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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.
Camilla Townsend
Aztecs referred to their ancient homeland, the place that they had migrated from, as Aztlan. Probably it was a mythical place because they had in fact stopped in their migrations and their wanderings in a variety of places. If there was one place more than another that had inspired the notion of Aztlan, we don't know where it was. They came down as part of a wave of multiple migrations coming down from the north, from northern Mexico, and in fact from what is today the southwestern part of the United States. There were periods of warfare and drought that drove people out. And there were also pull factors towards central Mexico. That is, central Mexico had been a wealthy land full of farmers and people building pyramids for centuries. There were prior great high cultures, so they had quite a reputation. So when there were problems in the north, warfare, drought, often people thought, let's go down to the fabled land of the south. And the Aztecs, or the Mexica, were probably the last major group of migrants to arrive in central Mexico from what is today the southwestern United States.
Narrator
The late arrival of the Aztecs contributes to their identity. Right from the start, they're seen as newcomers, as immigrants. The best land had already been claimed by other groups who have established their own city states on the banks of the enormous Lake Texcoco. The Aztecs are underdogs, and that makes them scrappy. They're good fighters, handy with a bow and arrow, and soon they're hiring themselves out as mercenaries to the more powerful groups in the valley. It means that they're able to camp, to hunt a few deer and plant A little corn, but they still don't have a place they can call home. In the evenings, they gather around communal fires, telling stories about their mythical past. Such tales boast of their ancestors prowess as hunters and detail the long journey they embarked upon through mountains and deserts to reach the valley. Like many other people in Central Mexico, the language of the Aztecs is Nahuatl.
Camilla Townsend
It's really a very beautiful language, very sonorous, very rich, very expressive. They wrote a great deal in it. They used pictographic or pictographic writings that were designed to elicit from trained reciters all sorts of ceremonial utterances or history tellings. After the conquest, they actually used our Alphabet, the Roman or Latin Alphabet, to transcribe in that Alphabet things that they themselves used to say orally. So we have lots and lots of writings in Nahuatl that we can read today, and they are very illuminating of their culture.
Narrator
The formative years of the Aztecs are marked by battles and skirmishes as the different groups in the valley jostle for power. Despite their skills as warriors, the Aztecs remain under the thumb of the more powerful city states. But they are committed to finding a permanent home of their own. In this matter, they consult their patron God, Huitzilopochtli. The God's name means hummingbird on the left or left footed, like a hummingbird, the God of warfare and the sun. He is often depicted as a hummingbird or eagle in Aztec art. Legend recounts that Huitzilopochtli sends a message to the Aztecs about where they should found their settlement. He tells them to choose a spot where they find an eagle eating a snake while perched on a cactus.
Camilla Townsend
According to an ancient myth or story that they told, one day an eagle landed on a cactus, and they knew from this sudden landing of this great bird that this was where they were supposed to settle. And indeed, it's very possible that one day one of their priests did see an eagle landing on a cactus. It's more than likely, but undoubtedly part of the reason that they settled was that they were on an island in the middle of a great lake, which was uninhabited, and it was very difficult to find uninhabited lands. So I am sure that they were very interested in settling on this island where there was plenty of food, waterfowl, fish, algae that you could eat, and where there were no competitors. It seemed like the perfect place to make their own. And lo and behold, an eagle happens to land on a cactus, and they decide to live there forever and ever.
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The new home of the Aztecs becomes known as Tenochtitlan but it takes a lot of work to build the city that will dazzle Hernan Cortez in two centuries time. They enlarge the flat, marshy island on the western side of the lake by creating artificial extensions into the water, using techniques such as the manufacture of chinampas. These are raised beds for crops with a basket like construction, which protrude into the water but sit above its surface. They're challenging to build, but the silty mud they plant into is extremely fertile, delivering rich yields of corn and beans. Soon, the Aztecs take these floating islands to the next level, building houses on them too. In addition to growing crops, the islanders gather certain insects to eat, as well as harvesting the plentiful, highly nutritious blue green algae for fish. They head out onto the lake in canoes. The spiral shells they find there are used to make jewelry or musical instruments like conch shell trumpets. But it's not an easy life, and the Aztecs are in constant battle with water and reeds. Their square adobe houses, constructed from mud bricks, often collapse in the swampy conditions. But they learn how to direct the flow of water, building dikes and canals, causeways and bridges. On one sacred piece of land, the spot where the eagle is said to have landed on the cactus, they work on creating a firmer foundation, adding a layer of gravel to their adobe shrine. They soon have a base on which to build a great pyramid. Priests now begin to work on painted books for posterity, recording their stories in their pictographic language on animal skins. Aztec religion is a complex affair. Though Huitzilopochtli is the central God for Aztecs, each city state in the valley has its own protective deity. The range of gods worshipped by the various peoples of the valley has been compared with the pantheon of ancient Greece. The divinities include Tlaloc, the rain God, and Quetzalcoatl, who is often depicted as a feathered serpent and whom in later years will feature in the mythmaking around the arrival of Cortez. Another important part of the Aztec worldview is its calendar system, consisting of two interlocking cycles, the 365 day solar calendar and the 260 day sacred calendar.
