towards the Indians: he adopted Montezuma's youngest daughter, and built a castle for her descendants in Spain, which has survived to this day. He supported the Mexican Indians in their struggle against the encomienda. Cortes had no physical aversion to the Indians, and he duly respected them as combat opponents.

see also

Sources and literature

Aztec group of sources

  • Prester Juan; Antonio Perez; fry Pedro de los Rios (glosses). Codex Telleriano-Remensis. www.kuprienko.info. - Ukraine, Kyiv, 2010. Translation from Spanish - A. Skromnitsky, V. Talakh. Archived from the original on August 22, 2011. Retrieved August 16, 2010.

Primary sources

  • Cortes, Hernan, “Letters (excerpts)”
  • . The history of the Chichimec people, their settlement and settlement in the country of Anahuac. . www.kuprienko.info (March 22, 2010). - per. from Spanish - V. Talakh, Ukraine, Kyiv, 2010. Archived from the original on August 23, 2011. Retrieved June 29, 2010.
  • Alva Ixtlilxochitl, Fernando de. A message about the arrival of the Spaniards and the beginning of the gospel law. . www.kuprienko.info (A. Skromnitsky) (October 22, 2010). - per. from Spanish - V. Talakh, Ukraine, Kyiv, 2010. Archived from the original on August 24, 2011. Retrieved October 22, 2010.
  • Talakh V. M. (ed.) Documents of Pashbolon-Maldonado (Campeche, Mexico, 17th century). (Russian) . kuprienko.info(June 26, 2012). Archived from the original on June 28, 2012. Retrieved June 27, 2012.
  • Hernán Cortes, Letters- available as Letters from Mexico translated by Anthony Pagden (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1986.) ISBN 0-300-09094-3
  • Francisco Lopez de Gomara, Hispania Victrix; First and Second Parts of the General History of the Indies, with the whole discovery and notable things that have happened since they were acquired until the year 1551, with the conquest of Mexico and New Spain Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1966.
  • Bernal Diaz del Castillo, The Conquest of New Spain- available as The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico: 1517-1521 ISBN 0-306-81319-X
  • León-Portilla, Miguel (Ed.) The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico. - Expanded and updated edition. - Boston: Beacon Press, 1992. - ISBN ISBN 0-8070-5501-8
  • History of the Conquest of Mexico, with a Preliminary View of Ancient Mexican Civilization, and the Life of the Conqueror, Hernando Cortes By William H. Prescott
  • Last Will and Testament of Hernán Cortés

Secondary sources

  • Conquest: Cortes, Montezuma, and the Fall of Old Mexico by Hugh Thomas (1993) ISBN 0-671-51104-1
  • Cortes and the Downfall of the Aztec Empire by Jon Manchip White (1971) ISBN 0-7867-0271-0
  • History of the Conquest of Mexico. by William H. Prescott ISBN 0-375-75803-8
  • The Rain God cries over Mexico by László Passuth
  • Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest by Matthew Restall, Oxford University Press (2003) ISBN 0-19-516077-0
  • The Conquest of America by Tzvetan Todorov (1996) ISBN 0-06-132095-1
  • Hernando Cortes by Fisher, M. & Richardson K.
  • Hernando Cortes Crossroads Resource Online.
  • Hernando Cortes by Jacobs, W.J., New York, N.Y.: Franklin Watts, Inc. 1974.
  • The World's Greatest Explorers: Hernando Cortés. Chicago, by Stein, R.C., Illinois: Chicago Press Inc. 1991.
  • Myth and Reality: The Legacy of Spain in America by Jesus J. Chao. Culture/Society Opinion. February 12, 1992. The Institute of Hispanic Culture of Houston
  • LeonPortilla, Miguel, ed., The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico. Boston: Beacon Press, 1962.

In Spanish

  • La Ruta de Hernán. Fernando Benítez ().
  • Hernán Cortes. Inventor de Mexico. Juan Miralles Ostos ().
  • Hernan Cortes. Salvador de Madariaga.
  • Hernan Cortes. Jose Luis Martinez. Edición del Fondo de Cultura Económica y UNAM. (1990)
  • Cortes. Christian Duverger ().
  • Hernán Cortés: el conquistador de lo imposible. Bartolomé Bennassar ().
  • El dios de la lluvia llora sobre Mexico. László Passuth. () ISBN 84-217-1968-8
  • Pasajes de la historia II: tiempo de heroes. Juan Antonio Cebrián () (Su vida se encuentra en el pasaje nº7, Hernán Cortés, símbolo de una conquista, páginas de 181 a 211).
  • Compostela de Indias, su origen y fundación. Salvador Gutiérrez Contreras (1949).
  • Hernán Cortes. mentalidad y propositos. Demetrio Ramos. ISBN 84-321-2787-6
  • Hernán Cortes. crónica de un imposible. José Luís Olaizola ().

Links

  • Letter from Cortés to Emperor Charles V, written in Segura de la Frontera on October 30, 1520
  • Persons in the history of Ancient Mesoamerica (including E. Cortes)
  • Zenon Kosidovsky"How Cortes conquered the Aztec country"
  • Third Epistle to Emperor Charles V (Hernán Cortes. Excerpts)
  • Fourth Epistle to Emperor Charles V (Hernán Cortes. Excerpts)
  • The True History of the Conquest of New Spain (Bernal Díaz del Castillo)
  • An Account of Some Things of New Spain and the Great City of Temestitan, Mexico City (Written by a Companion of Hernán Cortés, the Anonymous Conquistador)
  • Gulyaev V.I. “In the footsteps of the conquistadors”, “Science”, 1976, - 160 p.

Early biography

Expedition to Mexico

Map of the campaign 1519-1521.

