How Hernan Cortes Destroyed the Aztec Empire with 500 Men — Fexingo History

The Aztec Sun Stone: Calendar, Altar, and Political Prophecy

7 min · 11. Juni 2026
Episode The Aztec Sun Stone: Calendar, Altar, and Political Prophecy Cover

Beschreibung

In Episode 89 of our series on the Aztec Empire and Hernán Cortés, we turn away from the battlefield and toward a stone — the famed Aztec Sun Stone, often mislabeled a 'calendar stone.' Lucas and Luna explore what the Sun Stone actually was: a massive monolithic altar carved in the reign of Moctezuma II, covered in iconography that blends cosmogony, imperial propaganda, and a dire prophecy about the Fifth Sun. We examine its discovery in 1790 beneath Mexico City's Zócalo, the debate over its function (altar vs. calendar vs. gladiatorial stone), and how its imagery — including the four previous suns, the Ollin glyph, and the fire-serpent Xiuhcoatl — reflects Mexica beliefs about time, sacrifice, and the precarious survival of the current era. We also discuss how Cortés and his men would have seen this stone (if they saw it at all), and what its survival tells us about the collision of two worlds. This episode draws on the work of scholars like Elizabeth Hill Boone and Eduardo Matos Moctezuma, as well as colonial sources such as Fray Bernardino de Sahagún. #AztecSunStone #CalendarStone #MoctezumaII #Mexica #Tenochtitlan #Ollin #FifthSun #Xiuhcoatl #Tonatiuh #Cuauhxicalli #EduardoMatosMoctezuma #ElizabethHillBoone #BernardinoDeSahagun #Mesoamerica #AztecMythology #Archaeology #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle Folgen

107 Folgen

Episode The Aztec Flower Wars: Ritual Combat or Conquest Prelude Cover

The Aztec Flower Wars: Ritual Combat or Conquest Prelude

Lucas and Luna revisit the Mesoamerican world to explore the xochiyaoyotl, or flower wars—a uniquely Aztec institution often misunderstood as ritualized combat for sacrificial victims. Drawing on the Florentine Codex and Codex Mendoza, they distinguish the flower wars from full-scale conquest campaigns. Lucas explains how the Triple Alliance under Moctezuma I and Tlacaelel formalized these wars against Tlaxcala, Huexotzinco, and Cholula, turning them into a rotating cycle of battles that served both religious and political ends. They examine whether flower wars were truly 'gentlemanly' contests or brutal training grounds, and how the Tlaxcalans exploited the system to harden their own warriors. The episode also revisits the 1519 Tlaxcalan offensive against Cortés, questioning if flower-war tactics shaped the initial engagement. Finally, they discuss how the Spanish arrival broke the cycle, turning ritual into total war. #AztecFlowerWars #Xochiyaoyotl #Tlaxcala #MoctezumaI #Tlacaelel #FlorentineCodex #CodexMendoza #Huexotzinco #Cholula #TripleAlliance #Mesoamerica #RitualCombat #Cortés #AztecWarfare #Mexica #History #FexingoHistory #WarAndSociety Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gestern6 min
Episode The Aztec Obsidian Economy: Blades, Blood, and Trade Cover

The Aztec Obsidian Economy: Blades, Blood, and Trade

In Episode 106 of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore a hidden engine of the Aztec Empire: obsidian. While previous episodes covered aqueducts, spies, poetry, and alliances, this conversation digs into the volcanic glass that shaped Mesoamerican warfare, ritual, and long-distance trade. Lucas explains how the Mexica controlled the prized Pachuca green obsidian source, mined by skilled artisans called tecuitlatl, and how obsidian blades—sharper than surgical steel—were used in macuahuitl swords and human sacrifice. Luna asks about the brutal toll of mining on workers, and Lucas reveals that the Spanish later used obsidian mines as a model for silver extraction. The episode also touches on the Florentine Codex's descriptions, the obsidian trade routes that linked Tenochtitlan to the Tarascan Empire, and how Cortés's steel weapons were actually less effective in close combat than obsidian-studded clubs. A reflective closing segment ties the fragility and sharpness of obsidian to the broader story of conquest—then a brief, topic-linked donation appeal reminds listeners that support keeps the show ad-free. #Aztec #Obsidian #Mesoamerica #Mexica #Tenochtitlan #FlorentineCodex #Macuahuitl #Tarascans #Pachuca #Tecuitlatl #HumanSacrifice #Mining #Conquest #HernanCortes #Trade #VolcanicGlass #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gestern1 min
Episode The Texcoco Betrayal How an Aztec Ally Turned Against the Empire Cover

