2. Is there any information in his letter that he did not actually observe? How do you reconcile this fact with the idea that this is a primary source? Can a document be partially primary and partially secondary? (i.e., written by someone who did not witness the events or experience the emotion?)…
Have you ever wondered who Santa Anna was? You might have heard his name in history class,but do you know everything about him?…
Hernando Cortés was a excellent soldier under the command of Spanish soldier named Diego Velazquez. Cortés and Velazquez became very close friends in the year 1511 Diego Velazquez was selected as commander of an expedition to Cuba and Cortés joined him on his travel.The expedition to Cuba consisted of 4 ships with 300 men. In the year 1514 cuba had been conquered and the towns Santo Espiritu,Santiago de Cuba,Puerto Principe,Trinidad were founded. After the conquest of Cuba Cortés takes a break and becomes a farmer In year 1518 Velazquez decides to explore further into Mexico and Cortes sells all his land and boats to convince Velazquez to make him captain of the expedition to establish a colony in Mexico.…
The three accounts focuses on the conquest of Mexico and the interaction between Hernado Cortes and Montezuma who was the ruler of the Aztec Empire. The three accounts share some similar stories on between Montezuma and the Spaniards or conquistadors especially Hernado Cortes. But the three accounts also differ in the stories it tells.…
Hernan Cortes was a brilliant spanish conquistador that first sailed to the “New World” at the age of 19. He was born in 1485 and left Spain in 1504 in search of a place to expand Mexico for King Charles. I believe Hernan Cortes is most important because he over ran the Aztec emperor Montezuma, destroyed Tenochtitlan, and built Mexico City. In 1518, Cortes sailed from Cuba to explore the Yucatan Peninsula.…
The Spaniards allied with the Tlaxcalan indians and marched into Tenochtitlan. Montezuma welcomed in Quetzalcoatl’s men with open arms, but Hernan Cortes seized power of the empire by using Montezuma as a figurehead against his will, while Cortes made all the real decisions. Cortes acted as a secret leader until 1520, when events caused tension to escalate, and Cortes demanded Montezuma command his people obey the Spaniards. The Indians didn’t like this at all, and showered their leader in stones, he then went on to die days later in June of 1520. The spanish originally went to Mexico to search for land and gold, or other plunders because they had no prosperity back home in Spain. When they reached Mexico, they discovered the Aztec people and the native indians of the land, and decided to try to eliminate them and their ways (cannibalism, human sacrifices, etc. didn’t appeal to the Spanish, and they didn’t want people like that inhabiting the same land as…
King Montezuma was the leader of the Aztec empire from 1502-1520. The Aztecs had a large empire and complex civilization in present day Mexico. At their height, the Aztec empire had about five million citizens, about the same population as present day Paris. Hernando Cortez, a Spanish conquistador, set out to explore Mexico in 1518. In doing so, he disobeyed King Charles, the King of Spain. Cortez left Spain with 500 men in 11 ships. Once he arrived in Mexico, he burned most of his ships so his troops can’t escape back to Spain. He declared war against the Aztecs. Despite his underwhelming numbers compared to the Aztecs, the Spaniards did more than hold their own thanks to the revolutionary advantage of gun powder. On June 29th, 1920 Montezuma…
Hernando de Soto was a 16th century explorer that was born 1500 a.d. in Jerez de los Caballeros, Spain and died on May 21st, 1542 in Ferriday, Louisiana. When de Soto was a child he wanted to be a lawyer but his father said he would much rather be an explorer. Hernando was invited by Pedro Arias Dávila on an expedition to the West Indies in 1514. Pedro also paid for Hernando’s college education at the University of Salamanca.…
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz lived a life without fear regarding the social criticisms of her writing and she wrote to influence change regarding the educational stereotypes made by the men of her era. Sor Juana worked diligently to educate herself continuously throughout her life in order to reach a level of sophistication that no man could contest.…
