Follow TV Tropes

Following

History UsefulNotes / SpanishConquestOfTheMaya

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The Spanish made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and the first attempts to expand on it often more action between rivaling conquistadors than between them and the indigenous themselves. Expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, usually in the pattern of Spaniards allying with Mayan states to conquer less receptive neighbors, or on the other hand coming to the help of existent Mayan allies under attack by enemies - or on a third hand, coming to suffocate rebellions of states that had broken or forgotten their alliance. This meant campaigns were small and short and tended to stop once the most nearby enemies had been subjected.

Another divergent trait from the Mexicas, who were in the peak of their power, the [[UsefulNotes/PreColumbianCivilizations Mayans of the 16th century]] were a civilization in the last legs of its past glory, reaching the end of a period of decadence that is still not fully understood. All of this, ironically enough, would help the Mayans adapt better to Hispanic rule than their western neighbors, as their decentralized nature and little riches in comparison ensured that many pockets of Mayan culture would survive. Even in the present day, many ethnic Mayans live with the same customs, language, and even calendars that their ancestors did millennia ago.

to:

The Spanish Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and the first attempts to expand on it often featured more action between [[WeAreStrugglingTogether rivaling conquistadors conquistadors]] than between them and the indigenous themselves. Expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, usually in the pattern of Spaniards [[EnemyMine allying with Mayan states states]] to conquer less receptive neighbors, or on the other hand [[AFriendInNeed coming to the help of existent Mayan allies allies]] under attack by enemies - or on a third hand, coming to suffocate rebellions of states [[HeelFaceRevolvingDoor allies that had broken or forgotten their alliance.alliance]]. This meant campaigns were small and short and tended to stop once the most nearby enemies had been subjected.

Another divergent trait from the Mexicas, who were in the peak of their power, was the [[UsefulNotes/PreColumbianCivilizations Mayans of the 16th century]] were a civilization in the last legs of its past glory, reaching the end of a period of decadence that is still not fully understood. All of this, ironically enough, would help the Mayans adapt better to Hispanic rule than their western neighbors, as their decentralized nature and little riches in comparison ensured that many pockets of Mayan culture would survive. survive Hispanicization. Even in the present day, many ethnic Mayans and Mayan mestizos live with the same customs, language, and even calendars that their ancestors did millennia ago.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Focused warfare on the Maya started immediately after the capture of the Mexica Empire in 1521. When it became widely known that Tenochtitlan had been conquered by UsefulNotes/HernanCortez and his entente of indigenous states, the Mayan tribes of Iximche and Q'umarkaj sent emissaries of friendship to him. However, Cortés heard by other Mayan informants that those tribes weren't trustworthy, and in fact were attacking Spanish-aligned natives, so he dispatched his lieutenant Pedro de Alvarado with the help of an army of Tlaxcaltecs and Cholultecs to right wrongs. Alvarado and company broke through with the usual combination of cavalry, western weapons and ruthless countertraps, and after ravaging Q'umarkaj, he convinced the Iximche people to sincerely join his side. In 1524 founded the city of Santiago de los Caballeros, and their territory received further the name of Guatemala (meaning "forested land" in Nahuatl).

to:

Focused warfare on the Maya started immediately after the capture of the Mexica Empire in 1521. When it became widely known that Tenochtitlan had been conquered by UsefulNotes/HernanCortez and his entente of indigenous states, the Mayan tribes of Iximche and Q'umarkaj sent emissaries of friendship to him. However, Cortés heard by other Mayan informants that those tribes weren't trustworthy, and in fact were attacking Spanish-aligned natives, so he dispatched his lieutenant Pedro de Alvarado UsefulNotes/PedroDeAlvarado with the help of an army of Tlaxcaltecs and Cholultecs to right wrongs. Alvarado and company broke through with the usual combination of cavalry, western weapons and ruthless countertraps, and after ravaging Q'umarkaj, he convinced the Iximche people to sincerely join his side. In 1524 founded the city of Santiago de los Caballeros, and their territory received further the name of Guatemala (meaning "forested land" in Nahuatl).
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The [[UsefulNotes/TheKingdomOfSpain Spanish]] conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Mexica Empire]] aka the Aztec Empire, traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan jungles that offered too much work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest.

The Spanish made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadors than between them and the indigenous themselves.

to:

The [[UsefulNotes/TheKingdomOfSpain Spanish]] conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Mexica Empire]] aka (aka the Aztec Empire, Empire), traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan jungles that offered too much work effort and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest.

