- La Noche Triste
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La Noche Triste ("the sad night") Date June 30-July 1, 1520 Location Shores of Lake Texcoco, Mexico Result Aztec victory; Cortez barely escapes Belligerents Spain
TlaxcallānAztec Empire Commanders and leaders Hernán Cortés (WIA)
Pedro de Alvarado (WIA)Unknown Strength varies;likely 600 - 1000 Spanish and 20,000 native allies 50,000 warriors; likely more in reserves Casualties and losses 2/3 of the Spanish killed, drowned or captured; rest wounded; between 2,000 and 4,000 native allies killed or captured Light –,although thousands later died of disease, mainly smallpox Aztec civilization Aztec society Nahuatl language Religion · Mythology · Philosophy · Calendars Human sacrifice · Medicine Aztec history Aztlán · Codices · Warfare Aztec Triple Alliance Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire Fall of Tenochtitlan · La Noche Triste Montezuma II · Hernán Cortés La Noche Triste ("the sad night") on June 30, 1520, was an important event during the Spanish conquest of Mexico, wherein Hernán Cortés and his army of Spanish conquistadors and native allies fought their way out of the Mexican capital at Tenochtitlan following the death of the Aztec king Montezuma, whom the Spaniards had been holding as a hostage. The event is so-named on account of the sorrow that Cortés and his surviving followers felt and expressed at the loss of life and treasure incurred in the escape from Tenochtitlan.
Contents
Prologue
Cortés' expedition arrived at Tenochtitlan, the Mexica capital, on November 8, 1519, taking up residence in a specially designated compound in the city. Soon thereafter, suspecting treachery on the part of their hosts, the Spaniards took Moctezuma II, the king or Hueyi Tlatoani of the Mexica, hostage. Though Moctezuma followed Cortés' instructions in continually assuring his subjects that he had been ordered by the gods to move in with the Spaniards and that he had done so willingly, the Aztecs suspected otherwise. During the following six months, Cortés and his native allies, the Tlaxcaltecas, were increasingly unwelcome guests in the capital.
In June 1520, news from the Gulf coast reached Cortés that a much larger party of Spaniards had been sent by Governor Velázquez of Cuba to arrest Cortés for insubordination. Leaving Tenochtitlan in the care of his trusted lieutenant, Pedro de Alvarado, Cortés marched to the coast, where he defeated the Cuban expedition led by Pánfilo de Narváez. When Cortés told the defeated soldiers about the riches of Tenochtitlan, they agreed to join him. Reinforced by Narvaez's men, Cortés headed back to Tenochtitlan.
During Cortés' absence, Pedro de Alvarado obtained information that the Aztecs were about to attack him, and ordered a preemptive slaughter of Aztec nobles and priests celebrating a festival in the city's main temple. In retaliation, the Aztecs laid siege to the Spanish compound, in which Moctezuma was still being held captive. By the time Cortés returned to Tenochtitlan in late June, the Aztecs had elected a new Hueyi Tlatoani named Cuitláhuac. Cortés ordered Moctezuma to address his people from a terrace in order to persuade them to stop fighting and to allow the Spaniards leave the city in peace. The Aztecs, however, jeered at Montezuma, and pelted him with stones and darts. Struck in the head, the arm, and the leg, he fell to the ground, and not wishing to continue living under the conditions of his captivity, died several days later.
La Noche Triste
With Montezuma dead, Cortez and Alvarado knew now they had stirred up a hornets nest. Under constant attack, with gunpowder and food and water in short supply, Cortés decided to break out of the city by night. In order to put the Aztecs off their guard, he sent messengers asking for a one-week cease-fire, at the end of which the Spaniards would return any treasure of which they were in possession and would be permitted to leave the city peacefully. Since the Aztecs had damaged bridges on four of the eight causeways into the island city, the Spaniards devised a portable bridge they could use in order to cross any unspanned sections of water. Cortés ordered that as much of the accumulated gold and other booty as was feasible be packed and carried away, and invited the Spanish soldiers to take and carry away as much as they wished of the remainder. This invitation would lead to the demise of many a soldier who, overburdened with treasure, found it impossible to negotiate the causeways and other obstacles encountered on the way out of the city.
On the night of June 30, 1520,[1] his large army left their compound and headed west, toward the Tlacopan causeway. The causeway was apparently unguarded, and the Spaniards made their way out of their complex unnoticed, winding their way through the sleeping city. Before reaching the causeway, they were noticed by Aztec warriors, who sounded the alarm. Sources diverge here, with some stating that a woman filling water jugs sounded the alarm.