The Texcoco Betrayal How an Aztec Ally Turned Against the Empire

When Hernán Cortés arrived in the Valley of Mexico, he found more than just Aztec enemies—he found a fractured empire. This episode focuses on Texcoco, the second-most powerful city in the Triple Alliance, and its prince Ixtlilxochitl, who defected to the Spanish after his brother Cacamatzin was arrested by Moctezuma. We explore how Texcoco's internal politics, resentment against Tenochtitlan's dominance, and a disputed succession turned a former ally into Cortés's most crucial partner. Learn about the Acolhua people, the Texcocan fleet that helped build the brigantines on Lake Texcoco, and why Ixtlilxochitl's decision may have sealed the fate of the Mexica capital. Drawing from the Obras históricas of Fernando de Alva Ixtlilxochitl, this episode reveals a conquest driven as much by indigenous divisions as by Spanish steel. #Texcoco #Ixtlilxochitl #Cacamatzin #Cortés #AztecEmpire #TripleAlliance #Acolhua #Nezahualcoyotl #Nezahualpilli #ConquestOfMexico #Tenochtitlan #Brigantines #LakeTexcoco #Mesoamerica #HernanCortes #Malintzin #FernandoDeAlva #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. Juni 20268 min
Episode The Siege Engineer: How Cortés Built a Fleet on Lake Texcoco Cover

The Siege Engineer: How Cortés Built a Fleet on Lake Texcoco

When Hernán Cortés and his army fled Tenochtitlan on La Noche Triste, they left behind their cannons, horses, and nearly a thousand men. But Cortés had one weapon the Aztecs never saw coming: the ability to build a navy on a mountaintop. In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the incredible engineering feat that turned the tide of the conquest — the construction of thirteen brigantines, carried in pieces across the Sierra Madre and assembled on the shores of Lake Texcoco. We meet Martín López, the Spanish shipwright who oversaw the project with indigenous labor; we trace the route from Tlaxcala to Texcoco through the Florentine Codex and Bernal Díaz del Castillo; and we examine how the brigantines broke the Mexica canoe fleets, blockaded the island capital, and made the siege of Tenochtitlan possible. Along the way, we look at Aztec countermeasures — fire rafts, hidden stakes, and desperate night attacks — and the decisive naval battle of Tlatelolco. It's a story of adaptation, logistics, and the brutal logic of European naval warfare transplanted to a highland lake. #HernánCortés #MartínLópez #Brigantines #LakeTexcoco #SiegeOfTenochtitlan #Tlaxcala #Texcoco #AztecEmpire #NavalWarfare #FlorentineCodex #BernalDíazDelCastillo #LaNocheTriste #Cuauhtémoc #Tlatelolco #Shipbuilding #ConquestOfMexico #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. Juni 20269 min
Episode Cortés's Translator: Malintzin and the Conquest of Mexico Cover

Cortés's Translator: Malintzin and the Conquest of Mexico

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the pivotal role of Malintzin — also known as Malinche or Doña Marina — the Indigenous woman who served as Hernán Cortés's translator, advisor, and diplomat during the conquest of the Aztec Empire. They discuss her origins as a Nahua noblewoman sold into slavery among the Maya, her linguistic genius (speaking Nahuatl, Yucatec Maya, and learning Spanish), and how she became the linchpin of Cortés's strategic alliances with the Totonac and Tlaxcalans. The episode digs into the controversies surrounding her legacy: was she a traitor, a survivor, or a strategist? They examine her role in the massacre at Cholula, her negotiations with Moctezuma's emissaries, and her later life as a mother of Cortés's son Martín. Drawing on accounts from Bernal Díaz del Castillo, the Florentine Codex, and the Lienzo de Tlaxcala, the hosts paint a nuanced portrait of a woman who shaped history but remains an ambiguous figure in Mexican memory. #Malintzin #Malinche #HernánCortés #AztecEmpire #Mexica #Nahuatl #YucatecMaya #Cholula #Tlaxcala #Cempoala #DoñaMarina #BernalDíaz #FlorentineCodex #LienzoDeTlaxcala #Moctezuma #ConquestOfMexico #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18. Juni 20267 min