The idea of ​​conquering Mexico belonged to Velazquez, who was also the main sponsor of the campaign. In 1518, Cortes was appointed commander, but after another quarrel, the governor of Cuba canceled this order. Cortes, however, possessing great eloquence, hired a crew and soldiers, and sailed from Santiago de Cuba on November 18, 1518. The expedition was poorly supplied with food, so the conquistadors left Cuba on February 10, 1519. The expedition had 11 ships (one of them was commanded Lieutenant Alvarado, Cortez's deputy).

Cortez's army included 518 infantry, 16 horsemen (several of whom shared one horse, like Alvarado), 13 arquebusmen, 32 crossbowmen, 110 sailors and 200 slaves - Cuban Indians and blacks, as servants and porters. The equipment included 32 horses, 10 cannons and 4 falconets. Among the officers of Cortez's detachment, the future conquerors of Central America stood out: Alonso Hernandez Portocarero (he initially went to Malinche), Alonso Davila, Francisco de Montejo, Francisco de Salcedo, Juan Velazquez de Leon (a relative of the Cuban governor), Cristobal de Olid, Gonzalo de Sandoval and Pedro de Alvarado. Many of them were experienced soldiers who fought in Italy and the Antilles.

The main helmsman was Anton de Alaminos (participant of the third expedition of Columbus and the expedition of Ponce de Leon, Francisco de Cordoba and Juan de Grijalva).

The expedition set off along the well-known route to the Yucatan coast. The first contact with the high civilization of America took place on the island. Cozumel, home at the time to the Mayan principality of Ekab, center of veneration for the fertility goddess Ix-Chel. The Spaniards tried to destroy the sanctuary, horrified by the ritual of sacrifice. At first, an Indian slave youth served as a translator, from whom information was received about Jeronimo de Aguillar, a Spanish priest who was captured by the Mayans and learned their language. He became the expedition's chief translator. In March 1519, Cortes formally annexed Yucatan to the Spanish possessions (in fact, this only happened in 1535). Then the expedition went along the coast, and on March 14 they reached the mouth of the Tabasco River. The Spaniards attacked the Indian settlement, but found no gold. In Tabasco on March 19, Cortez received gifts from local rulers: a lot of gold, and 20 women, among whom was Malinche, who became Cortez's official translator and concubine. She was immediately baptized, the Spaniards called her “Doña Marina.”

In Tabasco, the Spaniards learned about the great country of Mexico, which lay further to the west, inland, and this is how the name “Mexico” appeared. In July 1519, Cortez's expedition landed on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, and the port of Veracruz was founded, 70 km north of the modern city. By this act, Cortes placed himself under direct subordination to the king. To avoid provoking a riot, Cortez ordered the ships to be burned. Leaving the garrison, Cortes moved inland. His first allies were the Totonac people, whose capital, Sempoala, Cortes entered. At a meeting of 30 leaders of the people, war was declared on the Aztecs. The majority of Cortez's army was now made up of allied Totonac tribes. A treaty was concluded with the Totonacs, under the terms of which, after the conquest of Mexico, the Totonacs received independence. This agreement was never respected.

On August 16, 1519, the Spaniards marched to Tenochtitlan. Cortes had 500 infantry, 16 horsemen and about 13 thousand Totonac warriors. The conquistadors found a strong ally in Tlaxcala, an independent mountain principality waging war with the Aztec Confederation. As a sign of the alliance, the leader of Tlaxcala gave Cortes his daughter Xicotencatl, whom the conqueror gave to Alvarado. Under the name of Luis de Tlaxcala, she accompanied Alvarado on all his campaigns. Cortez's army was replenished with approximately 3,000 Tlaxcalans.

Massacre at Cholula. Indian image

In October 1519, Cortez's army reached Cholula, the second largest city-state of Central Mexico, the sacred center of the local religion. For unknown reasons, Cortez carried out a massacre of the local population in the city, and partially burned the city. Later, in his messages, Cortez explained this act as retaliation for a possible trap set by the Indians.

On the way to the Aztec capital, the Spaniards discovered the Popocatepetl volcano (Nahuatl “Hill that smokes”). Cortez's officer, Diego de Ordaz, decided to conquer the top of the volcano with two squires. Later, King Charles V allowed the inclusion of an image of a volcano in the coat of arms of Ordaz.

In January 1521, the siege of Tenochtitlan began, cut off from food supplies and sources of fresh water. At the same time, the city-states of the Valley of Mexico, allied with the Aztecs, were subjugated. During this period, Cortés discovered the plot of Villafana, who was forced to hang himself. In August 1521, the assault on the city began. On August 13, after the capture of the last Tlatoani, Cuauhtémoc, the Aztec state fell. Until 1524, Cortes ruled Mexico alone.

Ruler of Mexico

In the messages of Cortez and the biography written from his words by Gomara, there are numerous complaints about the injustice of the king and those around him, who allegedly underestimated Cortez. In fact, Cortes during this period desired sole power, and greatly damaged relations with his companions.

In 1524, Cortes was awarded the rank of captain general of the newly formed colony of New Spain of the Sea-Ocean. Along with the decree, four royal officials (Royal Audiencia) arrived, called upon to organize the administrative system and limit the ambitions of Cortez. During this period, Cortes supervised extensive construction: the new city of Mexico City was built on the ruins of Tenochtitlan, which became the main center of Spanish possessions in the New World. Large church construction was carried out: according to rumors transmitted by Gomara, Cortes vowed to build 365 temples on the ruins of pagan pyramids so that they could be used all year round. Cortes began to send his officers to conquer other peoples and states of Central America: for example, Alvarado was sent to Guatemala. Cortez began the production of cane sugar in Mexico and began to import African blacks to work on the plantations.

In 1523, the king sent Juan de Garay to conquer Northern Mexico without informing Cortez about it. As a result of a fierce struggle with Velazquez, Garay and Bishop Fonseca, Cortes won, but decided to leave Mexico City, setting off on an expedition to conquer Honduras (1524-1526). Here also a war took place with Cristobal de Olid, who was sent by the Cuban governor Velazquez to conquer this country. Due to the constant military danger and conspiracies arising among his inner circle, Cortes showed increasing cruelty. In 1525, he ordered the torture and execution of Cuauhtemoc, the last ruler of the Aztecs, and also intended to march on Cuba and deal with Velazquez (he died in 1524). Such ill-considered decisions prompted King Charles V to remove Cortes from office.