On November 8, 1519, Aztec Emperor Moctezuma and Spanish Conquistador Hernan Cortes met for the first time outside the Aztec capital city of Tenochtitlan. Aztec accounts of the event, compiled by Miguel Leon-Portillo shortly after and published as The Broken Spears, claim that Moctezuma (also Montezuma) believed Cortes was a god. “Our Lord, you are weary. The journey has tired you, but now you have arrived on the earth. You have come here to site on your throne, to sit under its canopy.” The accounts also say that Cortes told Moctezuma, “We have come to your house in Mexico as friends. There is nothing to fear.” Moctezuma would soon be dead, and Cortes would be the ruler of New Spain.…
Starting with the Christopher Columbus’ voyages to the Americas in the late 15th century, European powers sought to explore, colonize, and find valuable resources within the New World. This source, a letter, was written in 1519 in the city of Tascalteca by the Conquistador Hernan Cortes to the Spanish King Charles IV. At first it seems unusual that he would be writing to the king as his expedition was called off; Cortes is practically writing to his superiors about how he is defying orders given to him. It is possible, however, that after the overall success of the trip, Charles IV let Cortes’ potential transgressions slide. Usually, the expeditions from the Spanish crown were both ordered and funded by the empire or royalty, but this explorations…
In Veracruz, he met some of Moctezuma's tributaries and asked them to arrange a meeting with Moctezuma. Moctezuma repeatedly turned down the meeting, but Cortés was determined. Leaving a hundred men in Veracruz, Cortès marched on Tenochtitlan in mid-August 1519, along with 600 men, 15 horsemen, 15 cannons, and hundreds of indigenous carriers and warriors.[7] On the way to Tenochtitlan, Cortés made alliances with native American tribes such as the Nahuas of Tlaxcala, the Tlaxcaltec, who surrounded the Spanish and about 2,000 porters onto of a hilltop and the Totonacs of Cempoala. In October 1519, Cortés and his men, accompanied by about 3,000 Tlaxcalteca, marched to Cholula, the second largest city in central Mexico. Cortés, either in a pre-meditated effort to instill fear upon the Aztecs waiting for him at Tenochtitlan or (as he later claimed when under investigation) wishing to make an example when he feared native treachery, infamously massacred thousands of unarmed members of the nobility gathered at the central plaza, then partially burned the…
“Tengo Puerto Rico en mi corazón” (“I have Puerto Rico in my heart”), Jose “Cha Cha” Jimenez said this because he had a lot of feelings for his nationality he helped many puertoriquenas to gain power and overcome more in life. Jose “Cha Cha” Jimenez was born august 8,1948 in Caguas, Puerto Rico, to jibaro parents. His mother Eugenia Rodriguez arrived from Puerto Rico in 1949 and took Jose to New York City, then to a migrant camp near Boston where they were reunited with José's father, Antonio Jiménez. Then they finally moved to Chicago. Jose “Cha Cha” Jimenez was the founder of the Young Lords as a national human rights movement. It was found in the Lincoln Park neighborhood of Chicago on September 23,1968. Jose Jimenez was important because he helped many people with their human rights, gain power and respect, and speak up for themselves.…
Can you imagine Hernán Cortes when he first entered Tenochtitlan? I’ll give you some information about the things he probably felt, watched, heard or noticed. Think if the action was completed or not. Then, use the verbs of sensation to report what happened. Follow the example.…
The Mexican American war is often overlooked when in reality, it was one of the most important wars in US history which changed history. This war was first started in 1846 and ended in 1848. Though the war was a little short, a lot changed for the US in just two years. The war started about a mile North of the Rio Grande because a squadron of American troops “crossed the border” and 16 peaceful Americans were shot and killed. The United States was definitely justified in going to war with Mexico because Mexico wasn't really using the land that America took, America was peaceful and Mexico just randomly killed 16 soldiers, and it was America’s manifest destiny to expand to the Pacific Ocean, meaning it was God’s will.…