The Spanish made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried the first attempts to expand on sparsely, it often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadors than between them and the indigenous themselves.
themselves. Expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, usually in the pattern of Spaniards allying with Mayan states to conquer less receptive neighbors, or on the other hand coming to the help of existent Mayan allies under attack by enemies - or on a third hand, coming to suffocate rebellions of states that had broken or forgotten their alliance. This meant campaigns were small and short and tended to stop once the most nearby enemies had been subjected.



At the same time, upon hearing of Gil González Dávila's successful conquests around the southern coast, Cortés sent yet another of his lieutenants, Cristóbal de Olid, to grab his piece of the cake. However, in a supply trip back to Cuba, Olid turned on Cortés, and was advised by their ArchEnemy Diego Velázquez to continue the expedition and take the new lands for himself. To make things worse, there were two other rival factions: Pedro Arias de Ávila, whose own lieutenant Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (not to confuse him with the late captain who explored México) was warring with González, and the entire Real Audiencia de Santo Domingo, which also claimed legal property. With the Mayan lands of modern-day Honduras turning into a battlefield, Cortés deployed his cousin Francisco de las Casas in a [[Film/ApocalypseNow Capt. Willard]]-like mission to solve the Olid problem, after which Hernán himself prepared an expedition with abundant Mexican warriors to join by land.

De las Casas lost most of his fleet to a series of storms, but he managed to arrive to find De Olid and González Dávila locked in combat. He capitalized on the chance to assault Olid's forces, but yet another storm finished the Cortesian fleet, and De las Casas himself ended up captured along with González Dávila. In his moment of triumph, De Olid tried to extract loyalty from them and let them free, but the two captains became [[EnemyMine unlikely allies]] and found the chance to turn the camp against him. De Olid was killed in an attempt to escape, or sent back to Spain and beheaded, depending on the version. Only then Cortés arrived, having suffered his own string of bad luck in a tortuous expedition through Tabasco and Acalán, in which he signed up some alliances with Mayan tribes yet lost most of his expeditioners. After pacifying some Mayan revolts, he left the two in charge and made due in 1525.

to:

At the same time, upon hearing of Gil González Dávila's successful conquests around the southern coast, Cortés sent yet another of his lieutenants, Cristóbal de Olid, to grab his piece of the cake. However, in a supply trip back to Cuba, Olid turned on Cortés, and was advised by their ArchEnemy Diego Velázquez to continue the expedition and take the new lands for himself. To make things worse, there were two other rival factions: the infamous Pedro Arias de Ávila, whose own lieutenant Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (not to confuse him with the late captain who explored México) was warring with González, and the entire Real Audiencia de Santo Domingo, which also claimed legal property. property over everything. In short, a mess. With the Mayan lands of modern-day Honduras turning into a both legal and literal battlefield, Cortés deployed his cousin Francisco de las Casas in a [[Film/ApocalypseNow Capt. Willard]]-like mission to solve the Olid problem, after which Hernán himself prepared an expedition with abundant Mexican warriors to join by land.

De las Casas lost most of his fleet to a series of storms, but he managed to arrive to find De Olid and González Dávila locked in combat. He capitalized on the chance to assault Olid's forces, but yet another storm finished the Cortesian fleet, and De las Casas himself ended up captured along with González Dávila.González. In his moment of triumph, De Olid tried to extract loyalty from them and let them free, but the two captains became [[EnemyMine unlikely allies]] and found the chance to turn the camp against him. De Olid was killed in an attempt to escape, or sent back to Spain and beheaded, depending on the version. Only then Cortés arrived, having suffered his own string of bad luck in a tortuous expedition through Tabasco and Acalán, in which he signed up some alliances with Mayan tribes yet lost most of his expeditioners. After pacifying some Mayan revolts, he left the two in charge and made due in 1525.



In 1531, Alonso de Ávila and Francisco de Montejo, helped by the latter's son, also named Francisco, initiated from Tabasco the conquest and settlement of northern Yucatán. Although the Mayan states of Xiu, Chel and Pech allied with them, others like the Canul, would have to be submitted by war. The Cupul state, famous by the city of Chichén Itzá, feigned alliance with Francisco Jr before trying to murder him, after which they threatened an attack that made the Spaniards retire quietly to take refuge in the allied lands. As the more successful UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheIncaEmpire had started grabbing the attention of the soldiers, and due to a legal struggle between Francisco Sr and Pedro de Alvarado, no action of punishment was taken, and the Montejos returned to México in 1534, leaving a handful of cities built.

to:

In 1531, Alonso de Ávila and Francisco de Montejo, helped by the latter's son, also named Francisco, initiated from Tabasco the conquest and settlement of northern Yucatán. Although the Mayan states of Xiu, Chel and Pech allied with them, others like the Canul, Canul would have to be submitted by war. The Cupul state, famous by the city of Chichén Itzá, feigned alliance with Francisco Jr before trying to murder him, after which they threatened an attack that made the Spaniards retire quietly to take refuge in the allied lands. As the more successful UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheIncaEmpire had started grabbing the attention of the soldiers, and due to a legal struggle between Francisco Sr and Pedro de Alvarado, no action of punishment was taken, and the Montejos returned to México in 1534, leaving a handful of cities built.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Another divergent trait from the Mexicas, who were in the peak of their power, the [[UsefulNotes/PreColumbianCivilizations Mayans of the 16th century]] were a civilization in the last legs of its past glory, reaching the end of a decadence that [[RiddleForTheAges is still not well-understood]]. All of this, ironically enough, would help the Mayans adapt better to Hispanic rule than their western neighbors, as their decentralized nature and little riches in comparison ensured that many pockets of Mayan culture would survive. Even in the present day, many ethnic Mayans live with the same customs, language, and even calendars that their ancestors did millennia ago.

to:

Another divergent trait from the Mexicas, who were in the peak of their power, the [[UsefulNotes/PreColumbianCivilizations Mayans of the 16th century]] were a civilization in the last legs of its past glory, reaching the end of a period of decadence that [[RiddleForTheAges is still not well-understood]].fully understood. All of this, ironically enough, would help the Mayans adapt better to Hispanic rule than their western neighbors, as their decentralized nature and little riches in comparison ensured that many pockets of Mayan culture would survive. Even in the present day, many ethnic Mayans live with the same customs, language, and even calendars that their ancestors did millennia ago.

Added: 360

Changed: 365

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The [[UsefulNotes/TheKingdomOfSpain Spanish]] conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Mexica Empire]] aka the Aztec Empire, traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan jungles that offered too much work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest. The Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of several years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadors than between them and the indigenous themselves.

to:

The [[UsefulNotes/TheKingdomOfSpain Spanish]] conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Mexica Empire]] aka the Aztec Empire, traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan jungles that offered too much work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest.

The Spaniards Spanish made contact with them at multiple points during a span of several many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadors than between them and the indigenous themselves.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The [[UsefulNotes/TheKingdomOfSpain Spanish]] conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Mexica Empire]], traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan jungles that offered too much work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest. The Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadores than between them and the indigenous themselves.

In another divergent trait from the Mexicas, who were in the peak of their power, the [[UsefulNotes/PreColumbianCivilizations Mayans of the 16th century]] were a civilization in the last throes of its past glory, reaching the end of a decadence that it's still not well understood. This makes the most ironical the fact that they would adapt better to Hispanic acculturation than their Mexica homologues, as their decentralized nature and little riches in comparison ensured that many pockets of Mayan culture here and there escaped notice through the years. Even in present time, many ethnical Mayans live with the same customs, crafts and even calendars their ancestors did.

to:

The [[UsefulNotes/TheKingdomOfSpain Spanish]] conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Mexica Empire]], Empire]] aka the Aztec Empire, traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan jungles that offered too much work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest. The Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many several years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadores conquistadors than between them and the indigenous themselves.

In another Another divergent trait from the Mexicas, who were in the peak of their power, the [[UsefulNotes/PreColumbianCivilizations Mayans of the 16th century]] were a civilization in the last throes legs of its past glory, reaching the end of a decadence that it's [[RiddleForTheAges is still not well understood. This makes the most ironical the fact that they well-understood]]. All of this, ironically enough, would help the Mayans adapt better to Hispanic acculturation rule than their Mexica homologues, western neighbors, as their decentralized nature and little riches in comparison ensured that many pockets of Mayan culture here and there escaped notice through the years. would survive. Even in the present time, day, many ethnical ethnic Mayans live with the same customs, crafts language, and even calendars that their ancestors did.
did millennia ago.

Added: 142

Changed: 1740

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The Spanish conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Mexica Empire]], traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan jungles that offered too much work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest. The Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadores than between them and the indigenous themselves.

to:


The Spanish [[UsefulNotes/TheKingdomOfSpain Spanish]] conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Mexica Empire]], traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan jungles that offered too much work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest. The Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadores than between them and the indigenous themselves.



* ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresII'' features the conquest of the Mayans in its aptly named ''The Conquerors'' expansion pack.

to:

* ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresII'' features the conquest of the Mayans in its aptly named ''The Conquerors'' expansion pack.pack.
* In ''VideoGame/AmericanConquest'''s ExpansionPack ''Fight Back'', the Maya campaign covers details from the Spanish conquest of Yucatán.
----

Added: 19

Changed: 133

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


!!Conquistador wars

to:

!!Conquistador wars!!First battles



Meanwhile, Cortés sent back another of his trusted men, Luis Marín, to pacify the revolted Mayan land of Tabasco and to expand their domains to Chiapas. He battled there in two back-to-back expeditions, sometimes with the help of the allied Zinacantec tribe, but he found little reward due to the place's hostile climate and the elusive retreats of the Mayans, who often opted to just abandon their cities and flee. Upon his return, the pacifying effort of Tabasco was continued by the unexperienced Rodrigo Rangel, who faced harsh resistance and failed to capture the rebel leaders of Cimatan, and later by the veteran Bernal Díaz del Castillo (the author of the famed chronicle ''Literature/TheTrueHistoryOfTheConquestOfMexico''), who managed to punish the Cimatecs with a better prepared native army, although rebellion would spring back afterwards.

to:

Meanwhile, Cortés sent back another of his trusted men, Luis Marín, to pacify the revolted Mayan land of Tabasco and to expand their domains to Chiapas. He battled there in two back-to-back expeditions, sometimes with the help of the allied Zinacantec tribe, but he found little reward due to the place's hostile climate and the elusive retreats of the Mayans, who often opted to just abandon their cities and flee. Upon his return, the pacifying effort of Tabasco was continued by the unexperienced Rodrigo Rangel, who faced harsh resistance and failed to capture the rebel leaders of Cimatan, and later by the veteran Bernal Díaz del Castillo (the author of the famed chronicle ''Literature/TheTrueHistoryOfTheConquestOfMexico''), Creator/BernalDiazDelCastillo, who managed to punish the Cimatecs with a better prepared native army, although rebellion would spring back afterwards.
afterwards.

!!Conquistador wars



* ''Literature/TheTrueHistoryOfTheConquestOfMexico'' is a chronicle written by Bernal Díaz del Castillo, who was part of multiple battles against the Mayans and commanded an expedition.

to:

* ''Literature/TheTrueHistoryOfTheConquestOfMexico'' is a chronicle written by Bernal Díaz del Castillo, Creator/BernalDiazDelCastillo, who was part of multiple battles against the Mayans and commanded an expedition.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The Spanish conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Mexica Empire]], traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan jungles that offered too much work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest. The Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadores than between them and the indigenous themselves.

to:

The Spanish conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire Mexica Empire]], traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan jungles that offered too much work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest. The Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadores than between them and the indigenous themselves.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


At the same time, upon hearing of Gil González Dávila's successful conquests around the southern coast, Cortés sent yet another of his lieutenants, Cristóbal de Olid, to grab his piece of the cake. However, in a supply trip back to Cuba, Olid [[ShockingSwerve turned on]] Cortés, and was advised by their ArchEnemy Diego Velázquez to continue the expedition and take the new lands for himself. To make things worse, there were two other rival factions: Pedro Arias de Ávila, whose own lieutenant Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (not to confuse him with the late captain who explored México) was warring with González, and the entire Real Audiencia de Santo Domingo, which also claimed legal property. With the Mayan lands of modern-day Honduras turning into a battlefield, Cortés deployed his cousin Francisco de las Casas in a [[Film/ApocalypseNow Capt. Willard]]-like mission to solve the Olid problem, after which Hernán himself prepared an expedition with abundant Mexican warriors to join by land.

to:

At the same time, upon hearing of Gil González Dávila's successful conquests around the southern coast, Cortés sent yet another of his lieutenants, Cristóbal de Olid, to grab his piece of the cake. However, in a supply trip back to Cuba, Olid [[ShockingSwerve turned on]] on Cortés, and was advised by their ArchEnemy Diego Velázquez to continue the expedition and take the new lands for himself. To make things worse, there were two other rival factions: Pedro Arias de Ávila, whose own lieutenant Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (not to confuse him with the late captain who explored México) was warring with González, and the entire Real Audiencia de Santo Domingo, which also claimed legal property. With the Mayan lands of modern-day Honduras turning into a battlefield, Cortés deployed his cousin Francisco de las Casas in a [[Film/ApocalypseNow Capt. Willard]]-like mission to solve the Olid problem, after which Hernán himself prepared an expedition with abundant Mexican warriors to join by land.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None



to:

* The documentary ''Film/SpainTheFirstGlobalization'' mentions the conquest among its many points about Spanish history.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The Spanish conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Mexica Empire]], traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan Peninsula that offered too work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest. The Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadores than between them and the indigenous themselves.

In another divergent trait from the Mexicas, who were in the peak of their power, the [[UsefulNotes/PreColumbianCivilizations Mayans of the 16th century]] were a civilization in the last throes of its past glory, reaching the end of a decadence that it's still not well understood. This makes the most ironical the fact that they would adapt better to Spanish domination than their Mexicans homologues, as their decentralized nature and little riches in comparison ensured that many pockets of Mayan culture escaped notice here and there through the years. Even in present time, many ethnical Mayans live with the customs, crafts and even calendars their ancestors did.

to:

The Spanish conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Mexica Empire]], traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan Peninsula jungles that offered too much work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest. The Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Yucatan Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadores than between them and the indigenous themselves.