The king at that time was in Germany, busy with the war between Protestants and Catholics. Spain was ruled by Archbishop Hadrian. It was to him that Juan Ponce de Leon II (the son of the discoverer of Florida) turned to him, denouncing the crimes of Cortez and calling for his execution. Opposition grew, and in 1527 Cortes was forced to resign as governor, and in 1528 he went to Spain to report on his activities.

Map of California in the 17th century. The territory is depicted as an island

Visit to Spain and return to Mexico

Cortes in 1528 appeared before the king's court and brilliantly acquitted himself. The main arguments of his opponents were based on the fact that he sent much less gold and silver from Mexico than was required when paying the royal nickel. The king honored Cortes with an audience and granted him membership in the knightly order of Santiago de Compostela. In 1529, Cortes and his descendants were granted the title of Marquis of Oaxaca, which existed until 1811. Cortes was granted the right to keep 23,000 vassals in Oaxaca, but he was not restored to the governorship, and was not given any other position in return.

In the absence of Cortes, a serious political crisis occurred in Mexico: members of the Audiencia shared power, and the commander-in-chief Nuño de Guzman ruined the Indians. In 1528, an Indian delegation arrived in Spain with complaints about the colonists, and Cortez took their side! In 1530, Cortes was appointed military governor of Mexico, he had to share power with Don Antonio de Mendoza, appointed civilian governor. Cortez soon appeared in court again, accused of conspiracy to seize power and the murder of his first wife. The court materials were classified and have not been preserved, so it is unknown what verdict was reached. Until 1541, Cortes lived on his estate in Cuernavaca (48 km south of Mexico City). In 1536, he undertook an expedition to California, hoping to increase the possessions of the Spanish crown, as well as to find a passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean (which he never found in Honduras). This campaign, despite the high costs, did not bring him wealth and power.

Sources and literature

Primary sources

  • Cortes, Hernan, "Letters (excerpts)"
  • Hernán Cortes, Letters- available as Letters from Mexico translated by Anthony Pagden (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1986.) ISBN 0300090943
  • Francisco Lopez de Gomara, Hispania Victrix; First and Second Parts of the General History of the Indies, with the whole discovery and notable things that have happened since they were acquired until the year 1551, with the conquest of Mexico and New Spain Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1966.
  • Bernal Diaz del Castillo, The Conquest of New Spain- available as The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico: 1517-1521 ISBN 030681319X
  • The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico. - Expanded and updated edition. - Boston: Beacon Press, 1992. - ISBN ISBN 0-807-05501-8
  • History of the Conquest of Mexico, with a Preliminary View of Ancient Mexican Civilization, and the Life of the Conqueror, Hernando Cortes By William H. Prescott
  • Last Will and Testament of Hernán Cortés

Secondary sources

  • Conquest: Cortes, Montezuma, and the Fall of Old Mexico by Hugh Thomas (1993) ISBN 0671511041
  • Cortes and the Downfall of the Aztec Empire by Jon Manchip White (1971) ISBN 0786702710
  • History of the Conquest of Mexico. by William H. Prescott ISBN 0375758038
  • The Rain God cries over Mexico by László Passuth
  • Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest by Matthew Restall, Oxford University Press (2003) ISBN 0195160770
  • The Conquest of America by Tzvetan Todorov (1996) ISBN 0061320951
  • Hernando Cortes by Fisher, M. & Richardson K.
  • Hernando Cortes Crossroads Resource Online.
  • Hernando Cortes by Jacobs, W.J., New York, N.Y.: Franklin Watts, Inc. 1974.
  • The World's Greatest Explorers: Hernando Cortés. Chicago, by Stein, R.C., Illinois: Chicago Press Inc. 1991.
  • Myth and Reality: The Legacy of Spain in America by Jesus J. Chao. Culture/Society Opinion. February 12, 1992. The Institute of Hispanic Culture of Houston
  • LeonPortilla, Miguel, ed., The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico. Boston: Beacon Press, 1962.

In Spanish

  • La Ruta de Hernán. Fernando Benítez ().
  • Hernán Cortes. Inventor de Mexico. Juan Miralles Ostos ().
  • Hernan Cortes. Salvador de Madariaga.
  • Hernan Cortes. Jose Luis Martinez. Edición del Fondo de Cultura Económica y UNAM. (1990)
  • Cortes. Christian Duverger ().
  • Hernán Cortés: el conquistador de lo imposible. Bartolomé Bennassar ().
  • El dios de la lluvia llora sobre Mexico. László Passuth. () ISBN 84-217-1968-8
  • Pasajes de la historia II: tiempo de heroes. Juan Antonio Cebrián () (Su vida se encuentra en el pasaje nº7, Hernán Cortés, símbolo de una conquista, páginas de 181 a 211).
  • Compostela de Indias, su origen y fundación. Salvador Gutiérrez Contreras (1949).
  • Hernán Cortes. mentalidad y propositos. Demetrio Ramos. ISBN 84-321-2787-6
  • Hernán Cortes. crónica de un imposible. José Luís Olaizola (

Spanish conquistador. In 1504 - 1519 he served in Cuba. In 1519 - 7527 he led the conquest in Mexico, which led to the establishment of Spanish rule. In 1522 - 1528 - governor, and in 1529 - 1540 - captain of New Spain (Mexico). In 1524, in search of a sea passage from the Pacific to the Atlantic, he crossed Central America. In the last years of his life he showed himself to be a talented colonialist.

