The Conquistadors: Exploration, Greed, and Destruction — Fexingo History

The Cholula Massacre: Cortés's Calculated Terror

6 min · 8. juni 2026
episode The Cholula Massacre: Cortés's Calculated Terror cover

Beskrivelse

In October 1519, just two months after arriving in Tenochtitlan, Hernán Cortés orchestrated one of the most brutal episodes of the Spanish conquest: the massacre of thousands of unarmed nobles and commoners in the sacred city of Cholula. This episode unpacks what happened, why it happened, and how it shaped the course of the invasion. Drawing on indigenous accounts from the Florentine Codex and Spanish chronicles like Bernal Díaz del Castillo, we separate legend from evidence — including the contested story that Cortés knew of a planned ambush thanks to La Malinche. We also examine Cholula's significance as a religious center dedicated to Quetzalcoatl, and how the massacre became a deliberate tool of psychological warfare aimed at intimidating both allies and enemies. The conversation explores the political calculations behind the violence, the role of Tlaxcalan allies in the slaughter, and the long memory of the event in Mexican history and folklore. #CholulaMassacre #HernánCortés #LaMalinche #FlorentineCodex #BernalDíazDelCastillo #Quetzalcoatl #Tlaxcala #Tenochtitlan #Moctezuma #Nahuatl #Conquistadors #Mesoamerica #SpanishConquest #PsychologicalWarfare #History #FexingoHistory #Aztec #Cholula Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

88 episoder

episode Malintzin: The Interpreter Who Shaped the Conquest cover

Malintzin: The Interpreter Who Shaped the Conquest

In this episode of The Conquistadors, Lucas and Luna explore the extraordinary life of Malintzin—better known as La Malinche—the Nahua woman who served as Hernán Cortés's interpreter, advisor, and diplomat during the conquest of Mexico. They trace her origins as a noblewoman sold into slavery among the Maya, her linguistic genius that allowed her to bridge Nahuatl, Maya, and Spanish, and her pivotal role in forging the alliances—most crucially with the Tlaxcalans—that brought down Tenochtitlan. The conversation examines how Malintzin navigated extreme power imbalances, why she has been reviled in Mexican history as a traitor yet is also hailed as the mother of a new people, and how recent scholarship reconsiders her agency. Lucas and Luna also discuss the Florentine Codex's shifting depiction of her, her relationship with Cortés and the child they had together, Martín, and the legacy of the term 'malinchista.' They end by reflecting on what her story tells us about survival, collaboration, and the complexity of indigenous choices in the colonial world. #Malintzin #LaMalinche #HernanCortes #Nahuatl #Maya #Tlaxcala #Tenochtitlan #Conquistadors #MexicanHistory #IndigenousAgency #FlorentineCodex #BernalDiaz #Malinchista #ConquestofMexico #History #FexingoHistory #ColonialLatinAmerica #Interpreter Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode The Encomienda's Shadow: Repartimiento and Forced Labor cover

The Encomienda's Shadow: Repartimiento and Forced Labor

We've talked about the encomienda system before, but this episode digs into what came next—and what coexisted alongside it. After the New Laws of 1542 tried to phase out encomiendas, Spanish officials didn't abolish forced labor; they just rebranded it. The repartimiento system—also called the 'repartimiento de indios'—became the new mechanism for funneling indigenous workers into Spanish mines, farms, and construction projects. We trace how this system functioned in practice, from the silver mines of Zacatecas to the fields of Michoacán. We look at the 'corregidores' and 'alcaldes mayores' who administered the labor drafts, the indigenous communities that resisted or adapted, and the Crown's own contradictory policies that both condemned exploitation and depended on it. We also get into the specific case of the Huasteca region, where forced labor sparked revolts in the 1550s. And we ask: did the shift from encomienda to repartimiento actually improve anything for indigenous people, or was it just a more efficient extraction machine? #Repartimiento #Encomienda #NewLaws1542 #ForcedLabor #Huasteca #Zacatecas #Michoacan #Corregidor #AlcaldeMayor #IndigenousResistance #SpanishColonialism #Mesoamerica #SilverMines #LaborHistory #ColonialMexico #FexingoHistory #Conquistadors #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode The Requerimiento's Lingering Shadow: Laws, Lies, and Conquest cover