Camilla Townsend
It seems very confusing to us, but the example I like to use is that we ourselves have a solar calendar. We always know what the date is, but we also have a series of repeating seven days, most of them named for Norse gods, that have absolutely nothing to do with the sun, nothing intrinsically to do with the solar calendar. And we're fine with that. We know that Today is Friday, and we also know the date.
Narrator
These two calendars run concurrently, returning to their starting point at the conclusion of a cycle that is known as the the bundle of years, itself 52 solar years long. At the end of this, the Aztecs hold a great feast day. Similarly cyclical is the idea of the fifth sun.
Camilla Townsend
The Aztecs believed that the world, the universe, was always in flux, always changing, and people and gods were always struggling to keep things on an even keel. They even thought that the universe had been destroyed, had imploded four times in the past, and that we now are living under the fifth son to exist. And they were very proud of being descended of a great figure who was just an ordinary guy, an ordinary mortal who had been willing to sacrifice himself by jumping into a great bonfire to become the fifth son. So they thought that each of us, like that progenitor, has to be willing to do what it takes to keep the world going forward in positive ways.
Narrator
This idea of self sacrifice is a key belief in the warrior culture of the Aztecs, in which men often lose their lives in war and women in childbirth. As their songs acknowledge, human existence is dangerous and often fragile.
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Camilla Townsend
The name Itzcoat literally means obsidian snake. He was the son of a former Aztec king, but not by a queen, probably by an enslaved woman. He was in the wings, being a good, dutiful Noble half brother of the heir, When a great crisis arose, the crisis of the former boss state Imploding in civil war.
Narrator
The when his nephew is murdered as a result of the civil unrest, Itzkoat steps forward to seize power for his people and himself. Once he's elected as the new king, he forms an alliance between the Aztecs and two other city states. All three then work together against Azcapot zalko, which they defeat in 1428. The political tables in the region Are now turned.
Camilla Townsend
They ruled together in what modern scholars call the triple alliance, Although they did not use those terms. They just knew that those three city states were the head honchos. But today, we use this term triple alliance so that we can easily and quickly refer to the governing system that they had in place while the three of them ruled. And of the three, the aztecs were by far the most. They were the most populous, so they had the greatest number of warriors, and they lived on an island from which canoes could easily pass to just about any city state in the region. And so they became centers of trade as well, making them very rich.