The two famous conquistadors were from the Spanish province of Es Tremadura. Hernan Cortez was born in the town of Medellin, Francisco Pizarro - in Trujillo. There was also a family connection between them: Cortez was the son of Martin Cortez de Monroe and Donna Catalina Pizarro Al-tamarino. Cortez, Monroe, Pizarro, Altamarino - ancient noble families, Cortez's father and mother belonged to the hidalgo class. In accordance with Spanish custom, the full name of the future conqueror was Hernan Cortez y Pizarro Cortez and Pizarro were distinguished by extraordinary courage, both were born leaders, adventurers . Moreover, both recruited their best people precisely in Extremadura, a harsh, high-altitude country.

Hernan Cortez's father predicted a career as a lawyer for his only son. At the age of fourteen, the young man was sent to the University of Salamanca. However, two years later Hernan returned home.

Chronicler Bernal Diaz wrote about Cortes: “He was a good Latinist and, when talking with learned people, spoke to them in this language. Apparently, he was even a Doctor of Law. He was also a bit of a poet and wrote lovely poems, and what he wrote was very worthy.”

After leaving the university, Cortez spent his days in idleness. He was too headstrong to allow others to guide him. The ardent and sharp young man was already thinking about a military career. However, he stayed in Seville for another two years.

In 1504, nineteen-year-old Cortes went to the island of Hispaniola. Here in Haiti, Cortes petitioned Santo Domingo for citizenship and land. Upon his arrival in the New World, he had no intention of settling here, but due to circumstances he was forced to try his luck as a municipal official and landowner. Governor Ovando allocated him land and Indians for work. In addition, Cortes, as a lawyer, was given the position of secretary in the council of the newly founded city of Azua, where he lived for six years. However, Hernan did not give up his penchant for adventure and participated in the fighting against the rebel Indians.

In 1511, Diego de Velazquez began the conquest of Cuba. Cortes, having abandoned his possessions, exchanged the quiet existence of a landowner for the adventurous life of a conquistador. During the Cuban campaign, thanks to his open, cheerful nature and courage, he acquired many friends. Cortez was in favor with the newly appointed governor Velasquez and even became the personal secretary of his patron. He settled in the first Spanish city in Cuba, Santiago de Barracoa, where he was twice elected alcalde (city judge). He also achieved success as a landowner, starting to breed sheep, horses, and cattle. In subsequent years, he devoted himself entirely to the improvement of his estates and, with the help of the Indians allocated to him, mined a large amount of gold in the mountains and rivers.

Changes also occurred in his personal life; in Santiago, in the presence of the governor, Cortes celebrated his wedding with Catalina Suarez, who came from the small landed nobility of Granada.

During the years spent in Cuba, Cortez learned a lot. He realized that corrupt Spanish officials played a major role in the colonist's career. The courtesy and diplomatic dexterity of the future conqueror is evidenced by the fact that, despite the occasional love affairs and other escapades that led to clashes with Velazquez, he continued to enjoy the favor of the wayward governor.

Velazquez appointed Cortes commander-in-chief of the expedition to Central America. Hernan immediately began equipping the fleet. He mortgaged his estates, borrowed money from several wealthy citizens of Santiago, and when his credit was exhausted, he used credits extended to his Friends. The reputation of Cortes, as well as the news of the wealth of the newly discovered countries, forced many adventurers to rush to his banner. Six ships were equipped, and more than three hundred people volunteered to take part in the expedition.

However, Velazquez wanted to limit the size of the expedition to a small number of participants and ships, and its goals - to continue discoveries, and then begin to colonize the country himself. The scale of the preparations displeased the governor, and he removed Cortes from command of the expedition.

Cortes, in this difficult situation for him, showed the ability to quickly make decisions, which subsequently more than once saved the expedition from certain death. Despite the fact that the crew was not fully staffed and the ships were insufficiently equipped, Hernan Cortes secretly gave the order to raise the sails. At midnight, the small flotilla weighed anchor. Cortez risked his head; only the success of the expedition could save him.

On November 18, the fleet moved to Macaca, a small port about 80 kilometers west of Santiago. Here the expedition members considered themselves beyond the reach of the governor's pursuit. In Trinidad, Cortés replenished his supplies and ordered his black velvet standard to be raised, which featured a red cross surrounded by white and blue flames and the Latin inscription “With this sign I conquer.” Noble and famous hidalgos were already under the command of Cortez, so more and more people joined the expedition. In the end, about 2,000 Spaniards took part in the conquest of Mexico. With this detachment, Cortes set off on the most risky and difficult military campaign of his century.

On February 10, 1519, the squadron headed for Cape San Antonio, chosen as a gathering place. The expedition consisted of 11 old ships. On February 18, a course was set for Yucatan. The soldier Bernal Diaz del Castillo, who described the campaign of the conquerors, reported about his 34-year-old commander-in-chief: “As for Cortez’s appearance, he was attractive, stately and strong. His face was ashen-gray; it would have been more beautiful if it had been a little longer... The expression on his face hardly indicated a cheerful disposition. His gaze was mostly serious, but he could, when he wanted, give his eyes great courtesy... He was an excellent horseman, skilled in the use of any weapon, in battle both on foot and on horseback, and, most importantly, he had courage that did not stop at anything... If Cortez was possessed by an idea, then it was no longer possible to force him to abandon it, especially in military matters...”

Such was the man to whom the Spanish knights entrusted themselves and who had the opportunity to become their leader in the greatest adventure, which they had never dreamed of in their wildest fantasies.

The flotilla, which had put to sea in favorable weather, was then caught in one of those powerful hurricanes that are not uncommon in the Caribbean at this time of year. It was scattered in all directions, and Cortes, on his flagship ship Capitaña, was the last to arrive at the gathering place - the island of Cozumel .

Finally the expedition reached the mouth of the Rio Tabasco, or Rio Grijalva, as the river was named after its discoverer. The Spaniards occupied the capital of the province of Tabasco and soon regretted that they had embarked on such an adventure, since numerous Indian detachments approached the city.

