CUAUHTEMOC:
WINNER IN DEFEAT
(1495 - 1525)
One
of history's recurring ironies is the spectacle of figures who die
in defeat or disgrace, but emerge in future generations as heroes
while the people who defeated them are downgraded to villains. Miguel
Hidalgo, executed as a "traitor" to the Spanish crown, is
today considered Mexico's George Washington. Nathan Hale, hanged by
the British as a spy, has become a symbol of resistance to tyranny.
Helmuth von Moltke, judicially murdered for his anti-Nazi activities,
is now hailed as a noble representative of the "other Germany"
that opposed Hitler.
Then we have the example
of Cuauhtemoc, last emperor of the Aztecs. Today, Cuauhtemoc is a
universal object of veneration in Mexico. Streets, parks, stadia --
even a brewery -- are named after him. Yet Hernan Cortés, the
man who defeated him, is so little celebrated that I have only encountered
one street that bears his name. In Orwell's term, Cortés has
become an "unperson" -- not "nonperson," as the
word is so frequently misquoted.
Though the exact year of
Cuauhtemoc's birth is uncertain, most historians agree that he was
born around A.D. 1495. In his History of the Conquest, Bernal Diaz
de Castillo writes that in 1520, the year he became emperor, Cuauhtemoc
was "not more than twenty-five years old, and elegant in his
person for an Indian."
Cuauhtemoc was of royal
birth, nephew to both Moctezuma and his brother Cuitlahuac, who succeeded
him. He was also Moctezuma's son-in-law, having married his daughter
Princess Tecuichpo. Though relatively little is known of his career
before the Conquest, William H. Prescott, in his definitive The Conquest
of Mexico, writes that the young prince had "ample experience
in military matters." Adds Prescott: "He bore a sort of
religious hatred to the Spaniards, like that which Hannibal is said
to have sworn, and which he certainly cherished, against his Roman
foes."
Cuauhtemoc first became
a high profile figure through an incident which may have been apocryphal.
The Spaniards had seized the royal palace and were holding Moctezuma
prisoner. Ironically, the emperor's death was triggered by a clash
between rival factions of Spaniards. Diego Velazquez, governor of
Cuba, had sent an expedition to Mexico to overthrow Cortés,
of whose success he was jealous. Cortés led part of his force
against the new enemy, leaving a rear guard in Tenochtitlan, the Aztec
name for Mexico City. Having successfully repelled the invaders from
Cuba, Cortés returned to find that his lieutenant, the brutal
Pedro de Alvarado, had provoked open revolt by killing 600 Aztec nobles.
As the Indians besieged the palace, Cortés ordered Moctezuma
to tell his subjects to disperse. Not only did they refuse but the
shower of stones they directed against their captive emperor caused
injuries that resulted in his death. The hail of stones began when
a nobleman defiantly brandished a javelin at Moctezuma. According
to legend, that nobleman was Cuauhtemoc.
Moctezuma was succeeded
as emperor by Cuitlahuac. Moctezuma had been intimidated by Cortés
because he believed the Spaniards were representatives of the bearded,
fair- skinned god Quetzalcoatl. Cuitlahuac never believed the legend
and set out to organize a determined resistance to the conquistadores.
Though he only ruled four months before succumbing to smallpox, Cuitlahuac
drove Cortés's men out of Tenochtitlan during the famous Noche
Triste ("sad night") of either July 1 or 10, 1520, depending
on which historian you read.
After Cuitlahuac's death,
Cuauhtemoc was elected emperor by a council of nobles. In the meantime,
Cortés was regrouping for another attack on Tenochtitlan. Allied
with him were the Tlaxcalans, traditional enemies of the Aztecs. Tenochtitlan
in those days lay on a large lake. The Spaniards had built 13 brigantines
while in Tlaxcalan territory and now planned to use the vessels in
a naval assault on Tenochtitlan. Before mounting their offensive,
Cortés called on Cuauhtemoc to surrender. The young emperor
defiantly refused and announced that all Christian converts found
in his lands would be sacrificed to the Aztec gods.
The attack was launched
in March 1521. Cortés began with a reconnaissance in force
to gain control of communities in the Valley of Mexico adjacent to
Tenochtitlan. He got as far as the neighboring settlement of Tacuba
before Cuauhtemoc drove the Spaniards and Tlaxcalans back in a determined
land and naval counterattack. Then the tide turned again when reinforcements
arrived from Hispaniola -- the island that today houses the Dominican
Republic and Haiti. With 200 more men, plus 80 horses, supplies and
ammunition, Cortés was able to consolidate his hold on the
entire Valley of Mexico.
The stage was now set for
the final assault. The brigantines were launched April 28, 1521, and
land operations began a few days later. Cuauhtemoc, realizing that
his horseless troops were no match for the Spaniards in open country,
became a master of urban warfare. Turning Tenochtitlan into an Aztec
Stalingrad, he defeated the initial Spanish assault on the city and
drove the enemy back to their siege lines outside the gates.
In the end, Cuauhtemoc
was defeated more by famine than by force of arms. The Spaniards,
backed by their Indian allies, seized the city market and the defenders
were threatened with starvation. Indomitable as ever, Cuauhtemoc decided
to raise fresh forces in the countryside to aid the beleaguered city.
But he was captured while crossing the lake in a pirogue and, with
that, all Aztec resistance ended.
At first, Cortés
treated his foe chivalrously. "A Spaniard knows how to respect
valor even in an enemy," he declared. Then, to his eternal discredit,
he allowed Aldrete, the greedy royal treasurer, to have Cuauhtemoc
tortured to make him reveal the whereabouts of hidden treasure.
Cuauhtemoc, insisting that
there was no hidden treasure, heroically stood up under the ordeal.
In the end, a shamed Cortés delivered him from Aldrete's hands.
But there was a final horror. In 1525, Cuauhtemoc was serving as an
auxiliary on a Cortés-led expedition into Honduras. Convinced
by an Indian convert to Christianity that Cuauhtemoc was conspiring
against him, Cortés had him tried for treason. Found guilty,
he was sentenced to hang. Though even some of the Spaniards -- notably
Bernal Diaz de Castillo -- believed the former emperor innocent, the
sentence was carried out. Cuauhtemoc's last words to Cortés
demonstrate his unconquerable spirit: "I knew what it was...to
trust to your false promises; I knew that you had destined me to this
fate since I did not fall by my own hand when you entered my city
of Tenochtitlan."
At the time of his death,
Cuauhtemoc's official status was that of an army auxiliary guilty
of treason against his superior officer. Then the forces of historical
revisionism set in and, as we know, Cuauhtemoc is today one of the
most revered figures in the Mexican pantheon. As for Cortés,
his present position could accurately be described as that of the
Unknown Conqueror.