Part
4 - The Siege and Capture of
Mexico
The siege
of Mexico is one of the most memorable and most disastrous
sieges of history. Cortez disposed his troops so as to
occupy the three great causeways leading from the shore of
the lake to the city, and thus cut off the enemy from their
sources of supply. He was strong in the possession of twelve
brigantines, built by his orders, which swept the lake with
their guns and frequently defeated the maneuvers of the
enemy, to whom a sailing ship was as new and as terrible a
phenomenon as were firearms and cavalry. But the Aztecs were
strong in numbers, and in their deadly hatred of the
invader, the young emperor, Guatemozin, opposed to the
Spaniards a spirit as dauntless as that of Cortez himself.
Again and again, by fierce attack, by stratagem, and by
their indefatigable labors, the Aztecs inflicted checks, and
sometimes-even disaster, upon the Spaniards. Many of these,
and of their Indian allies, fell, or were carried off to
suffer the worse fate of the sacrificial victim. The priests
promised the vengeance of the gods upon the strangers, and
at one point Cortez saw his allies melting away from him,
under the power of this superstitious fear. But the threats
were unfulfilled, the allies returned, and doom settled down
upon the city. Famine and pestilence raged with it, and the
inhabitants suffered all the worst horrors of a siege.
But still
they remained implacable, fighting to their last breath, and
refusing to listen to the repeated and urgent offers of
Cortez to spare them and their property if they would
capitulate. It was not until the 15th of August 1521, that
the siege, which began in the latter part of May, was
brought to an end. After a final offer of terms, which
Guatemozin still refused, Cortez made the final assault, and
carried the city in face of a resistance now sorely
enfeebled but still heroic. Guatemozin, attempting to escape
with his wife and some followers to the shore of the lake,
was intercepted by one of the brigantines and carried to
Cortez. He bore himself with all the dignity that belonged
to his courage, and was met by Cortez in a manner worthy of
it. He and his train was courteously treated and well
entertained.
Meanwhile,
at Guatemozin's request, the population of Mexico was
allowed to leave the city for the surrounding country; and
after this the Spaniards set themselves to the much-needed
work of cleansing the city. They were greatly disappointed
in their hope of treasure, which the Aztecs had so
effectively hidden that only a small part of the expected
riches was ever discovered. It is a blot upon the history of
the war that Cortez, yielding to the importunity of his
soldiers, permitted Guatemozin to be tortured, in order to
gain information regarding the treasure. But no information
of value could be wrung from him, and the treasure remained
hidden.
At the very
time of his distinguished successes in Mexico, the fortunes
of Cortez hung in the balance in Spain. His enemy Velasquez,
governor of Cuba, and the latter's friends at home, made
such complaint of his conduct that a commissioner was sent
to Vera Cruz to apprehend Cortez and bring him to trial.
But, as usual, the hostile effort failed, and the
commissioner sailed for Cuba, having accomplished nothing.
The friends of Cortez, on the other hand, made
counter-charges, in which they showed that his enemies had
done all in their power to hinder him in what was a
magnificent effort on behalf of the Spanish dominion, and
asked if the council were prepared to dishonor the man who,
in the face of such obstacles, and with scarcely other
resources than what he found in himself, had won an empire
for Castile, such as was possessed by no European potentate.
This appeal was irresistible. However irregular had been the
manner of proceeding, no one could deny the grandeur of the
results. The acts of Cortez were confirmed in their full
extent. He was constituted Governor, Captain General, and
Chief Justice of New Spain, as the province was called, and
the emperor, fully acknowledging its services, complimented
his army.
The news of
this was received in New Spain with general acclamation. The
mind of Cortez was set at ease as to the past, and he saw
opening before him a noble theatre for future enterprise.
His career, ever one of adventure and of arms, was still
brilliant and still checkered. He fell once more under
suspicion in Spain, and at last determined to present
himself in person before his sovereign, to assert his
innocence and claim redress. Favorably received by Charles
V., he subsequently returned to Mexico, pursued difficult
and dangerous voyages of discovery, and ultimately returned
to Spain, where he died in 1547.
The history
of the Conquest of Mexico is the history of Cortez, who was
its very soul. He was a typical knight-errant; more than
this, he was a great commander. There is probably no
instance in history where so vast an enterprise has been
achieved by means apparently so inadequate. He may be truly
said to have affected the conquest by his own resources. It
was the force of his genius that obtained command of the
co-operation of the Indian tribes. He brought together the
most miscellaneous collection of mercenaries who ever fought
under one standard, --men with hardly a common tie, and
burning with the spirit of jealousy and faction, wild tribes
of the natives also, which had been sworn enemies from their
cradles. Yet this motley congregation was assembled in one
camp, to breathe one spirit, and to move on a common
principle of action.
As
regards the whole character of his enterprise, which seems
to modern eyes a bloody and at first quite unmerited war
waged against the Indian nations, it must be remembered that
Cortez and his soldiers fought in the belief that their
victories were the victories of the Cross, and that any war
resulting in the conversion of the enemy to Christianity,
even as by force, was a righteous and meritorious war. This
consideration dwelt in their minds, mingling indeed with the
desire for glory and for gain, but without doubt influencing
them powerfully. This is at any rate one of the clues to
this extraordinary chapter of history, so full of suffering
and bloodshed, and at the same time of unsurpassed courage
and heroism on every side.
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