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

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

5 min · 9 jun 2026
aflevering The Requerimiento's Lingering Shadow: Laws, Lies, and Conquest artwork

Beschrijving

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]

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Alle afleveringen

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aflevering The Totonac: Cortés's First Allies on the Gulf Coast artwork

The Totonac: Cortés's First Allies on the Gulf Coast

When Hernán Cortés landed on the Mexican Gulf Coast in 1519, he found a people simmering with resentment against the Aztec Empire: the Totonac. Based in the prosperous city of Cempoala, the Totonac had been forced to pay heavy tribute to Moctezuma II—cacao, cotton, feathers, and even human sacrifices. Their leader, a rotund cacique nicknamed the Fat Chief by Spanish chroniclers, saw in Cortés a chance to break free. This episode explores the Totonac alliance from their perspective: why they allied with a handful of Spaniards, how they provided crucial support at Cempoala and Villa Rica de la Veracruz, and how they were ultimately betrayed by the very system they helped install. We examine their civilization—known for monumental stone sculptures, a unique language, and a long history of resistance—and trace their fate after the conquest, including devastating epidemics and forced labor under the encomienda. A story of pragmatism, hope, and tragic miscalculation. #Totonac #Cempoala #FatChief #Cortés #Veracruz #AztecEmpire #Mesoamerica #Conquistadors #IndigenousAllies #GulfCoast #Tribute #Cacao #VillaRica #Encomienda #Smallpox #BernalDíaz #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12 jun 20269 min
aflevering Cortés and the Tribute System: How Indigenous Wealth Funded Conquest artwork

Cortés and the Tribute System: How Indigenous Wealth Funded Conquest

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Spanish conquest of Mesoamerica was financed not by Spanish gold but by Indigenous tribute networks. They trace the Mexica tribute system—recorded in the Matrícula de Tributos—which funneled cacao, cotton, maize, and jade from 38 provinces into Tenochtitlan. After 1521, Cortés repurposed these same mechanisms through encomiendas, demanding labor and goods from native communities to fund expeditions into Oaxaca, Michoacán, and beyond. The discussion highlights figures like Moctezuma Xocoyotzin, Cuauhtémoc, and the cihuacoatl Tlacaelel, whose administrative genius was co-opted by the conquerors. The episode also touches on the tribute's human cost: macehualtin forced to produce for both native lords and Spanish encomenderos, leading to famine and rebellion. A detailed look at one province, Tochtepec, reveals how a single region supplied rubber, feathers, and warriors—first for the Aztec Empire, then for Cortés. #TributeSystem #MatriculaDeTributos #Cortes #Moctezuma #Cuauhtemoc #Encomienda #Mesoamerica #AztecEmpire #Mexica #Tlacaelel #Cihuacoatl #Tenochtitlan #Tochtepec #Macehualtin #Nahuatl #Conquistadors #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren8 min
aflevering Cacao: The Currency That Built an Empire artwork

Cacao: The Currency That Built an Empire

Before chocolate became a sweet treat, it was money. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the role of cacao beans as currency in Aztec society. They discuss how cacao was harvested, processed, and used for everyday purchases from food to brides, touching on the tribute system, the cacao drink enjoyed by nobles, and what happened when Cortés and his men encountered this strange 'brown gold.' They also look at how the Spanish adapted cacao for their own use, adding sugar and vanilla to create the forerunner of modern chocolate. The episode draws on sources like the Florentine Codex and Bernal Díaz del Castillo's account to bring this rich history to life. A donation appeal seamlessly weaves in: just as cacao was a medium of exchange for the Aztecs, listener support keeps this ad-free podcast going. #Cacao #AztecCurrency #ChocolateHistory #Mesoamerica #FlorentineCodex #BernalDíazDelCastillo #Nahuatl #Xocolātl #Tribute #Cortés #Conquistadors #History #FexingoHistory #AztecEconomy #CacaoBeans #FoodHistory #PreColumbian #SpanishConquest Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren5 min
aflevering Malintzin: The Interpreter Who Shaped the Conquest artwork

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]

10 jun 20267 min
aflevering The Encomienda's Shadow: Repartimiento and Forced Labor artwork

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]

10 jun 20267 min