Cuauhtemoc was the last Aztec Emperor who ruled from 1520 and 1521
@Last Aztec Emperor, Life Achievements and Childhood
Cuauhtemoc was the last Aztec Emperor who ruled from 1520 and 1521
Cuauhtemoc was married to Isabel Moctezuma, daughter of Emperor Moctezuma II. Not much is known about the number of children they had.
Cuauhtemoc’s captivity by Cortes ended any kind of resistance from the Aztecs. By 1525, he had become an auxillary soldier under Cortés, serving with the Spaniard’s army as it pushed into Honduras.
During the fateful journey to Honduras, Cortes was brainwashed to believe that Cuahtemoc was traitor who was plotting against him. Furious, he opened a treason trial for the Aztec leader. Cuauhtemoc was found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging
Cuauhtemoc was born in 1495 to the Aztec emperor Ahuitzotl and his wife Tlilancapatli. He was the eldest legitimate son of the Emperor.
Young Cuauhtemoc attended Calmecac, a school for the upper-class boys, to complete his formal education.
Academically trained, he joined military service. His grit, determination and aggressiveness earned him the title of cuauhtlatoani or eagle ruler. Just like an eagle who is at its aggressive best while catching its prey, he too was belligerent towards his enemies.
In 1515, he was named ruler of Tlatelolco. This position was strictly restricted to elite males and warriors with a history of capturing enemies for sacrifice.
In 1520, Cuauhtémoc was voted as the Emperor by the highest noblemen of the country, following the death of Montezuma’s successor, Cuitláhuac due to smallpox.
At the time when Cuauhtemoc took over the throne, Hernán Cortés, with powerful Indian allies, was marching on Tenochtitlán, the Aztec capital. His predecessor, Cuitlahuac, had built a defense program against the invaders, especially Spanish allies that left the country deeply isolated, with the desertion of numerous polities that once came under Tenochtitlan.
Cuauhtémoc’s frontier forces were forced to retreat in 1521. He defended his city by launching warfare against the Spanish. In his four-months of siege, the city was impaired by destruction with fewer Indians surviving. Only the district of Tlatelolcas remained loyal to the Emperor where women too participated in the battle.
On August 13, 1521, Cuauhtemoc was captured by the Spanish, while attempting to flee Tenochtitlan at the time of crossing Lake Texcoco. Cortes treated Cuauhtemoc with deference initially. However, when the wealth found was too little, he tortured Cuauhtemoc to reveal the location of the hidden Aztec treasure. Cuauhtemoc, on the other hand, did not give out the information.
All through his reign, Cuauhtemoc was known for his aggressiveness and determination. Strong-willed as he was, Cuauhtemoc defended the city during the four-month siege. Though he was eventually captured and tortured by the Spainards for revealing the location of the Aztec wealth, he remained resolute and till the end did not reveal the same.