Cortez

Up

Hernando Cortez

Early Life:

Hernando Cortez was born in the small town of Medellin in southwestern Spain in 1485. When he was about 18, he sailed for the island of Hispaniola, then the Spanish headquarters in the West Indies. He was a soldier and a farmer before he sailed for Diego Velasquez to help conquer Cuba in 1511. Velasquez became the governor and Cortez was elected mayor-judge of Santiago.

Off to Mexico:

ex25.jpg (181798 bytes)When Juan de Grijalva reported his discovery of Mexico in 1518, Velasquez picked Cortez to make a colony there. Velasquez soon suspected Cortez would go beyond his orders and cancelled the expedition. Unfortunately for Velasquez, Cortez had already assembled men and equipment and set sail. He rounded the peninsula at Yucatan and touched Mexico on the coast of what is now the state of Tabasco. During the battle with Indians there, he took many captives including a young Aztec princess to whom he gave the Spanish name Marina. She became his interpreter, advisor and girlfriend.

ex19.jpg (267228 bytes)

Cortez continued up the coast. On April 21,1519, he landed near the site of Veracruz. There, to prevent all thought of retreat, he burned his ships. Leaving a small force on the coast, Cortez led the rest of his men into the interior. His party was attacked by a warlike tribe of natives. The Indians outnumbered the Spaniards 300 to 1.

On November 8, 1519, Cortez reached Tenochtitlan (now Mexico City) and was graciously received by Montezuma, the Aztec emperor. Soon after Cortez established headquarters in the capital, he learned that the Aztecs had plundered Veracruz. He seized Montezuma and forced him to surrender the attackers. Then he had them executed.ex21.jpg (245991 bytes)

Meanwhile Velasquez had sent 1,400 soldiers to arrest Cortez and bring him back to Cuba. Cortez defeated this army and enlisted most of the survivors under his banner. He returned to the Aztec capital.

The leader of the garrison there had slaughtered 600 Mexican nobles. As Cortez and his men reached the heart of the city, they were attacked by thousands of Aztec warriors. Montezuma was brought out to pacify his people, but they stoned him, and later he died of his wounds. Cortez' army was surrounded and apparently doomed, but he and three others managed to get to the chieftain of the Aztecs and killed him. Confused by this apparent "miracle," the Aztecs withdrew. With fewer than 500 of his men left alive, Cortez, in July of 1520, made his way back to his Indian allies.

The Aztec Empire Is Destroyed:

Cortez attacked Tenochtitlan again from ships the following May. On August 13, 1521, Guatemoc, the new Aztec emperor, surrendered. This was the end of the great empire of the Aztecs.

Later Life:

Cortez spent the next seven years establishing peace among the Indians of Mexico and developing mines and farmlands. In 1528 he went home and was received with great honor by Charles V, but he had no skill for court politics.

He returned to Mexico as a military commander. He explored Lower California from 1534 to 1535 and served against the pirates of Algiers in 1541. The same year he led an expedition against the Mayas of Yucatan.

Cortez died near Seville on December 2, 1547.