After much thought, Cortez decided to give the enemy battle. Retreating early in the campaign would have undermined the morale of his men and inspired the Indians. On March 25, 1519, on the day of the Annunciation, members of the expedition heard mass and then rushed into battle. Although the Spaniards were opposed by superior forces of the aborigines, they were victorious. The Indians, who had never seen horses before, fled in panic, and the horsemen, led personally by Cortes, shouted “Santiago!” rushed after them. At the site of the victory, a new provincial capital was subsequently built, named Santa Maria de la Victoria.

Spanish losses were insignificant. The inhabitants of Tabasco, who had lost several thousand people, made peace with the Spaniards. The leaders presented gifts, including 20 Indian girls, whom Cortes, after baptism, distributed among his captains. One of them, Marina, gave birth to Cortes a son, who received the name Don Martin Cortes in honor of his grandfather and subsequently became the commander of the knightly order in Iago...

The expedition continued its journey. The first meeting with the powerful ruler of Mexico, Montezuma, took place in San Juan de Ulua. From the stories of the Indian ambassadors one could judge the greatness and power of the Aztec empire. The idea of ​​conquering by force a state in which there are about two million warriors, with a detachment of 600 people, should have seemed pure madness. It was possible to conquer Mexico only through political and diplomatic means, through clever use of the split that existed within the Indian people.

A week later, Montezuma's ambassadors again arrived at the Spaniards' camp. A hundred porters delivered the ruler's gifts to the conquerors. To the surprise of the Indians, Cortez became interested in the yellow metal that was mined in mountain mines. The Indians themselves called gold “the impurity of the gods.”

With the help of precious offerings, Montezuma sought to force the outsiders to abandon their plan to capture the Mexican capital. The ruler did not suspect that it was his rich gifts that further inspired the Spaniards to move towards the source of these treasures. Products made of gold could prevent the danger threatening Mexico no more than the spells of magicians and sorcerers, sent again and again by Montezuma.

Hernan Cortes, before moving into the interior of Mexico, founded a village on the coast - Villa de la Vera Cruz. In order to maintain at least the appearance of legality, Cortez entrusted all powers to the city council appointed by him and asked for his resignation from the post of commander-in-chief. The power of Governor Diego Velazquez replaced the power of the Council of Veracruz. For appearances, there was a discussion for some time, then Cortes again appeared before the Council, where they announced to him that they could not find a more worthy candidate for the post of leader of the expedition than him. Cortes became chief judge and captain general. However, for this decision to gain legal force, it was necessary to obtain the approval of the King of Spain. Hernan Cortes used his gift of eloquence to win over Velazquez’s supporters, of whom there were many in his squad.

In his decision to make his way to the mysterious capital of the Mexican Empire, Cortez found unexpected, and therefore much desired allies in the Totonacs, the enemies of the Mexicans. Indians from this tribe invited Cortez to visit their capital, Sempoalla.

In order to bind the Totonacs even more firmly to himself, Cortez ordered the capture of five Mexican tax collectors. At the same time, he played a double game, since he ordered his people to secretly release the Aztec officials and send them to Montezuma with a friendly message. Thus, Cortez gained the favor of the Totonacs, and on the other hand, received the gratitude of the Mexicans, who were not aware of the Spaniard’s treachery.

But the conquistador also needed to enlist the support of the Spanish king in order to avoid possible sanctions from Velazquez. Cortes refused his fifth share of all the booty he had won so far and managed to persuade the soldiers to give up their share in favor of the king.

In July 1519, the best ship of the squadron sailed to Spain with a fair wind. For Hernán Cortés, the reception of his envoys at court was a triumph. The king expressed his gratitude and, together with his courtiers, admired the works of art of the New World. The king legalized the activities of the conquistador; at the same time he gave the order to equip three ships to help Cortes.

On August 16, 1519, the Spanish conquerors, together with the Totonacs, set out towards the Mexican capital of Tenochtitlan. A camp was set up on the steep slopes of the Cordillera.

On the fourth day, the detachment finally entered the mountains. A steep climb began to the fortified city, which Diaz calls Socochima in his notes. Two paths led to it, carved into the rock in the form of stairs and very convenient for defense. However, the local cacique received an order from Montezuma to let the Spaniards through.

For the next three days, the Spaniards walked through “desert terrain, uninhabited due to its scarcity, lack of water and severe cold.” Crossing the desert, they reached a chain of hills. Here, on the pass, there was a small repository of idols, “resembling a roadside chapel,” lined with neatly stacked bundles of firewood. Cortés named the place Puerto de la Lena (Port of Brushwood). Soon the army reached a large city, whose stone houses, whitewashed with lime, sparkled so brightly in the sun that the strangers remembered the south of their native Spain. Bernal Diaz writes that they named the city Castilblanco (White Fortress). Now it is called Saulta. And Brother Bartolomeo, the head of the priests of the detachment, who did everything possible to spread the faith in the cities and villages of the Totonac Indians, did not allow the cross to be installed here: he was struck by the scale of the sacrifices. There were thirteen teocalli (Indian temples) with the inevitable piles of skulls in each. Bernal Diaz estimated the number of people sacrificed here at more than a hundred thousand.

Cortez needed allies, and since the Cempoalans assured him of the friendly intentions of the Tlaxcalans, whose lands lay ahead, Cortez sent four Indians ahead as ambassadors, and he himself set out for the city of Ixtacamaxchitlan. Three days later the detachment moved through the valley into the mountains.

Having overcome the pass, the conquistadors entered the lands of hostile tribes. Bernal Diaz describes the subsequent events as follows: “Two armies, numbering about six thousand, came out to meet them with loud cries and the beating of drums. Blowing into trumpets, they shot arrows, threw spears and fought with extraordinary courage.” It was a rare battle among the natives that began without confrontation - and Cortez had time to show signs of his peaceful intentions and even communicate with the Indians through an interpreter. But in the end they rushed to the attack, and this time Cortes himself was the first to shout the old battle cry of “Santiago!” During the first onslaught, many Indians were killed, including three chiefs. Then they retreated into the forest, where the Tlaxcalan leader Xicoten-catl was waiting in ambush with forty thousand warriors. The terrain was rough to make good use of the cavalry, but when the Spaniards drove the Indians into the open, the situation changed, and Cortes was able to bring six of his cannons into battle. But even with cannons, the battle lasted until sunset. The Indians outnumbered the Spaniards and their allies many times over, since Xicotencatl had five chiefs, each commanding ten thousand warriors.