Narrator
The Aztecs and their allies in the triumvirate Collect tribute from the other people in the valley, who, unsurprisingly, don't always give it up without a fight. But Itzkowat leads his people through a number of successful campaigns, Cementing the triple alliance's control over the southern half of the valley of Mexico. This string of victories gains more land for the aztecs. The increase in tribute paid to them Helps to develop tenochtitlan, where more roads and temples are built. The island city endures as their capital. But as their empire grows, the Aztecs also begin to inhabit other regions in the central valley that have either been conquered by or allied with them. Victories over their neighbors multiply under the guidance of Itzkowat and his successor, Moctezuma I, who rules from 1440. By bringing other tribes and city states under their control, the Aztecs acquire not only wealth, but also captives to work as slaves. But it's also possible for people to be enslaved as punishment for crimes. And in dire cases, Some even sell themselves or their children into slavery. Aztec society is hierarchical. There are the noble families at the top and a vast majority of commoners who work as warriors, farmers, or craftsmen While their wives weave, Bring up children, and shop in the bustling markets. Then there is the highly respected merchant class that travels to source goods. Textiles, ceramics, precious stones, and feathers. Right at the bottom are the enslaved people, whose work includes agricultural labor, Household chores, and construction. It is often these captives who are called upon to make the greatest sacrifice of all. It is December 1465. Deep inside the temple complex, a prisoner of war awaits his fate. A flickering flame in the corridor outside is the only source of light in his stone cell. The sweet, resinous scent of incense drifts through the wooden bar. In the distance, you can hear the reverberations of drums. Today is a sacred occasion. The Aztecs are celebrating a religious festival in honor of their patron God. The prisoner's belly rumbles. Fasting is an important part of purification before the ceremony, though a little food might quell the rising fear, he reminds himself to show courage today. He must not dishonor his people with weeping. There are footsteps, and soon a religious attendant arrives at his cell bearing a ceramic cup and a bowl of indigo dye, which he carefully places on the floor. The prisoner is offered the drink, which he swallows down gratefully. But it tastes bitter and it's not long before his vision begins to blur. The drink's hallucinogens take effect, and the prisoner experiences a floating sensation, feeling that he is hovering above himself. He lies still as the attendant carefully paints his chest and limbs blue, a sacred color. The drug does something strange to the passing of time. It feels like only moments later that he is alone again, the dye already dry on his skin. But now there is the sound of more people approaching in the passage beyond. The door swings open. The priests enter, dressed for the day in elaborate feathered headdresses. With grave expressions, they motion for their captive to rise. One binds his hands tightly, still feeling as if he is drifting. The prisoner is led out into bright daylight, where the rhythmic drumming grows louder. Outside in the complex, the pyramid temple looms above them. The grounds are crowded with people. Some faces are obscured by masks carved to resemble jaguars and eagles. The prisoner shudders when he spots the warrior who captured him, his face streaked with war paint. Still clutching his sword embedded with obsidian blades, he is presented to the warrior, who accompanies him in a solemn procession around the packed complex. It seems the entire population is out today to witness the ceremony. Eventually he is swept towards the pyramid and up the steps, worn smooth by those who have made the journey before. Climbing higher, he can see the true extent of the crowd below. The mood is solemn, but as the people stand quietly clutching sacred flowers, there is the unmistakable crackle of anticipation. At last the prisoner reaches the summit, where an enormous circular stone awaits him. Barely able to keep his knees from buckling in fear, he is presented to the high Priest by the warrior as he is compelled to lie on his back over the stone, he spots the sacred vessel where he knows his heart will soon be placed. Now the priest cuts his own hand, dripping blood as a sacrifice, he says a few final words in honor of Huitzilopochtli and raises a gleaming knife high above his head. And as the sun catches on the blade for the last time, the captive closes his eyes.
Camilla Townsend
Scholars now believe that some form of human sacrifice was probably a part of most religions around the world. It certainly was in the New World, that is, Indigenous Americans throughout the hemispheres practiced human sacrifice in the sense that an occasional prisoner of war was offered to the gods. That person, usually a warrior, a man, but occasionally a woman, was never denigrated. We mustn't imagine that this person was humiliated and sent off in an effort to make their enemies feel worse. The person was given every opportunity to attain honor. And if they didn't cry out, they were brave and stoical, were deeply honored by their enemies who had killed them.
Narrator
But it's far from a gentle death. After being drugged by the priests, the victims are bound and their hearts are cut from their chests. The bodies are dropped down the steep steps of the pyramid. Later, a potion made with their remains is touched to the lips of the priests and the warrior who captured the prisoner is given their hair and ceremonial regalia to keep in a special reed chest. Any remaining body parts are burned. But how common is human sacrifice?
Camilla Townsend
The modern version of Aztec religion is that they were all desperately superstitious and believed that the world would literally end tomorrow if they didn't sacrifice X numbers of human beings. But there's no real evidence for that. Towards the end of their realm, when they were very powerful and were trying to intimidate other people, they did sacrifice large numbers, but for most of their history they were just trying to survive. And although human sacrifice was part of their religion, it wasn't a huge part. Frankly. They didn't have the political power for most of their tenure to make it possible for them to sacrifice large numbers of people.
