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That's 20% off your first purchase with Code Short History at LiquidIV. It is November 8, 1519. The Morning sun shines down on the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan, where Mexico City stands today. The settlement sits on an island on the western side of Lake Texcocko, an enormous body of water around 10 miles across the and twice that in length. The marshy valley beyond the lake's shores is encircled by mountains whose peaks are etched on the horizon. Hernan Cortes rides on horseback, leading a cavalcade towards the island city across the clean swept man made causeway straddling the glittering water. The Aztecs are out in droves to witness the arrival of the strangers on the water. Many are sitting in canoes, staring warily at Cortes, his men and their horses, a species long extinct in the Americas. The Spanish born Cortes is an explorer or conquistador in his early 30s. He has a neat dark beard and a character that some describe as mischievous, others as ruthless. And though his arrival here is peaceful, it's only because Moctezuma ii, the Aztec king, knows he cannot prevent it. Even so, the atmosphere is tense. A sudden movement on the water causes Cortes to reach instinctively for his sword. But it is just a bird. At the enormous carved gates to the island city, he and his men come to a stop here. Hundreds of native dignitaries have gathered to greet them. They wear headpieces adorned with the colorful feathers of quetzals, and they are draped in richly decorated cloaks with jade and turquoise at their throats and wrists. It's part of a show of strength, but a couple of them can't hide the Worry on their faces. One by one, the nobles step forward, touch the ground, and then kiss the earth. Cortes and his retinue, hot in their metal armor, grow impatient with the ritual. But now the enslaved indigenous translator, Malintzin, steps forward. She explains that the chief's gestures symbolize unity and respect. At last, Cortes and his men are welcomed to proceed onto the island. They find themselves facing a broad avenue, looking into the heart of Tenochtitlan. The lush green metropolis out dazzles the dark, narrow streets of European cities. They pass adobe houses with bountiful roof gardens as tropical songbirds fill the air with their sweet music. In the distance, great pyramids rise. They're whitewashed with lime and painted in bright colors. Embroidered flags flutter in the wind that comes off the water. But a more immediate concern is the royal procession making its slow approach down the avenue. Cortes is about to be greeted by Moctezuma ii, walking ahead of the king. On his litter, an attendant carries an intricately carved pole. Others wear heavily jeweled cloaks. And Cortes can discern Moctezuma's grandly feathered headdress even from this distance. Yet it's not the man that catches the eye of Cortes, but the enormous shimmering canopy that shelters the king. It is quite dazzling. An ark of precious stones and gold. He narrows his eyes, estimating its value. The astonishing landscape, the architecture, the sophisticated culture, even the pyramids fade into meaningless for Cortes at the sight of such wealth. Because this is what he's come for. The meeting between the Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes and the great Aztec leader Moctezuma II is one of the most famous in the story of the European colonization of the Americas. But it's a narrative largely heard from the Spanish point of view. In that version, Moctezuma II greets the conquistador as a God and cheerfully turns the Aztec empire over to him. But what if history got that and other things wrong about the Aztecs? How well do we really know them? Active in central Mexico from the early 1300s, the Aztecs reached their zenith in the 16th century, just as the Tudor dynasty began its ascent in England. They're widely reputed to be a savage people who left behind obsidian knives, skull racks, and other evidence of their practice of human sacrifice. But the Aztecs were more multifaceted than the conquistadors would have us believe. They were weavers, sculptors, painters and poets. Family oriented and with complex systems of deities. Their early status as newcomers to the region they later dominated left its mark on their identity. So how did they become so powerful? Why were they so feared and reviled? And when the Spanish came and changed their world forever, what was the full truth about their downfall? I'm John Hopkins from Noiza. This is a short history of the Aztecs. The Valley of Mexico is a verdant basin cradled between mountains in the center of the country. This land is characterized by its highland terrain and enormous lakes. The fertile soil around these bodies of water makes the region ideal for agriculture, and the highlands encircling it help to protect the inhabitants from sudden attacks. For these reasons, the area has never lost its appeal to migrants from the hot, dry north. And in the late 1200s, a new group begins to arrive, a nomadic band of hunter gatherers who call themselves the Mexica. Today we know them as the Aztecs, a term invented for them by European scholars in the 1800s that derives from the name of the fabled land of their origin. Camilla Townsend is the author of Fifth A New History of the Aztecs.
