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Encyclopedia > Cuauhtemoc

Cuauhtémoc (also Cuauhtemotzin or Guatimozin; also written Cuauhtemoc without the diacritical mark) was the last Aztec ruler (Tlatoani) of Tenochtitlán and the last "Aztec Emperor". The name means "descending eagle", from Nahuatl cuauhtli (eagle) and temoc (descent); by extension it can be interpreted as "setting sun".


He lived c. 1502 - February 26, 1525. Cuauhtémoc took power in 1520 as succeder of Cuaitláhuac and was a nephew of the emperor Moctezuma II, and his young wife was one of Moctezuma's daughters. He ascended to the throne as his city was being besieged by the Spanish and devastated by an epidemic of smallpox. He was about 18 years of age at the time. Probably after the killings in the main temple, there were few Aztec captains available.


On August 13, 1521, Cuauhtémoc went to call for reinforcements from the countryside to aid the falling Tenochtitlán, after eighty days straight of urban warfare agaist the Spanish. He was captured while crossing Lake Texcoco in disguise, he surrendered to Hernán Cortés in the Tlatelolco section of Tenochtitlán, with that the great Aztec civilization came to an end.


Cuauhtémoc was tortured by having his feet put to a fire, but even so refused to divulge information about the treasures the Spanish coveted. Cortés eventually ordered him hanged on 26 February 1525, on his trip to Honduras. Cortés proabably took Cuauhtémoc with him so he wouldn't have to kill him close to his fellow Aztecs.


The modern-day Mexican town of Ixcateopan in Guerrero state is home to an ossuary purportedly containing Cuauhtémoc's remains.

Preceded by:
Cuitláhuac
Tlatoani of Tenochtitlán
1520-1521
Followed by:
Diego Velázquez Tlacotzin

puppet under Spanish rule


Many places in Mexico are named in honour of Cuauhtémoc. These include Ciudad Cuauhtémoc in Chihuahua and the Cuauhtémoc borough of the Mexican Federal District. There is also a Cuauhtémoc station on the Mexico City metro.


Cuauhtémoc is also the name of a training ship belonging to the Mexican Navy.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Ixcateopan Mexico +|+ Aztec Dancing +|+ Cuauhtemoc (1043 words)
Cuauhtemoc was of royal birth, nephew to both Moctezuma and his brother Cuitlahuac, who succeeded him.
Cuauhtemoc, realizing that his horseless troops were no match for the Spaniards in open country, became a master of urban warfare.
At the time of his death, Cuauhtemoc's official status was that of an army auxiliary guilty of treason against his superior officer.
AllRefer.com - CuauhtEmoc (Mesoamerican Indigenous Peoples, Biography) - Encyclopedia (224 words)
Succeeding the brother of Montezuma II in 1520, CuauhtEmoc failed to unite the native city-states of the Valley of Mexico against the Spanish after the expulsion of HernAn CortEs from TenochtitlAn.
Tortured to reveal his treasure, CuauhtEmoc replied that it lay at the bottom of the lake : where the Spaniards had perished with it in their flight from TenochtitlAn on the noche triste [sad night].
CortEs took CuauhtEmoc with him on his march to Honduras and, accusing the Aztec of treason, had him hanged.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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