In another divergent trait from the Mexicas, who were in the peak of their power, the [[UsefulNotes/PreColumbianCivilizations Mayans of the 16th century]] were a civilization in the last throes of its past glory, reaching the end of a decadence that it's still not well understood. This makes the most ironical the fact that they would adapt better to Spanish domination Hispanic acculturation than their Mexicans Mexica homologues, as their decentralized nature and little riches in comparison ensured that many pockets of Mayan culture here and there escaped notice here and there through the years. Even in present time, many ethnical Mayans live with the same customs, crafts and even calendars their ancestors did.



Focused warfare on the Maya started immediately after the capture of the Mexica Empire in 1521. When it became widely known that Tenochtitlan had been conquered by UsefulNotes/HernanCortez and his entente of indigenous states, the Mayan tribes of Iximche and Q'umarkaj sent emissaries of friendship to him. However, Cortés heard by other Mayan informants that those tribes weren't trustworthy, and in fact were attacking Spanish-aligned natives, so he dispatched his lieutenant Pedro de Alvarado with the help of an army of Tlaxcaltecs and Cholultecs to right wrongs. Alvarado and company broke through with the usual combination of cavalry, western weapons and ruthless countertraps, and after ravaging Q'umarkaj, he convinced the Iximche people of the need to sincerely join his side. In 1524 founded the city of Santiago de los Caballeros, and their territory received further the name of Guatemala (meaning "forested land" in Nahuatl).

to:

Focused warfare on the Maya started immediately after the capture of the Mexica Empire in 1521. When it became widely known that Tenochtitlan had been conquered by UsefulNotes/HernanCortez and his entente of indigenous states, the Mayan tribes of Iximche and Q'umarkaj sent emissaries of friendship to him. However, Cortés heard by other Mayan informants that those tribes weren't trustworthy, and in fact were attacking Spanish-aligned natives, so he dispatched his lieutenant Pedro de Alvarado with the help of an army of Tlaxcaltecs and Cholultecs to right wrongs. Alvarado and company broke through with the usual combination of cavalry, western weapons and ruthless countertraps, and after ravaging Q'umarkaj, he convinced the Iximche people of the need to sincerely join his side. In 1524 founded the city of Santiago de los Caballeros, and their territory received further the name of Guatemala (meaning "forested land" in Nahuatl).



At the same time, upon hearing of Gil González Dávila's successful conquests around the southern coast, Cortés sent yet another of his lieutenants, Cristóbal de Olid, to grab his piece of the cake. However, in a supply trip back to Cuba, De Olid [[ShockingSwerve turned on]] Cortés, and was advised by their ArchEnemy Diego Velázquez to continue the expedition and take the new lands for himself. To make things worse, there were two other rivals: Pedro Arias de Ávila, whose own lieutenant Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (not to confuse him with the late captain who explored México) was warring with González, and the entire Real Audiencia de Santo Domingo, which also claimed legal property. With the Mayan lands of modern-day Honduras turning into a battlefield, Cortés deployed his cousin Francisco de las Casas in a [[Film/ApocalypseNow Capt. Willard]]-like mission to solve the trouble of De Olid, after which Hernán himself prepared an expedition with abundant Mexican warriors to join by land.

De las Casas lost most of his fleet to a series of storms, but he managed to arrive to find De Olid and González Dávila locked in combat. He capitalized on the chance to assault De Olid's forces, but yet another storm finished the Cortesian fleet, and De las Casas himself ended up captured along with González Dávila. In his moment of triumph, De Olid tried to extract loyalty from them and let them free, but the two captains became [[EnemyMine unlikely allies]] and found the chance to turn the camp against him. De Olid was killed in an attempt to escape, or sent back to Spain and beheaded, depending on the version. Only then Cortés arrived, having suffered his own string of bad luck in a tortuous expedition through Tabasco and Acalán, in which he signed up some alliances with Mayan tribes yet lost most of his expeditioners. After pacifying some Mayan revolts, he left the two in charge and made due in 1525.

to:

At the same time, upon hearing of Gil González Dávila's successful conquests around the southern coast, Cortés sent yet another of his lieutenants, Cristóbal de Olid, to grab his piece of the cake. However, in a supply trip back to Cuba, De Olid [[ShockingSwerve turned on]] Cortés, and was advised by their ArchEnemy Diego Velázquez to continue the expedition and take the new lands for himself. To make things worse, there were two other rivals: rival factions: Pedro Arias de Ávila, whose own lieutenant Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (not to confuse him with the late captain who explored México) was warring with González, and the entire Real Audiencia de Santo Domingo, which also claimed legal property. With the Mayan lands of modern-day Honduras turning into a battlefield, Cortés deployed his cousin Francisco de las Casas in a [[Film/ApocalypseNow Capt. Willard]]-like mission to solve the trouble of De Olid, Olid problem, after which Hernán himself prepared an expedition with abundant Mexican warriors to join by land.

