Tenochtitlan: A Retelling of The Conquest
In a sense, 1521 is Mexico's 1619. A foundational moment that has for a long time been shaped by just one perspective, a European one. The story of how Hernán Cortés and his small army of conquistadors conquered the mighty Aztec Empire, in the heart of what's now modern Mexico City, has become a foundational myth of European dominance in the Americas. This is the story that for centuries was largely accepted as the truth. But in recent decades researchers have pieced together a more nuanced, complicated version based on indigenous accounts, a version that challenges many of the bedrock assumptions about how European Christians came to control the Western Hemisphere. In this episode, the story of the fall of Tenochtitlán.
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Tenochtitlan: A Retelling of The Conquest
October 7, 202112:01 AM ET
[Ramtin Arablouei, co-host and co-producer of Throughline.]
[Tamar Charney, photographed for NPR, 13 November 2019, in Washington DC.]
Victor Yvellez
Tenochtitlan: A Retelling of The Conquest
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Transcript](https://www.npr.org/transcripts/1043792004)
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Transcript](https://www.npr.org/transcripts/1043792004)