Narrator
By the 1470s, the island city at 5.5 square miles is home to as many as 50,000 people. And it is a place of shimmering beauty. Gardens blossom on the rooftops and a rich abundance of birds live in finely wrought cages. Vibrant long tailed quetzal birds, parrots, parakeets and tufted ducks. Friends and allies of the Aztecs arrive in canoes from city states on the various shores of the lake to trade at the bustling market in the north of the island, cacao beans and standardized bolts of cotton fabric serve as currency. Here, thousands visit daily, with merchants selling tanned hides, textiles, ceramics, raw gems, jewelry and obsidian, knives and weapons. It is possible to get a haircut, buy a slave, or find a prostitute. A casual visitor might be surprised by the clay pots that serve as a repository for the urine of the island's thousands of inhabitants. The ammonia is used for tanning hides and making salt crystals. In another spot, the doctors and healers ply their trades, selling herbs intended to cure any ailment. And then there is the food. Corn and beans are staples for the Aztecs, who make tortillas from ground cornmeal for protein. They enjoy wild turkeys, ducks and eggs, while other delicacies include chocolate made from cacao beans mixed with honey, spices and rose petals for flavor. One guest at the royal palace counts more than 2,000 dishes on offer. The palace itself sits on the center of the island, behind the gleaming pyramid dedicated to Huitzilopochtli, and next to it, a similar construction for Tlaloc, the rain God. The palace is an architectural marvel featuring grand courtyards and intricate stone carvings. There's even a zoo home to jaguars, wolves and mountain lions. But in just a few decades, the arrival of outsiders will transform this world beyond recognition. In 1492, the Italian born explorer known to English speakers as Christopher Columbus becomes famous for his so called discovery of the Americas. Landing on a small island in the Bahamas, Columbus claims the place for the Spanish king and queen, despite the fact it is already populated. Because he is searching for a new route to India, Columbus believes he has reached Asia. He calls the people he meets on the island Indians. His arrival in their land marks a pivotal moment. So begins what is known as the age of discovery or exploration. The period from the 15th to the 17th century when European seafarers explore, colonize and conquer regions across the globe. Keen for a piece of the action, other European powers launch their own missions to the Americas. But their impact on indigenous populations will be devastating.
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Camilla Townsend
In Mexico, the woman known as Dona Marina or Malinche or Malincin, has a very bad reputation. The idea is that she was a young Aztec girl who sided against her against her own people and helped Hernando Cortez. But that is not the truth of her story at all. Malintzin grew up near today's Quetzalcoatos, which is on the gulf coast of Mexico. Her people did speak Nahuatl, the same language that the Aztecs spoke, but they were not Aztecs. In fact, her people were targeted by the Aztecs for war. She ended up being given as a prisoner to the Aztecs. So the Aztecs were the ones who destroyed her life and turned her from a young nobleman's daughter to a prisoner of war. The Aztecs then sold her to the Mayans, where she lived as an enslaved girl for years before she was later turned over to Hernando Cortez. So this young indigenous woman, although she spoke the Aztec language, was not an Aztec. She was an enemy of the Aztecs and therefore had no love for them.
Narrator
Back in the Aztec capital, the current king, Moctezuma ii, keeps abreast of the arrival of the strangers by deploying spies to monitor their movements. He hears that the Spanish, with their horses, metal armor, and weapons, are on their way, winning their battles, exacting tribute, and gaining allies as they journey inland. He tries to bribe them not to come to a city. But the Spanish persist in making the arduous journey to the center of the Aztec empire they have heard so much about. Cortes all the while considers what it might take to conquer Tenochtitlan for the Spanish King Charles I. Recognizing the precarious situation, Moctezuma opts to receive the strangers hospitably Rather than engage in conflict. He goes out in full state regalia in a litter with an enormous golden canopy over him. Cortes and his people approach on horseback, and the two sides meet, exchanging gifts and communicating through the translation chain Cortez has set up.
Camilla Townsend
Much has been made of this moment. The truth is, we don't have a transcript of what got said, but we do have various perspectives on it, and the stories do line up in a certain way. Mostezuma almost certainly did his best to make these people welcome, to bring them into his city as guests so that he could learn more about them. Cortez in effect said that, and the indigenous people in effect said that. Many years later, the Spaniards began to say that what had happened is that Montezuma said, oh, God, oh, divine figure, I am so glad you are here, and I happily will turn over to you my entire kingdom.