De las Casas lost most of his fleet to a series of storms, but he managed to arrive to find De Olid and González Dávila locked in combat. He capitalized on the chance to assault De Olid's forces, but yet another storm finished the Cortesian fleet, and De las Casas himself ended up captured along with González Dávila. In his moment of triumph, De Olid tried to extract loyalty from them and let them free, but the two captains became [[EnemyMine unlikely allies]] and found the chance to turn the camp against him. De Olid was killed in an attempt to escape, or sent back to Spain and beheaded, depending on the version. Only then Cortés arrived, having suffered his own string of bad luck in a tortuous expedition through Tabasco and Acalán, in which he signed up some alliances with Mayan tribes yet lost most of his expeditioners. After pacifying some Mayan revolts, he left the two in charge and made due in 1525.



De Montejo and his son led a new expedition to Yucatán in 1537, accompanied now by his nephew, who was ''[[OneSteveLimit also]]'' named Francisco de Montejo. The conquest seemed to go smoothly the first years, as the powerful lord Tutul Xiu converted to Christianity and popularized peaceful adhesion around the western lands, but eastern tribes were still unconvinced, so Francisco the nephew was sent with orders to attract their friendship by the pen or the sword. Despite his efforts, an alliance of hostile states including the Cupul rose up in 1546 and attacked the Spaniards and their Mayan allies, requiring the three Franciscos de Montejo to team up and defeat them. The area was finally declared conquered, with many of the surviving rebels fleeing to the southern, densely forested lands of Petén. Those would not be attacked and conquered until the end of the 17th century, putting an end to the last rebel Mayan kingdom.

to:

De Montejo and his son led a new expedition to Yucatán in 1537, accompanied now by his nephew, who was ''[[OneSteveLimit also]]'' named Francisco de Montejo. The conquest seemed to go smoothly the first years, as the powerful lord Tutul Xiu converted to Christianity and popularized peaceful adhesion around the western lands, but eastern tribes were still unconvinced, so Francisco the nephew was sent with orders to attract their friendship by either the pen or the sword. Despite his efforts, an alliance of hostile states including the Cupul rose up in 1546 and attacked the Spaniards and their Mayan allies, requiring the three Franciscos de Montejo to team up and defeat them. The area was finally declared conquered, with many of the surviving rebels fleeing to the southern, densely forested lands of Petén. Those would not be attacked and conquered until the end of the 17th century, putting an end to the last rebel Mayan kingdom.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Spanish TV series ''Series/TheMinistryOfTime'', has an episode set during Cortés' expedition's arrival to the Mayan lands (though its portrayal of the Mayans themselves is more similar to of the stone age).

to:

* Spanish TV series ''Series/TheMinistryOfTime'', has an episode set during Cortés' expedition's arrival to the Mayan lands (though its portrayal of the Mayans themselves is more similar to that of the their stone age).

Added: 1135

Changed: -4

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


De Montejo and his son led a new expedition to Yucatán in 1537, accompanied now by his nephew, who was ''[[OneSteveLimit also]]'' named Francisco de Montejo. The conquest seemed to go smoothly the first years, as the powerful lord Tutul Xiu converted to Christianity and popularized peaceful adhesion around the western lands, but eastern tribes were still unconvinced, so Francisco the nephew was sent with orders to attract their friendship by the pen or the sword. Despite his efforts, an alliance of hostile states including the Cupul rose up in 1546 and attacked the Spaniards and their Mayan allies, requiring the three Franciscos de Montejo to team up and defeat them. The area was finally declared conquered, with many of the surviving rebels fleeing to the southern, densely forested lands of Petén. Those would not be attacked and conquered until the end of the 17th century, putting an end to the last rebel Mayan kingdom.

to:

De Montejo and his son led a new expedition to Yucatán in 1537, accompanied now by his nephew, who was ''[[OneSteveLimit also]]'' named Francisco de Montejo. The conquest seemed to go smoothly the first years, as the powerful lord Tutul Xiu converted to Christianity and popularized peaceful adhesion around the western lands, but eastern tribes were still unconvinced, so Francisco the nephew was sent with orders to attract their friendship by the pen or the sword. Despite his efforts, an alliance of hostile states including the Cupul rose up in 1546 and attacked the Spaniards and their Mayan allies, requiring the three Franciscos de Montejo to team up and defeat them. The area was finally declared conquered, with many of the surviving rebels fleeing to the southern, densely forested lands of Petén. Those would not be attacked and conquered until the end of the 17th century, putting an end to the last rebel Mayan kingdom.kingdom.

