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When Montezuma Met Cortes

Page 61

by Matthew Restall


  Nican tlaca, 360

  Nicaragua, 159

  Nicholas, Thomas, 245–46, 443–44n

  Nicuesa, Diego de, 158

  Nixon, Richard, 323

  Noche Triste, 34, 57–58, 172, 286–87, 306, 312, 313, 317–18

  Novo, Salvador, 290

  Nuremberg Chronicle, 8, 378n

  Nuremberg Map, 7–9, 116, 117–19, 378n, 407n

  Oaxaca, 275

  Ochoa de Elejalde, Juan, 159, 175

  Ochpaniztli, 146, 265

  Ogilby, John, America, x, 404n

  human sacrifice, 82, 97

  the Meeting, 25, 46

  Montezuma depictions, 108, 112–13, 126–27

  Montezuma’s zoo-collection, 122, 123, 126–27

  myth of Cortesian control, 172, 187–88

  Ojeda, Alonso de, 158, 169, 175

  Olid, Cristóbal de, 294

  brief biography of, 364

  cohort loyalties, 177, 255, 256

  Honduras campaign, 173

  January-August campaign of 1521, 255, 256, 259

  Kislak Paintings, 30, 34

  Vera Cruz plot, 185, 186

  Olmedo, Bartolomé de, 197, 373n

  Oñate, Cristóbal de, 272

  “On Cannibals” (Montaigne), 90

  Ordaz, Diego de, 4, 177, 320

  brief biography of, 364–65

  Montezuma’s zoo, 120–21

  Popocatepetl climb, 10, 365

  Order of Saint Francis, 239

  Orellana, Diego de, 161

  Orozco, José Clemente, 181, 250, 351, 445n

  Ortiz, Cristóbal, 175

  Ovando, Nicolás de, 154, 164–65, 418n, 420n

  Ovejero, Ignacio, 70, 428n

  Pacificación, 330

  Pacini, Giovanni, 70, 428n

  Palacio de Bellas Artes, 351–52, 353, 467–68n

  Palomera, Esteban, 110–11

  Panquetzaliztli, 98, 146

  Paredes, Andrés de, 175–76

  Passion of Christ, 197

  Paul, Saint, 237

  Paz, Ireneo, 290

  Paz, Octavio, 1, 250, 278

  Paz, Rodrigo de, 173, 304, 327, 423n, 464n

  Peninsular War, 69–70

  Pérez de Arteaga, Angela, 307

  Pérez de Arteaga, Juan, 307

  Pham Thanh Cong, 323

  Philadelphia Zoo, 137

  Philip, Prince of Spain, 334–35

  Philippines, 274

  Phoney Captivity, 211–23, 259

  “arrest” of Montezuma, 40, 49–50, 213

  Cortés’ Second Letter and Surrender, 212, 213–15

  the “guard,” 220–21

  intra-dynastic and inter-altepetl politics, 217–19

  May events, 223–25

  Montezuma’s demeanor, 215–17