Narrator
The story that is told later, a narrative that solidifies the Spanish position, is that Moctezuma entertains the idea that Cortes is the returning deity Quetzalcoatl, the feathered serpent prophesied to return from the east to reclaim his kingdom. Perhaps, though, it is Cortez and his men who are dazzled not by ancient stories, but by the abundance of gold and riches they are shown in the Aztec capital. They are welcomed like honored guests, and despite the drain on his resources, Moctezuma feeds the strangers and allows them to tour the city. They are even shown his personal storehouse and told they can take whatever they like. The Spanish slap each other on the back at the sight of the treasures, seizing beautiful jewelry to melt down later into gold bricks. But this is not simply a random act of generosity on the part of Moctezuma. There is a long history of paying tribute in the Valley of Mexico, and he is hoping that if the Spanish name their price and he meets it, they might eventually leave. He even offers his own daughters, including the 11 year old Princess Tekwiczpotzin. In her translation, Malinson emphasizes what an honored gift this is. The Spanish seem to understand and give the princess the new name of Isabel, after the Queen of Spain. Later, though, rumors circulate that Cortez violated the child. The Spaniards remain in the city for months. But then another Spanish party arrives on the coast of Mexico to arrest Cortes over the small matter of his revoked permit. With Cortes distracted, Moctezuma spots an opportunity and gives the order for his people to prepare for war. At this point, the fragile peace is shattered and Cortes takes Moctezuma hostage, threatening to kill him if his people revolt. With the Aztec king in irons, Cortes hurries to the coast to deal with the Spanish ships there. But while Cortes is away, war erupts.
Camilla Townsend
A few Spaniards were left, and among them a man named Pedro de Alvarado, who took it into his head to attack some warriors who were celebrating religious festival in their temple and killed dozens, possibly hundreds of them, thus provoking a huge crisis. By the time Cortes and his men got back to the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan, in effect, warfare was brewing and it exploded several days later. Cortes and all the Spaniards had to run for their lives, because as powerful as they were with their armor and their horses and their crossbows, etc. They couldn't fight against a city of tens of thousands of people who had turned against them.
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Moctezuma is killed in the fray. According to Spanish accounts, he attempts to speak to his subjects, but is assailed with stones and arrows. The Aztecs, however, tell a different story, that the strangers murdered their king but it is the Spanish who pay the greatest price, losing approximately 600 men. It is a night that becomes known as La La Noche Triste, the Night of Sorrows. June 30, 1520. The remaining few hundred Spanish retreat, and Moctezuma's daughters, who were given to the Spanish, are returned to the arms of their people. They thank the gods for their safe return and hope that life can go back to normal. But soon another horror emerges, and no amount of warriors will help them. Defeat. Is early in the morning in October 1520, Tekwicz Potzin, the 12 year old daughter of Moctezuma II, lies on her reed mat next to her sisters in the palace complex. Smoke drifts from outside, carrying with it the familiar smell of burning bodies. The Aztecs have never experienced a plague like this. It arrived in the weeks after the Spanish were driven from Tenochtitlan. The strangers who brought it with them call it La Viruella. Today we know it as smallpox. One of the princess's younger sisters begins to cry. Unable to bear the burning source, Tekwicz Potzin calls out for a servant. But few remain in the palace. So many have perished. She gets to her feet to find help. Still weak, she makes her way through the corridors gingerly. Once a place of vibrant color of activity and song, the palace seems now deserted. They have the Spanish to blame for that. During the worst of her fever, she hallucinated that she was back with those strangers who called her Isabel. But she's had her own name since she returned to her family, or what's left of it, since her father died and the new king, Quatemoc, murdered her brother and half brothers. Hearing movement outside, she peeks from a window and sees Quarteymoc arriving at the palace. From the look of his servants laden with baskets and bundles, it seems he is moving into the staterooms. Tekwicz Potzin returns to her mission, finding an old nurse in the servants quarters and accompanying her back to the bedroom. There, the woman attends to her sister's sores, grinding up herbs in a pestle and mortar and applying the poultice to her painful skin. Now there is another servant at the door. The new Aztec king wishes to speak with the princess. She has no choice but to meet with the man who ordered the death of her brother. Quatemoc is waiting for her in a ceremonial room where her father once held sway. The king's attendants sit on mats, while at the far end of the pillared room, their new ruler presides over them from his reed throne. On a raised platform, Quatemoc is in his