The fighting was ferocious. As the Spaniards and their native allies reached the causeway, hundreds of canoes appeared in the waters alongside to harry them. The Spaniards fought their way across the causeway in the rain, sometimes using the portable bridge to cover the gaps, although as the battle progressed some gaps had become so filled with wreckage and bodies that the fugitives were able to walk across. Weighed down by gold and equipment, some of the soldiers lost their footing, fell into the lake, and drowned. As for Cortés himself, together a vanguard of horsemen he pressed ahead and reached dry land at the village of Tacuba, leaving the rest of the expedition to fend for itself in the treacherous crossing. Seeing the wounded survivors straggle into the village, however, Cortés and his horsemen turned back to causeway, where they encountered Pedro de Alvarado, unhorsed and badly wounded, in the company of a handful of Spaniards and Tlaxcaltecas. According to Bernal Díaz del Castillo, it was at this point that tears came to Cortés' eyes, as he realized the extent of the debacle.
Cortés, Alvarado and the strongest and most skilled of the men had managed to fight their way out of Tenochtitlán. However, all of the artillery had been lost, as had most of the horses. As to the total number of casualties suffered by the expedition, the sources are not in agreement. Cortés himself claimed that 154 Spaniards were lost along with over 2,000 native allies. Thoan Cano, another eyewitness to the event, said that 1170 Spaniards died, but this number probably exceeds the total number of Spaniards who took part in the expedition.[2] Francisco López de Gómara, who was not himself an eyewitness, estimated that 450 Spaniards and 4,000 allies died.[3] The noncombatants attached to the expedition suffered terribly. Most of the native women who had been given to or taken by the Spaniards and who served them as cooks, mistresses and housekeepers were killed that night. The few women who survived included María Estrada, Cortes' mistress and the only Spanish woman in the party, La Malinche the interpreter, Alvarado's mistress, and two of Moctezuma's daughters under Cortés' care. (A third died, apparently leaving behind her infant by Cortés, the mysterious second "María" named in his will.)
Aftermath
Further battles awaited the Spaniards and their allies as they fought their way around the north end of Lake Zumpango. Two weeks later, at the Battle of Otumba, not far from Teotihuacan, they turned to fight the pursuing Aztec, decisively defeating them — according to Cortés, because he slew the Aztec commander — and giving the Spaniards a small respite that allowed them to reach Tlaxcala.[citation needed]
It was there in Tlaxcala that Cortés plotted the siege of Tenochtitlan and the eventual destruction of the Aztec Empire.
Footnotes
- ^ Various sources give dates ranging from June 30 to July 4, a problem further confounded by the use of the Julian calendar in Europe at this time, which had diverged from the true (solar) date by almost 12 days.
- ^ Prescott, Appendix.
- ^ Prescott, Book 5, Chapter 3.
References
Primary sources
- Historia verdadera de la conquista de la Nueva España ("True History of the Conquest of New Spain") by Bernal Díaz del Castillo. Bernal Díaz del Castillo served as a rodelero, or soldier armed with sword and buckler, in Cortés' expedition, and personally participated in the nocturnal battle known as "La noche triste." His Chapter CXXVIII ("How we agreed to flee from Mexico, and what we did about it") is an account of the event.
- La Historia general de las Indias ("General History of the Indies") by Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés. See Parsons (below), Volume III, p.296-292. Oviedo, not himself a witness to La Noche Triste, claimed to have interviewed Thoan Cano, a member of Pánfilo Narváez' expedition who joined Cortés in his return to Mexico and who survived the escape from the city.
Secondary sources
- Conquest: Cortés, Montezuma, and the Fall of Old Mexico by Hugh Thomas (1993) ISBN 0-671-51104-1.
- Cortés 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. Available online at www.questia.com.
- 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.
- The Conquistadors by Michael Wood (2002) PBS.
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See also
External links
- Página de relación
- Hernando Cortes on the Web with thumbnail galleries
- Catholic Encyclopedia (1911)
- Conquistadors, with Michael Wood — 2001 PBS documentary
- Ibero-American Electronic Text Series presented online by the University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center.
Categories:- Battles involving Spain
- Battles involving Tlaxcala
- Battles involving the Aztec Empire
- Spanish conquests in the Americas
- Aztec history
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