  Phoney War, 431n

  Pinzón, Vicente Yánez, 158

  Pizarro, Catalina, 285

  Pizarro, Diego, 176

  Pizarro, Francisco, 104, 158, 237, 276

  Pizarro, Leonor, 157, 284–85

  Pliny the Elder, 77

  Pochteca, 131–32

  Polk, James K., 70, 347

  Polk, Sarah Childress, 347

  Polygyny, 126, 448n

  Ponce de León, Juan, 158, 173–74, 424n

  Popocatepetl, 10, 365, 379

  Portillo, Jacinto “Cindo” del, 325, 326, 464n

  Portrait paintings or engravings, 74, 347, 378-79n, 404-5n, 429n

  of Cortés, xxv, 158, 230, 244, 346-48, 441-43n

  of Montezuma, 74, 84, 106, 111-13, 139-40, 404n, 406n, 413n

  Prescott, William, 75, 86, 94, 179, 253, 315, 322, 350, 383n

  the Meeting and Surrender, 27, 47, 52, 63, 70, 227

  myth of Cortesian control, 179, 188

  Prévost, Antoine François “Abbé,” 62–63, 293, 399n

  Prince, The (Machiavelli), 238–39, 438–39n

  Prophecy, the, 40–46, 52, 68, 111

  Protestant Reformation, 135

  Puerto Rico, 158, 175, 324

  Purcell, Henry, 102

  Qualpopoca. See Cohualpopocatzin

  Quauhpopocatl, 200–204, 218, 256, 371, 430n

  Quebrantamiento, 160

  Quecholac, 295–96

  Quecholli, 146–47, 223

  Quetzalcoatl, 99–102, 109, 110–11

  Cortés as, 40–45, 143–44, 401–3n

  prophecy story, 40–45, 100–101

  “Race wars,” 326–27

  Racism, 79–80, 319, 320, 327

  Ramirez, Gerónimo, 107–8

  Ramusio Map, 136, 407n

  Ranking, John, 85–86, 110

  Reséndez, Andrés, 298

  Ritual knives, 93, 94, 132

  Rivera, Diego, 250, 445n

  Robertson, William, 45, 63, 151, 155, 156, 157, 196, 322, 378n

  Rodríguez, Ana, 285–86

  Rodríguez, Cristóbal, 175

  Rodríguez de Villafuerte, Juan, 255–56

  Rojas, Manuel de, 302, 303

  Romanticism, 247, 289

  Romero, Cesar, 248

  Romerovargas Iturbide, Ignacio, 108, 137, 198, 250, 408n

  Rowdon, Maurice, 3, 397–98n

  Royal Palace (Aranjuez), 225

  Ruiz de León, Francisco, 244–45

  Ruta de Cortés, 181

  Saavedra, Antonio de, 152, 156, 242, 243, 244

  Saavedra Cerón, Alvaro de, 274–75, 301

  Sacrifice. See Human sacrifice

  Sagipa, 200, 227

  Sahagún, Bernardino de, 41, 67–68, 89, 90, 91, 99, 100–101, 106, 109, 123, 129, 131–32, 133, 198