According to Bernal Diaz, the first clash with the main forces of the Tlaxcalans took place on September 2, 1519, and three days later another major battle took place. Cortez claimed in his letters to the king that there were 139 thousand Indians. The battle took place on the plain, where both cavalry and artillery could deploy. The Tlaxcalans attacked in droves, and the artillery mowed them down like grass, and the battle-hardened Spanish soldiers burst into the enemy crowd like Roman legionaries. However, soon the Spaniards had only a dozen horses left, and the sharp blades of the infantrymen brought Cortes victory. In addition, this time there was a split in the Tlaxcalan camp: two of Xicotencatl’s commanders refused to march with him. As a result, the four-hour battle ended in the complete defeat of the Indians.

“We gave thanks to the Almighty,” writes Bernal Diaz. The Spanish lost only one soldier, although sixty were wounded. But the conquistadors did not care about their wounds.

Subsequently, the Tlaxcalans attacked in small detachments, which competed with each other for the honor of capturing a living Spaniard. But the surrounding leaders were already beginning to come to the camp with peace proposals. Two days after the battle, fifty Indians appeared in the camp. They offered the soldiers cornmeal, turkey, and cherry flatbreads. Cortes was warned that these were spies, and he himself noticed that the envoys were interested in the location of defensive posts, and ordered them to be captured. During interrogation, they admitted that they had come for reconnaissance in order to prepare a night attack. Having cut off their hands, Cortes sent them back to Tlaxcala and began to prepare to repel the attack.

At night, the camp was stormed by approximately ten thousand soldiers. The priests convinced Xicotencatl that at night valor leaves the Spaniards. Unfortunately for him, this was not true - Cortez led his army into the expanse of corn fields, where he met the Indians. The Tlaxcalans, unaccustomed to night battles, were quickly defeated, after which the leader not only assured the Spaniards of eternal friendship, but also invited them to enter the city; at the same time he also complained about Montezuma’s constant oppression.

At this time, another embassy from Montezuma came to Cortes - six leaders with a retinue of two hundred people, who brought Cortes gifts of gold, congratulations on the victory and, more importantly, the news that Montezuma was ready not only to become a vassal of the Spanish king, but also to pay an annual tribute on the condition that the Spaniards do not enter the capital of Mexico. It was both a bribe and a deal. Thus, Cortez was able to play a subtle game. He still did not trust the Tlaxcalans and admitted that he “continued to court both, secretly thanking each side for their advice and pretending to have warmer feelings for Montezuma than for the Tlaxcalans, and vice versa.”

Entering Tlaxcala, Cortez not only conquered a city of thirty thousand, but also the entire district, “ninety leagues in circumference,” since Tlaxcala was the capital of a country that could be called a republic. The city itself, according to Cortes, “larger than Granada and much better fortified,” lay in a lowland among the hills, and some temples stood in the mountains surrounding the capital. In order to secure the friendship of the Spaniards, the leaders offered them hostages, and to strengthen it, five virgins, their daughters. But they did not want to overthrow their idols or put an end to the sacrifices.

In Tlaxcala, Cortez collected information about the Mexican capital and the Mexicans themselves. The Tlaxcalans told him how many drawbridges there were on the dams and even how deep the lake was. They estimated the strength of the Mexican armies of Montezuma alone at 150 thousand warriors. The Tlaxcalans were confident that the Spaniards were their only hope in the fight against Montezuma, so Cortes received the support of the entire country.

It is unknown what thoughts and doubts tormented the conquistador: he always carefully hid his feelings. But it is known that he certainly took into account the wishes of the people and did not take any important steps if he did not have their support.

Cortez again faced a choice of path. Tenochtitlan lay due to the west. Go straight or go through Cholula, as Montezuma's ambassadors advised? The Tlaxcalans grimly predicted a trap for him in Cholula. While Cortes was racking his brains, another embassy arrived from Montezuma, four leaders with gifts - gold jewelry worth two thousand pesos. They, in turn, warned Cortez that the Tlaxcalans were waiting for the right moment to kill and rob the Spaniards. This was such an obvious attempt to quarrel him with his new allies that Cortez ignored the warnings.

On October 12, 1519, the Spanish army, reinforced by 5,000 Tlaxcalans, marched to Cholula, located 40 kilometers away, which was considered a loyal ally of Tenochtitlan. This city was home to many luxurious teocalli. Arts and crafts flourished here.

On the morning of October 13, the Spaniards were met by a procession of Cholulu residents. The foreigners, who from the day they appeared were considered teules (gods), were fumigated with the aroma of plant resin. At the request of the chiefs, the Indians from Cortez's auxiliary detachments set up camp outside the city, while the Spaniards themselves were quartered in Cholulu itself. However, Cortez suspected that a trap was being prepared for them.

He invited local leaders to his place, pretending that he was going to leave the city the next day, and asked them to provide 2,000 tamans (porters). The leaders readily agreed.

Early in the morning, porters appeared in the courtyard of the house where the Spaniards lived, as well as local leaders who were invited to say goodbye. Cortez summoned the leaders to his presence and accused them of conspiracy. At the signal, the Tlaxcalans entered the city. Arson and general looting of the city began. The news of Cholula's cruel punishment spread throughout all the provinces of the Aztec empire. Montezuma's fears were confirmed; the ruler of Mexico decided to receive the conquistador in the capital.