mid-20s, more than a decade older than her. Tekwicpotzin lowers her gaze as the new king tells her of his intention to marry her and merge their two branches of the royal family. At 12, she has already been passed from man to man. But Kotaymok will need as many allies as possible if the Spanish return, because, as everyone knows, it is likely that they will. In the early months of 1521, the Aztecs keep an eye on the Spanish, who have reappeared and are now assembling their boats on the eastern side of the lake. While Cuautemoc has been able to win over some allies in the surrounding areas, others remain united with the conquistadors. Eventually, one day in May, the Spanish attack. The speed with which their brigantines move is breathtaking. The invaders knock down walls with cannons from their ships and send their indigenous allies to fill the island's canal with rubble and sand. When the Spanish have a flat, open area, they land with their horses and lances, killing dozens at a time. The Aztecs put up a good fight with their famous warriors, managing to topple men as well as horses. On one day, there is even a mass human sacrifice of their Spanish captives at the top of a pyramid temple where the heads of the dead are strung into a macabre necklace as a warning. Yet still the Spanish press on. They have the speed of their sails on the water and horses on the land, plus the durability of their metal weapons and armor. And though the Aztecs seize some of their guns, they soon learn they can't use them without ammunition. At a loss what to do with a captured cannon, they end up sinking it in the lake. Later, in discussing what went wrong for them, the Aztecs use the word tepostli, metal more than any other. In the end, metal wins. After a brutal three month siege, the Aztec leader Cuautemoc gives himself up. On August 13, 1521, he canoes over to the Spanish, taking his young wife and closest advisors. The once magnificent Tenochtitlan is in a piteous state, soaked in blood and strewn with bodies. Dysentery is spreading, and the residents of the city that boasted one of the richest markets in the world are now starving. Once Qatamoc has surrendered, the surviving Aztecs are permitted to leave the island to search for food. Tekwiczpotcin, the king's young wife, watches them go. It won't be long before she is forced to return to her Spanish name, Isabel Moctezuma. The conquest of the Aztec capital marks the beginning of Spanish colonial dominance in the region, shaping the course of Mexican history for centuries to come. The conquistadors, led by Cortes, begin to build in the ruins, turning it eventually into what is now known as Mexico City. His previous transgressions forgiven, Cortes is named governor of this new Spanish colony, and the remaining Aztecs must learn to submit once again to a ruler other than their own.
Camilla Townsend
There is always a next day after a great world crisis, and their language, their beliefs, their sense of self in many ways did remain intact. Likewise, as the Spaniards moved through Mexico, gradually conquering the rest of it, there were moments in time when people lost wars, lost control of their lives. But there were many other years and other decades when life went on much as usual, except that they now had to pay their taxes to the Spaniards rather than to the Aztecs.
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Camilla Townsend
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As the Spanish establish their rule over Mexico, they impose Christianity and their governance structures, including the encomienda system, which exploits indigenous people for their labor and resources. They also embark upon the extraction of precious metals such as silver and gold. The passing months and years see a blending of Spanish and indigenous cultures and races. Malinsin, the native woman who worked as a translator for Cortes, bears him a son. But European diseases continue to weaken the population, and in 1529 she dies in another outbreak of smallpox. Cortes also takes Moctezuma's daughter, whom he continues to call Isabel, to live in his house after having given the order for her husband, Quatemoc, to be put to death in 1525. She is soon pregnant with the child of the conquistador. She's later married off to one of his followers and encourages her daughters to be nuns. Through the religious influence of the Spanish, particularly the Franciscan friars, the Aztecs and other indigenous people are taught how to read and write using the Latin script.
Camilla Townsend
They did work on projects with the friars. That was the whole point, so that they could study the Christian texts. But they took this Alphabet home and they used it to write down other things that the Spaniards didn't even know they were writing down. Occasionally prayers, but usually histories and other commentaries. They might ask their uncle or their grandmother, you know, tell me what such and such was like. And the person, the old person would tell them in fluent Nahuat what? And they would write this down in Nahuatl. So many of those texts survive. And now that we're becoming better and better at reading Nahuatl, we can hear more what the Nahuas or the speakers of Nahuatl have to say about their own culture and their own religion in their own words. And we get a very different picture.