!!In fiction:

[[AC:{{Film}}]]
* The depressing conclusion of ''Film/{{Apocalypto}}'' features the arrival of Spanish conquerors, although this gets a bit downplayed given that the film is set in 1502, almost twenty years before any significant action.

[[AC:{{Literature}}]]
* ''Literature/TheTrueHistoryOfTheConquestOfMexico'' is a chronicle written by Bernal Díaz del Castillo, who was part of multiple battles against the Mayans and commanded an expedition.
* The ancient backstory of Creator/SteveAlten's ''Literature/{{Domain}}'' includes a characteristically stereotypical review of the Spanish conquest.
* Creator/CliveCussler's ''Literature/{{Serpent}}'' features a plot rooted in the contacts between Mayans and Spaniards before the latter supposedly exterminated them.

[[AC:LiveActionTV]]
* Spanish TV series ''Series/TheMinistryOfTime'', has an episode set during Cortés' expedition's arrival to the Mayan lands (though its portrayal of the Mayans themselves is more similar to of the stone age).

[[AC:VideoGames]]
* ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresII'' features the conquest of the Mayans in its aptly named ''The Conquerors'' expansion pack.

Added: 1138

Changed: 987

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tlaxcalamayans.gif]]
[[caption-width-right:350:Spaniards and Tlaxcaltecs vs. Mayans. From the ''Lienzo de Tlaxcala'', painted by the latter.]]



Six years later, De Montejo and his son led a new expedition to Yucatán, accompanied now by his nephew, who was ''[[OneSteveLimit also]]'' named Francisco de Montejo. The conquest seemed to go smoothly the first years, as the powerful lord Tutul Xiu converted to Christianity and popularized peaceful adhesion around the western lands, but eastern tribes were still unconvinced, so Francisco the nephew was sent with orders to attract their friendship by the pen or the sword. Despite his efforts, an alliance of hostile states including the Cupul rose up in 1546 and attacked the Spaniards and their Mayan allies, requiring the three Franciscos de Montejo to team up and defeat them. The area was finally declared conquered, with many of the surviving rebels fleeing to the southern, densely forested lands of Petén. Those would not be attacked and conquered until the end of the 17th century, putting an end to the last rebel Mayan kingdom.

to:

Six years later, Gonzalo Guerrero, one of the two Spaniards that [[GoingNative went native]] and were found by Cortés, would die in 1532 or 1536 helping the Mayans of Chectumal resist against the Spanish armies, faithful to the end to the society that had adopted him.

De Montejo and his son led a new expedition to Yucatán, Yucatán in 1537, accompanied now by his nephew, who was ''[[OneSteveLimit also]]'' named Francisco de Montejo. The conquest seemed to go smoothly the first years, as the powerful lord Tutul Xiu converted to Christianity and popularized peaceful adhesion around the western lands, but eastern tribes were still unconvinced, so Francisco the nephew was sent with orders to attract their friendship by the pen or the sword. Despite his efforts, an alliance of hostile states including the Cupul rose up in 1546 and attacked the Spaniards and their Mayan allies, requiring the three Franciscos de Montejo to team up and defeat them. The area was finally declared conquered, with many of the surviving rebels fleeing to the southern, densely forested lands of Petén. Those would not be attacked and conquered until the end of the 17th century, putting an end to the last rebel Mayan kingdom.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

The Spanish conquest of the Mayans in the 16th century was a slow, gradual affair that lasted until the next century in its entirety. Compared to the power and iron-handed reign of the [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfMexico Mexica Empire]], traits that made it both appetizing to conquer and easy to decapitate, the Mayans were a loose conjunction of states spread around the Yucatan Peninsula that offered too work and too little interest to earn a full-on campaign of conquest. The Spaniards made contact with them at multiple points during a span of many years, sometimes entirely by accident due to the Peninsula's closeness to the Spanish homebase of Cuba, and expeditions and conquering efforts were carried on sparsely, often featuring more action between rivaling conquistadores than between them and the indigenous themselves.

In another divergent trait from the Mexicas, who were in the peak of their power, the [[UsefulNotes/PreColumbianCivilizations Mayans of the 16th century]] were a civilization in the last throes of its past glory, reaching the end of a decadence that it's still not well understood. This makes the most ironical the fact that they would adapt better to Spanish domination than their Mexicans homologues, as their decentralized nature and little riches in comparison ensured that many pockets of Mayan culture escaped notice here and there through the years. Even in present time, many ethnical Mayans live with the customs, crafts and even calendars their ancestors did.