On November 1, 1519, the Spaniards set out in strict marching order towards the capital of Mexico. Tenochtitlan, which was called the “Venice of the Aztecs,” made a great impression on the Europeans, but to the amazement was added an ever-increasing anxiety, for, as Bernal Diaz put it, “before us was the great city of Mexico City, and we had less than 400 soldiers.”

Montezuma greeted the strangers with a bow. Then the traditional exchange of gifts took place. Accompanied by a solemn procession, the Spaniards walked to the palace of Montezuma Azayacatl's father, where the reception was to take place.

Cortez understood that if the bridges were destroyed, the city would turn into a trap for his detachment. Therefore, one of his first tasks was the construction of four brigantines, which would make him independent of the roads running along the dams.

Cortez used both political and military means to carry out his plans. In Veracruz, the Indians killed several Spaniards, including the commander Escalante. On November 14, 1519, Cortes ordered the arrest of his hospitable host Montezuma right in his palace, accusing the ruler of organizing an attack in Veracruz. Spanish officers occupied the exits from the imperial palace, and then Montezuma, in a simple, unadorned palanquin, accompanied by an armed escort, was taken to the palace of his late father. So the “Lord of the World” became a prisoner of the Spaniards.

In his report to Charles V, Cortés presented his violent actions as a measure necessary to ensure the safety of the Spaniards and to protect the interests of the king. The captive emperor served as a guarantor of the safety of his soldiers, because in this authoritarian state no one would dare to do anything against the Europeans without the sanction of Montezuma.

The “Lord of the World” gave calming orders to the population, declaring that he preferred to be located closer to his European friends. In reality, Cortez ruled. He was also supposed to convey the tribute intended for the Aztec emperor. The Spaniards still showed respect for Montezuma's royal title, recognizing his right to all the external attributes of supreme power.

Cortez's next step was Montezuma's official abdication from the throne. In December 1519, in the presence of the highest officials of the empire, a formal act of taking the oath of allegiance to the Spanish monarch was carried out, due to the absence of the person represented by Hernan Cortes. Submission to the supreme authority of Charles V was solemnly certified by a notary.

After the transfer of power to Cortez, Montezuma had no choice but to give his father’s treasures to strangers. The Indians valued gold only in the form of elaborate jewelry, while the Spaniards melted precious works of art into ingots and put a royal mark on them.

In early May 1520, six months after arriving in Tenochtitlan, a message arrived from the coast that worried Cortés. A punitive expedition under the command of Panfilo de Narvaez appeared in Mexico. She was sent by Diego Velazquez to deal with the rebellious Cortes.

The conquistador faced the threat of war on two fronts. Attempts to negotiate with Narvaez were unsuccessful.

Knowing the great numerical superiority of Narvaez's army, Cortes nevertheless divided his already small army. A small detachment managed to get unnoticed to the capital of the Totonacs, where the punitive detachment was located, and take the enemy by surprise. The army of the Cuban governor laid down its arms. Thus Cortes, a recent troublemaker who stood at the head of a handful of adventurers, became the independent leader of an army hitherto unseen in the New World.

But at this time, Hernan received alarming messages from Tenochtitlan: the Aztecs attacked the garrison. However, the Mexicans had enough reason to use Cortez's absence to attack the Spaniards in Tenochtitlan: the capture of their ruler, the devastation of palaces, the theft of treasures of gold and silver, the desecration of temples and the destruction of images of gods, Cortez's failure to fulfill his promise to leave the city after the arrival of the ships and , finally, the presence of mortal enemies, the Tlaxcalans, which probably most offended the proud Tenocha people.

On June 24, 1520, with the Spanish situation in Tenochtitlan desperate, Cortés re-entered the Mexican capital. With his detachment, he made his way to Azayacatl's palace and found himself under siege. It was dangerous to stay in Tenochtitlan. But how to get out of the city when all the bridges are destroyed?

Cortez ordered the construction of a portable wooden bridge, with which it was possible to overcome the destroyed passages across the canals. In the presence of witnesses, he ordered the king's fifth to be packed into bags and appointed reliable officers to guard the royal share.

On June 30, 1520, Cortes gave the order to leave the capital. On the night of July 1, when the Spaniards crossed the bridge, the Indians attacked the conquerors and dealt them a crushing blow. On the notorious “night of sorrow,” all the guns, 80 horses, and 459 Spaniards died. The entire convoy and most of the treasures captured in a hurry were destroyed. Cortez almost died.

On July 7, 1520, at Otompan, or as the Spaniards called it, Otumba, Cortés met with a huge army of Mexicans, approximately 200,000 warriors, and the Spaniards no longer had firearms. Nevertheless, the Spaniards and Tlaxcalans furiously attacked the superior enemy forces. Cortes, at the head of a cavalry detachment, broke through the thick of the enemies and pierced the magnificently dressed Aztec leader with a spear. When the Indians saw their standards in the hands of the Spaniards, they panicked and began to flee.

Inspired by success, Cortez decided to conquer the Mexican capital again. He ordered the construction of 13 brigantines, which were dismantled after testing. Indian porters carried them across the Sierra to Lake Texcoco. The brigantines were reassembled at a distance of 800 meters from the shore; At the same time, about 40,000 Indians were busy digging a canal leading to the lake. These preparations lasted almost seven months.

On December 28, 1520, Cortez set out for Mexico with his impressive army. He chose a difficult but safe path through the wild Sierra. Before the assault on Tenochtitlan, Cortés had 650 infantry, 194 riflemen, 84 cavalry and 24,000 Indian auxiliaries, as well as three heavy cannons and 15 field guns.

On May 20, 1521, the assault on the Mexican residence began. The brigantines destroyed the entire flotilla of Indian canoes. But the advance along the dams came with heavy losses, so Cortez decided to take Tenochtitlan by siege. The Mexicans, greatly superior in manpower, continued to resist. Cortes only miraculously managed to escape from the hands of the Indians twice thanks to the bravery of his soldiers. Nevertheless, he continued to propose peace to the Aztecs.