  Sahlins, Marshall, 382n

  Salcedo, Juan de, 285, 452n

  Sámano, Juan de, 294

  Sánchez, Bartolomé “Coyote,” 307

  Sandoval, Gonzalo de, 176, 422–23n

  brief biography of, 365

  campaign of 1521, 254–56, 263, 294–95, 308

  cohort loyalties, 176, 177, 186, 220, 255, 256

  death of, 176, 458n

  Kislak Paintings, 30, 34

  violence and brutality, 316, 320

  San Juan de Ulúa, 167, 181–83, 421n

  San Juan Moyotlan, 269

  San Juan Tenochtitlan, 269

  San Pablo Teopan, 269

  Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco, 343–44

  Schwaller, John Fritz, 175

  Scott, Winfield, 349

  Second Coming of Christ, 39–46

  Sedeño, Isabel, 306

  Sedeño, Juan, 306

  Sepúlveda, Juan Ginés de, 47, 60–61, 81, 109, 245

  Seville, Spain, 4, 5

  Sexual slavery, 305–11

  Ship burning, 188–91, 425–26n

  Ships of Cortés Destroyed, The, 245

  Siege of Jerusalem, 236

  Siguaquesuchil, Isabel, 297

  Sigüenza y Góngora, Carlos, 76, 83–84, 101, 216, 346

  Slavery, 80, 81, 161, 296–311, 339, 458n

  women and sexual, 305–11

  Smallpox, 314–15, 317

  Solana, Mateo, 231, 239

  Solari, Amara, 131, 138, 408n

  Solís, Antonio de, 28–29, 75, 113, 352

  Cortesian legend, 168, 231, 238, 266, 267

  Huitzilopochtli, 97

  the Meeting and Surrender, 28–29, 63

  Montezuma’s death, 195

  Montezuma’s zoo-complex, 123–25, 128, 134

  Solís, Francisco de, 284, 291

  Solís, Pedro, 220

  Sopuerta, Sancho de, 159–60, 306

  Soustelle, Jacques, 89–90

  Spaniards in the Caribbean, 156–61, 164–66

  Spanish Armada, 246

  Spanish-Aztec War. See also Invasion of 1519; Fall of Tenochtitlan

  conquistador behavior, 317–27

  conquistador factionalism, 160, 170–77

  conquistador mindset, 314–15

  conquistador numbers, 311–14, 461–62n

  dating, 253

  ending date, 253, 267�
�68, 446n

  epidemic mortality, 314–15

  genocidal element, 328–30, 347–48

  indigenous population loss, 314–15

  January-August campaign of 1521, xviii, 255–56

  Mexica perspective, 265–71

  Nahua account, 47–49

  pre-Columbian restraint, 316–17

  role of indigenous warriors, 315–16

  Sandoval attack, 254–56

  starting date, 253

  Tetzcoco perspective, 256–65

  timeline, xv–xx

  use of term, xxix

  violence and brutality, 316–30, 341

  Spanish Inquisition, 92, 94, 448

  Spanish-Mesoamerican War, xxix, 253–54, 327

  Spanish political system, 177–80

  Spanish spellings, xii

  Spanish weaponry, 313–14

  Spice Islands, 274

  Spiritual conquest, 241, 242, 448n

  Spontini, Gaspare, 69–70, 247, 444n

  Suárez, Catalina, 157, 161, 452–53n

  death, 281–87, 452–53n, 456n

  TV depiction, 281–82, 445n

  Suárez, Lorenzo, 175–76, 305–6

  Suárez de Peralta, Juan, 59–60

  Surrender, the, 37–53, 143–45

  accounts of, 62–65

  blaming of Montezuma, 66–71

  Cacama and, 258–59

  concept of justification, 56–62

  Cortés’ Second Letter, 212, 213–15

  Díaz’s True History, 50–51, 338–39

  Dryden’s Montezuma, 102–6

  genesis of invention, 56–65

  Montezuma as Coward, 46–50, 431–32n

  Montezuma’s murder by Spaniards, 227

  Montezuma’s speech, 15–18, 45, 46, 50, 51, 52, 59–63, 75, 101–2, 343, 344–45

  the Prophecy, 40–46, 52, 68, 111

  role of Aztec royal family, 65–68

  skeptical views of, 63–64, 391–92n

  triumphal entry, 54–59

  U.S. Capitol Rotunda scene, 24, 25–27

  Taíno slaves, 194, 206, 302–3, 324, 338

  Tangier, 27–28

  Tapia, Andrés de, 96–97, 100, 125, 128, 133, 144, 176–77, 190, 255, 303