The Requerimiento's Lingering Shadow: Laws, Lies, and Conquest

In this episode, Lucas and Luna revisit the Requerimiento — the Spanish legal decree read to indigenous peoples before conquest — but from a new angle: its afterlife. They explore how the document was weaponized by conquistadors, how Bartolomé de las Casas and Francisco de Vitoria debated its legitimacy, and how its logic of 'just war' echoes in later colonial legal codes. The conversation touches on the Requerimiento's use in the Mixtón War, its translation into Nahuatl, and the irony of a text meant to offer peace that was almost always read in Spanish to people who couldn't understand it. They also discuss how the Requerimiento shaped indigenous legal strategies: some native leaders later cited it in Spanish courts to argue for their rights. This episode offers a nuanced look at how words can be as violent as swords, and how the legacy of a single document persists in debates about sovereignty and conquest. #Requerimiento #BartoloméDeLasCasas #FranciscoDeVitoria #HernánCortés #Nahuatl #MixtónWar #JustWar #ColonialLaw #Encomienda #IndigenousResistance #Mesoamerica #SpanishConquest #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast #Colonialism #LegalHistory #Translation Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

9. juni 20265 min
episode Cortés's Brigantines: The Ships That Won Tenochtitlan cover

Cortés's Brigantines: The Ships That Won Tenochtitlan

In 1521, Hernán Cortés faced a seemingly impossible problem: how to besiege an island city without a navy. His solution—building a fleet of thirteen brigantines in Tlaxcala, carrying them over the mountains, and launching them on Lake Texcoco—was one of the most audacious logistical feats of the conquest. This episode dives into the construction, transport, and tactical use of those ships, drawing on accounts from Bernal Díaz del Castillo, the Florentine Codex, and Spanish shipbuilding records. We'll look at the Spanish shipwright Martín López, who supervised the project, the thousands of Tlaxcalan laborers who cut timber and carried the vessels, and the climactic naval battle that cut off Tenochtitlan's last lifeline. Along the way, we'll consider the brigantines' design—were they galleys or sloops?—and why Cortés insisted on sails and oars both. No other episode has focused solely on this forgotten fleet, the weapon that turned an inland capital into a trap. #Brigantines #Cortés #Tenochtitlan #MartínLópez #Tlaxcala #LakeTexcoco #BernalDíaz #FlorentineCodex #NavalHistory #1521 #SiegeOfTenochtitlan #SpanishConquest #Shipbuilding #Mesoamerica #History #FexingoHistory #MilitaryHistory #Aztecs Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

9. juni 20267 min
episode The Noche Triste: Cortés's Night of Sorrows cover

The Noche Triste: Cortés's Night of Sorrows

On the night of June 30, 1520, Hernán Cortés and his men attempted to flee Tenochtitlan under cover of darkness. What followed was a catastrophic rout that the Spanish would forever call the Noche Triste — the Night of Sorrows. This episode reconstructs the events of that night in vivid detail: the causeway of Tlacopan, the portable bridge that collapsed under the weight of gold, the battle cries of Aztec warriors, and the staggering losses on both sides. We explore the tactical decisions that led to the disaster, the role of the Tlaxcalan allies, and the aftermath that nearly destroyed the Spanish expedition. Using firsthand accounts from Bernal Díaz del Castillo and the Florentine Codex, we separate myth from history and examine how Cortés turned this defeat into the psychological turning point of the conquest. A harrowing story of hubris, desperation, and survival that changed the course of Mesoamerican history. #NocheTriste #Cortés #Tenochtitlan #Aztec #SpanishConquest #BernalDíaz #FlorentineCodex #Moctezuma #Cuauhtémoc #Tlacopan #Tlaxcala #Malinche #historia #Mesoamerica #1520 #conquistadors #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

8. juni 20268 min