On August 13, 1521, the Spaniards burst into the city and, having suppressed the resistance of the defenders, captured it. According to various sources, from 24 to 70 thousand Mexicans died or died of hunger or disease. The exact number of Spanish losses is also not established; at least 100 people were captured and sacrificed to pagan gods, and about the same number died. Allied losses approached 10 thousand.

The siege lasted 75 days, and, according to Cortez's reports, there was not a day without fighting with the Indians. The Aztec leader Cuauhtemoc fell into the hands of the Spaniards during his flight and, chained, appeared before Cortez.

However, the treasures for which, in fact, this grandiose operation was started, disappeared without a trace. Probably, the Indians drowned part of their wealth in the lake or hid it in some other place. Cuauhtemoc, even under torture, did not say where Montezuma’s treasures were hidden.

Before 1524, Spanish conquistadors founded several cities in Mexico. Cortes spent most of his time in Coyohuacan, from where he personally supervised the restoration of Tenochtitlan. During these years he proved himself to be a talented colonialist. By the will of the Spaniard, a new Ibero-American culture was to emerge through the merging of ancient American and Christian cultures. Great progress was also made in converting Indians to Christianity. Cortes asked the king to send missionaries of “good and exemplary life.”

Cortes himself throughout his life enjoyed the confidence of the natives, for whom he often acted as a lawyer and who, according to eyewitnesses, greatly respected and revered him. However, the distrust of the Spanish court towards the conquistador and serious suspicions on the part of royal officials in Mexico itself did not allow Hernán Cortés to realize his dream - to extend the power of Spain to the South Sea and to the shores of Asia. Meanwhile, he, who brought a powerful power to the monarch as a trophy, was accused by envious people of seeking separation from the Spanish crown.

Cortez went to Spain to meet the king. At the end of May 1528, the conquistador with an impressive retinue landed at the port of Paloe. At the emperor's court he was received with all honors. Cortes swore his allegiance to the monarch. On July 6, 1529, the Emperor granted him the title "Marquis del Valle de Oaxaca", awarded him the Grand Cross of the Order of Saint James and gave him extensive lands in Mexico. However, this time Hernan did not receive the post of governor of New Spain. Appointed captain-general of New Spain and the South Sea Islands, Cortes was not deceived that new large expeditions could end successfully only if the discoverer had gubernatorial powers.

In July 1529, the conquistador was given new plots of land in the capital of Oaxaca. Cortez became lord of 22 settlements and 23,000 Indian vassals. By marrying Juana Zúñiga, daughter of the Count de Aguilar and niece of the Duke de Béjar, Hernán gained access to the most influential houses of the highest Spanish aristocracy. One of his gifts to the young bride - two fabulously beautiful emeralds carved in the shape of roses (the work of Mexican craftsmen) - aroused the admiration of the entire court. The glory of the conqueror thundered throughout Europe and the New World, so that Cortes, according to contemporaries, competed in glory as a commander with Alexander the Great and in wealth with Croesus.

In the spring of 1530, he, accompanied by his wife and his elderly mother Doña Catalina, returned to Mexico, where he devoted himself primarily to the tasks of colonization. He brought sugar cane from Cuba, raised Merino sheep and developed gold and silver mines. But these peaceful pursuits could not satisfy his adventurer nature.

In 1532 and 1533 he equipped two small flotillas. Cortez attempted to establish a settlement in California. But such enterprises required a lot of money without bringing anything in return. In 1535, Cortez himself went on an expedition, walking along the coast of the Gulf of California to 30 degrees north latitude. In the south of the California Peninsula, he founded the city of Santa Cruz, present-day La Paz. In 1539, three ships did not return. The financial damage caused to Cortes ultimately amounted to almost 200,000 gold ducats.

Nevertheless, the geographical discoveries were very significant. It was established that California is not an island, but part of the mainland. Finally, Cortez explored large areas of the western coast of the American continent and the Gulf of California. Despite the difficulties, he conceived a new expedition under the command of his son Don Luis. However, the first viceroy of New Spain, Antonio de Mendoza, who himself claimed discoveries in this area, did not approve of the enterprise. The outraged Cortes decided to go to the king.

In 1540, accompanied by his son Don Martin Cortes, he landed in Spain. The king was absent, but Cortes was given a magnificent reception in the capital. He was warmly welcomed to the Indian Affairs Council, but the Marquis did not achieve any tangible success.

In 1541, Cortes and his son took part in the memorable Algerian campaign of Charles V. During a storm that destroyed part of the fleet, the Marquis's galley also became a victim of the elements. The Cortes barely escaped

Unfortunately, all of Cortez's initiatives in Spain did not find a response from the nobles. Upon returning to his homeland, the king also did not support his plans to expand the borders of the Spanish empire at the expense of the entire territory of the newly discovered continent. After three years of waiting, Hernan decided to return to Mexico.

However, he only managed to get to Seville. There he fell ill with dysentery. Cortes still managed to complete his earthly affairs and signed his will on October 11. He died on December 2, 1547 at the age of 62, having shortly before his death moved from the city to the quieter village of Castilleja de la Cuesta.

Initially, the conqueror was buried in the family crypt of the Dukes of Medina Sidonia. After 15 years, his mortal remains were transported to Mexico and buried in the Franciscan monastery in Texcoco next to the grave of his mother. In 1629, the marquis was buried with great pomp in the Franciscan church in Mexico City. In 1794, the sarcophagus was moved to the Hospital of Jesus of Nazareth, once established by Cortez. This tomb was decorated with a simple tombstone and a bronze bust. In order to save the remains from destruction, they had to be secretly removed in 1823. In Naples, in the crypt of the Dukes of Terranuova-Monteleone, descendants of the great-granddaughter of the conqueror, they finally found peace. Cortez's last wish expressed in his will - to find an eternal refuge in Coyohuacan - remained unfulfilled. The great discoverer and conqueror of Mexico is buried far from the places where he knew success and triumph, far from the country with which his name is forever associated.