Narrator
In time, the lake on which the magnificent island city once sat is drained, and much of Mexico City today rests in its Basin. In 1978, the accidental discovery of an exquisitely carved Aztec monolith, seven feet beneath a busy street, serves as a reminder of the ruined pyramids, temples and palaces of the Aztec capital below. From the founding of Tenochtitlan in 1325 to its dramatic downfall just over 200 years later, Aztec civilization flourished in Mexico. Yet the legacy of the Aztecs persists even now through their language, culinary traditions and storytelling. Today, over 1.5 million continue to speak Nahuatl, keeping the linguistic heritage of this remarkable civilization alive
Camilla Townsend
to this day. Millions of people in Mexico speak indigenous languages. Others wear indigenous dress. It's not as though they suddenly lost their whole psychological world. On the other hand, the Spaniards were very powerful and collected a horrific level of taxes from them, to the point that the indigenous people gradually became poorer and poorer. And to this day, indigenous people are among the poorest in Mexico. And the Mexicans, descended from the Spaniards, are among the rich in the so on one hand, everything changed, but on another level, it didn't. I suppose it depends on whether we're asking who was in charge militarily, politically, who got to keep the tax money, or whether we're asking about jokes and prayers and stories. In that way, indigenous people remain very much themselves. And still do.
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Next time on Short HISTORY of something A little different, we'll bring you an episode from Noyes brand new podcast. It's called the curious history of your home. Join domestic historian Ruth Goodman as she guides you through the surprising, often epic stories behind everyday objects in your home. Like the vacuum cleaner in your cupboard. Small and compact today, but when it was invented, it was literally powered by horses and took four to six people to operate the minty fresh toothpaste by your sink. Well, if you lived in ancient Greece, you'd be washing your teeth with ground up bones and oyster shells and wallpaper. It seems innocent enough, but in the Victorian era it was downright deadly. The curious history of your home explores the extraordinary in the ordinary. We think you'll love it. So that's an exclusive taster of Noyes new show next time. Where is Garadelpha? A minor? Don't miss the return of Morph. Marvel Television's Daredevil Born Again.
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Podcast: Short History Of...
Host: NOISER
Episode Title: The Aztecs
Date: April 7, 2024
This episode offers an immersive journey into the Aztec civilization, tracing their rise from underdog migrants in the Valley of Mexico to the creation of their dazzling island capital, Tenochtitlan, and exploring their culture, society, and dramatic fall to the Spanish conquistadors. The narrative challenges longstanding stereotypes and revisits both myth and reality around their downfall, presenting a multi-faceted picture of the Aztecs beyond the tropes of savagery and sacrifice. Through expert commentary, notably from historian Camilla Townsend, the episode weaves together archaeological findings, indigenous voices, and colonial records to paint a rich, nuanced portrait of Aztec history—and its living legacy in modern Mexico.
On the Aztec homeland:
"Aztecs referred to their ancient homeland, the place that they had migrated from, as Aztlan. Probably it was a mythical place..."
—Camilla Townsend (08:16)
On Nahuatl:
"It's really a very beautiful language, very sonorous, very rich, very expressive. [...] we have lots and lots of writings in Nahuatl that we can read today, and they are very illuminating of their culture."
—Camilla Townsend (10:37)
On human sacrifice:
"That person, usually a warrior, a man, but occasionally a woman, was never denigrated. [...] If they didn't cry out, they were brave and stoical, were deeply honored by their enemies who had killed them."
—Camilla Townsend (29:28)
On Malintzin (La Malinche):
"...She was an enemy of the Aztecs and therefore had no love for them."
—Camilla Townsend (38:31)
On the Spanish narrative of conquest:
"Many years later, the Spaniards began to say that what had happened is that Montezuma said, oh, God, oh, divine figure, I am so glad you are here, and I happily will turn over to you my entire kingdom."
—Camilla Townsend (40:46)
On the aftermath:
"There is always a next day after a great world crisis, and their language, their beliefs, their sense of self in many ways did remain intact."
—Camilla Townsend (51:47)
On Indigenous reality in modern Mexico:
"...indigenous people gradually became poorer and poorer. And to this day, indigenous people are among the poorest in Mexico. And the Mexicans, descended from the Spaniards, are among the rich..."
—Camilla Townsend (56:11)
The episode closes by acknowledging the Aztecs’ stunning achievements and tragic fall, but emphasizes that their legacy persists—their language spoken, their stories told, and their spirit alive in modern Mexico. The conquest did not erase indigenous identity; it adapted and endures, even in the face of continued adversity. The Aztec story, as told by those who lived it and their descendants, complicates and enriches what we think we know about history’s so-called lost civilizations.
For listeners new to the Aztecs or seeking a richer context, this episode combines gripping storytelling, accessible scholarship, and indigenous perspectives to offer a compelling, rounded introduction to one of history’s most misunderstood empires.