  Tarascan Empire, 257

  Tecocol, 260–61

  Tecuichpochtzin (Isabel Moctezuma Tecuichpo), 66, 71, 286–87, 365–66

  Tenochtitlan, xii, 3–9. See also Fall of Tenochtitlan

  altepetl, 209, 256

  author’s walk through Mexico City, 347–54

  chorographs, 136–37

  comparisons with European cities, 4–5

  Cortés’ arrival in, 4, 5, 6–9, 14–15, 54–55

  Great Temple. See Great Temple of Tenochtitlan

  map, 116, 117–19, 122

  Nuremberg Map, 7–9, 116, 117–19

  population, 4–5, 85–86, 222, 314, 376n

  royal families, 367–68, 370–71

  Spaniards’ first arrival in, 3–6, 146

  theme as lost wonder, 377–78n

  Triple Alliance and, 143, 210–11, 218–19, 257, 266, 316, 342

  zoo complex. See Montezuma, zoo-collection complex of

  Teocalli, 97, 98

  Tepeaca massacre, 295–96, 306, 308–9, 317–18, 324, 326, 365

  Tequanpixque, 133

  Teresa de Mier, Servando, 84, 101, 232

  Terrazas, Francisco de, 175

  Tetlahuehuetzquititzin, Pedro, 265

  Tetzcoco, xii, 256–65

  royal families, 218–19, 256–59, 367–68, 370–71

  Spanish-Aztec War and, 218–19, 256–65, 266, 308–9, 316–17

  Triple Alliance and, 141, 143, 218–19, 256–57, 316–17

  Thevet, André, 112–13, 149, 156, 193

  Thirty Years’ War, 322, 327, 446n

  Thomas, Hugh, xxvi–xxvii, 291, 456n

  Thomas, Lewis Foulk, 43, 51, 289, 349–50

  Thomas, Saint, 84, 100, 101–2

  Three Kings, The (play), 42–43, 73, 343

  Timeline of events, xv–xx

  Tititl, 266

  Titus Flavius Josephus, 236

  Tizoc, 142, 257, 258, 271, 370

  Tlacaelel, 269

  Tlacaxipehualiztli, 146, 147–48, 223

  Tlacopan, xii, 141, 257, 262, 266, 316–17

  Tlacotzin, 269–70

  Tlacuilloque, 129

  Tlahtoani, 109, 131, 140–42, 204, 206, 209–10, 218, 261

  Tlahuitoltzin, Antonio Pimentel, 265, 371, 448n

  Tlaloc, 130

  Tlatelolco, 39–40, 48, 66, 96, 209, 224–25, 268

  Tlaxcala (Tlaxcallan), 10, 54–55, 80, 143, 205, 207–11, 240, 261, 340–41

  Tlaxcalteca, 144–45, 205–10, 267, 430n

  Tlaxcalteca Triple Alliance, 257, 259, 260–61, 263, 266, 316–17, 462n

  Tlilantzin, Pedro, 203

  Todorov, Tzvetan, 319, 465n

  Topiltzin Quetzalcoatl, 99–100

  Torquemada, Juan de, 83, 96, 152, 216, 402n

  Torture, 35, 62, 89–90, 92, 206, 304

  Totocalli, 123–24

  Totoloque, 216, 433n

  Totonacs, 31, 167, 182–84

  Tovar, Juan de, 97, 129, 198, 402n

  Toxcatl, 223, 224

  massacre at festival, 254, 265, 361, 434n

  Traditional “Conquest of Mexico” narrative, 18–22, 25–35, 263, 266, 267, 335–37

  A/B/-A/-B/A, 64–65

  the Ambush, 50–53

  Classical narrative, 64

  concept of justification, 56–62

  core elements and events, 28–30

  Cortés’s final years, 273, 277–78

  demographics, 311–14

  Díaz’s True History, xxv–xxix, 338–40

  fall of Tenochtitlan, 18, 20, 252–53

  indigenous slaves and, 299–300

  Kislak Paintings, 27–28, 30–35

  march to Tenochtitlan, 204–5, 208

  the Meeting and Surrender, 18–22, 25–35, 62–65, 143, 335

  Montezuma as Coward, 47–50, 431–32n

  Montezuma’s death, 193–94, 202, 218, 223, 224–25, 227–28

  the Prophecy, 40–46

  temporal distortions of, 212, 224, 252

  theme of triumphal entry, 54–59

  U.S. Capitol Rotunda scenes, 24, 25–27

  Tributes, 129–30, 131, 142–43, 146–47

  Triple Alliance, xii, 141, 143, 210–11, 218–19, 226, 316–17, 341, 462n

  Triumphal entries, 54–59, 389–90n

  Trujillo, 220–21

  Tuchman, Barbara, 3

  Tula, 99–100

  Tupac Amaru rebellion, 441n

  “Tyrant,” 320–21

  Ucelote, Juan, 297

