Aztec Account (Perspective)
Aztec Account (Perspective)
Conquest of Mexico
edited by Miguel León Portillo
1
OVERVIEW
The Native Americans left few written records of the arrival of the Spanish conqueror
Hernán Cortés in Tenochtitlán (today's Mexico City) in 1519. From them, however, Miguel
León Portillo, a Mexican anthropologist, constructed an eyewitness account of how Cortés
treated the Native Americans and seized Montezuma (also known as Moctezuma) before
going on to destroy the city and to take over much of what is present-day Mexico.
Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico 1
He was also terrified to learn how the cannon roared, how its noise
resounded, how it caused one to faint and grow deaf. The messengers told
him: "A thing like a ball of fire comes out of its entrails: it comes out shooting
sparks and raining fire. The smoke that comes out with it has a pestilent odor,
like that of rotten mud. This odor penetrates even to the brain and causes the
greatest discomfort. If the cannon is aimed against a mountain, the mountain
splits and cracks open. If it is aimed against a tree, it shatters the tree into
splinters. This is a most unnatural sight as if the tree had exploded from
within."
The messengers also said: "Their trappings and arms are all made of iron.
They dress in iron and wear iron casques on their heads. Their swords are iron;
their bows are iron; their shields are iron; their spears are iron. Their deer carry
them on their backs wherever they wish to go. These deer, our lord, are as tall
as the roof of a house.
"The strangers’ bodies are completely covered, so that only their faces can
be seen. Their skin is white, as if it were made of lime. They have yellow hair,
though some of them have black. Their beards are long and yellow, and their
moustaches are also yellow. Their hair is curly, with very fine strands.
"As for their food, it is like human food. It is large and white, and not
heavy. It is something like straw, but with the taste of a cornstalk, of the pith
of a cornstalk. It is a little sweet, as if it were flavored with honey; it tastes of
honey, it is sweet-tasting food.
"Their dogs are enormous, with flat ears and long, dangling tongues. The
color of their eyes is a burning yellow; their eyes flash fire and shoot off sparks.
Their bellies are hollow, their flanks long and narrow. They are tireless and
very powerful. They bound here and there, panting, with their tongues
hanging out. And they are spotted like an ocelot."
When Motecuhzoma heard this report, he was filled with terror. It was as
if his heart had fainted, as if it had shriveled. It was as if he were conquered by
despair. . . .
Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico 2
charcoal. Also: large, clean cooking pots, water jars, pitchers, dishes and other
pottery. Motecuhzoma ordered that it be sent to them. The chiefs who
received this order were angry with the king and no longer revered or
respected him. But they furnished the Spaniards with all the provisions they
needed—food, beverages and water, and fodder for the horses.
Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico 3
lesser palace, the Gate of the Canestalk and the Gate of the Serpent of Mirrors.
They posted guards so that no one could escape, and then rushed into the
Sacred Patio to slaughter the celebrants. They came on foot, carrying their
swords and their wooden or metal shields. . . .
Some attempted to force their way out, but the Spaniards murdered them
at the gates. Others climbed the walls, but they could not save themselves.
Those who ran into the communal houses were safe there for a while; so were
those who lay down among the victims and pretended to be dead. But if they
stood up again, the Spaniards saw them and killed them.
Source: Broken Spears, by Miguel Leon-Portilla. Copyright © 1962, 1990 by Miguel Leon-Portilla. Expanded
and Updated Edition © 1992 by Miguel Leon-Portilla. Reprinted by permission of Beacon Press, Boston.
Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico 4