Hernán Cortés ’s journey to the heart of the Aztec Empire was a saga of staggering ambition, catastrophic failure, and eventual triumph—a story often summarized by the contrasting "Noches tristes" (Sad Nights) and "Días de gloria" ( Days of Glory ). The Rise: Ambition and Defiance
Cortés leveraged native resentment toward Aztec rule, forging a crucial alliance with the Tlaxcalans, who became his most faithful supporters. Guided by his interpreter and mistress, , he reached the magnificent island-city of Tenochtitlán on November 8, 1519. The Aztec Emperor, Moctezuma II , initially welcomed the Spaniards as potential divine envoys. However, Cortés soon seized Moctezuma as a hostage to control the empire through its own monarch. La Noche Triste: The Night of Sorrows HernГЎn CortГ©s. Noches tristes, dГas de gloria._...
Born in 1485 to minor nobility in Medellín, Spain, Cortés was restless and clever, eventually abandoning law studies at Salamanca for the promise of the New World. By 1519, he was an ambitious clerk and landowner in Cuba who defied the orders of Governor Diego Velázquez to lead an unauthorized expedition to Mexico. To ensure his men had no choice but to succeed, he famously scuttled his ships at Veracruz, committing his force of roughly 500 men to "survival by conquest". The Encounter: Gods and Hostages Hernán Cortés ’s journey to the heart of