  Umbría, Gonzalo de, 177, 398–99n, 464n

  Usagre, Bartolomé de, 255

  Usigli, Rodolfo, 290

  Vaca de Guzmán, Joseph María, 110, 234, 277–78

  Valadés, Diego, 56, 82, 83, 110–11, 239–40, 242, 439n

  Valencía, Martínó de, 240

  Valiant Cortés (Lasso de la Vega), 51, 152, 243, 244

  Valladolid debate, 60–61

  Valley of Mexico, 10, 171, 210–11, 259

  Vargas Machuca, Bernardo, 55, 91, 245, 267, 319

  Vasconcelos, José, 247, 250

  Vásquez, Martín, 169, 220

  Vásquez de Tapia, Bernardino, 175, 186, 292

  brief biography of, 366

  Cortés’ women, 285, 286

  indigenous slaves and, 295, 298

  Phoney Captivity and, 212, 217–18

  Vecchietti, Girolamo, 242

  Velázquez, Diego (painter), 164

  Velázquez, Diego de, 57, 78, 161–69, 420–21n

  brief biography of, 366–67

  Conquest of Cuban, 52, 155, 157–58, 165, 172

  Conquest of Hispaniola, 164–65

  expeditions organized by, 165–69, 337

  feud with Cortés. See Cortés, Hernando, feud with Velázque
z Velázquez, Juan, 220

  Velázquez de León, Juan, 177

  Vera Cruz, 32, 170–71, 174, 183, 184, 185–87, 189, 200–201

  Verne, Jules, 76, 394n

  Versailles, 137

  Very Brief Account of the Destruction of the Indies (Las Casas). See Las Casas, Bartolomé de

  Vietnam War, 322–24, 327

  Villagrá, Gaspar de, 81–82, 237, 243

  Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz, 31, 182

  Violence against indigenous communities, 161, 316–30

  Vitoria, Francisco de, 81

  Vitzilopuchtli. See Huitzilopochtli

  Vivaldi, Antonio, 70, 351–53, 428n

  Vizcaíno, Pedro, 175

  Voyage Round the World, A (Gemelli), 74, 76–77, 394n

  Weaponry, 313–14

  Women and sexual slavery, 305–11

  Women in Aztec society, 126–27, 285–86, 410n

  World War II, 211–12, 327

  Worth, William Jenkins, 347

  Wright brothers, 26

  Xaragua massacre, 418n

  Xicotencatl, 206, 207, 209, 210, 256, 264, 341, 367

  Xihuitl, 146, 415–16n

  Xipehua, 147–48

  Xitl, Juan, 297

  Xochimilco, Lake, 13–14

  Xochiquentzin, Pablo Tlacatecuhtli, 270

  Xocoto, María, 311

  Xuárez, Catalina. See Suárez, Catalina

  Young, Neil, 149, 251

  Yoyontzin, Jorge, 265, 371

  Yucatan, 158, 165–67

  use of term, 420n

  Zorita, Alonso de, 91, 334–35, 337, 391n

  Zuazo, Alonso de, 120, 122, 124

  Zumárraga, Juan de, 82, 85, 90, 94, 272, 413n, 448n

  Zúñiga, Juana de, 285

  Photo Section

  THE URTEXT. The title page to the first publication of Cortés’s 1520 report to the king, the so-called Second Letter, printed in Seville in 1522 by Jacobo Cromberger, and recently dubbed “the urtext on the conquest of Mexico.”

  Courtesy of the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University.

  CIVILIZATION, BARBARISM, AND NATURE. Undaunted Spaniards and fearful Aztecs before the twin erupting volcanoes of Popocatepetl and Iztaccihuatl. The version in America (English 1670, Dutch 1671) of this imaginative illustration popular in the early modern centuries.

  Courtesy of the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University.

  THE VALLEY. A nineteenth-century rendering of the Valley of Mexico in 1519, shows the route that the Spanish-Tlaxcalteca forces took in November 5–8 from Chalco (bottom right) through Ayotzinco, Cuitlahuac, and Itztapalapa, to the Meeting at Tenochtitlan’s edge (marked here as “Camp of Cortez”).

  Courtesy of the Sutro Library, California State Library, San Francisco.

 

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