!!Conquistador wars
Focused warfare on the Maya started immediately after the capture of the Mexica Empire in 1521. When it became widely known that Tenochtitlan had been conquered by UsefulNotes/HernanCortez and his entente of indigenous states, the Mayan tribes of Iximche and Q'umarkaj sent emissaries of friendship to him. However, Cortés heard by other Mayan informants that those tribes weren't trustworthy, and in fact were attacking Spanish-aligned natives, so he dispatched his lieutenant Pedro de Alvarado with the help of an army of Tlaxcaltecs and Cholultecs to right wrongs. Alvarado and company broke through with the usual combination of cavalry, western weapons and ruthless countertraps, and after ravaging Q'umarkaj, he convinced the Iximche people of the need to sincerely join his side. In 1524 founded the city of Santiago de los Caballeros, and their territory received further the name of Guatemala (meaning "forested land" in Nahuatl).

Meanwhile, Cortés sent back another of his trusted men, Luis Marín, to pacify the revolted Mayan land of Tabasco and to expand their domains to Chiapas. He battled there in two back-to-back expeditions, sometimes with the help of the allied Zinacantec tribe, but he found little reward due to the place's hostile climate and the elusive retreats of the Mayans, who often opted to just abandon their cities and flee. Upon his return, the pacifying effort of Tabasco was continued by the unexperienced Rodrigo Rangel, who faced harsh resistance and failed to capture the rebel leaders of Cimatan, and later by the veteran Bernal Díaz del Castillo (the author of the famed chronicle ''Literature/TheTrueHistoryOfTheConquestOfMexico''), who managed to punish the Cimatecs with a better prepared native army, although rebellion would spring back afterwards.

At the same time, upon hearing of Gil González Dávila's successful conquests around the southern coast, Cortés sent yet another of his lieutenants, Cristóbal de Olid, to grab his piece of the cake. However, in a supply trip back to Cuba, De Olid [[ShockingSwerve turned on]] Cortés, and was advised by their ArchEnemy Diego Velázquez to continue the expedition and take the new lands for himself. To make things worse, there were two other rivals: Pedro Arias de Ávila, whose own lieutenant Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (not to confuse him with the late captain who explored México) was warring with González, and the entire Real Audiencia de Santo Domingo, which also claimed legal property. With the Mayan lands of modern-day Honduras turning into a battlefield, Cortés deployed his cousin Francisco de las Casas in a [[Film/ApocalypseNow Capt. Willard]]-like mission to solve the trouble of De Olid, after which Hernán himself prepared an expedition with abundant Mexican warriors to join by land.

De las Casas lost most of his fleet to a series of storms, but he managed to arrive to find De Olid and González Dávila locked in combat. He capitalized on the chance to assault De Olid's forces, but yet another storm finished the Cortesian fleet, and De las Casas himself ended up captured along with González Dávila. In his moment of triumph, De Olid tried to extract loyalty from them and let them free, but the two captains became [[EnemyMine unlikely allies]] and found the chance to turn the camp against him. De Olid was killed in an attempt to escape, or sent back to Spain and beheaded, depending on the version. Only then Cortés arrived, having suffered his own string of bad luck in a tortuous expedition through Tabasco and Acalán, in which he signed up some alliances with Mayan tribes yet lost most of his expeditioners. After pacifying some Mayan revolts, he left the two in charge and made due in 1525.

!!Hungry jungles
Upon returning to México, Cortés was informed the Tabasco Mayans had revolted one more time, so he sent Juan de Vallecillo, who found [[AllYourBaseAreBelongToUs the local Spanish headquarters destroyed]] and its occupants surviving desperately in the mountains. Vallecillo pushed the rebels back and rebuilt things by sheer hard work, but he died of illness in 1527 and had to be replaced by Baltasar de Osorio. The same year, the Spaniards expanded to the Chiapas highlands under the aristocratic Diego Mazariegos, but the Mayan jungles were still disrupting exploration and conquest with its continuous revolts: Mazariegos struggled to maintain control, and even Francisco de Montejo and Alonso de Ávila, both of them Cortesian veterans who just returned from making conquests in alliance to local chieftain Nahum Pat, only obtained gradual success upon replacing Vallecillo, as the Mayans still revolted again right after being submitted.

1529 also saw the continuation of the conflict in Guatemala, as two unconquered Mayan tribes, the Ixil and Uspantecs, harassed indigenous allies of the Spanish. A coalition of those led by Gaspar Arias would climb to the Sierra de los Cuchumatanes to counter the threat, but the ill-fated attack of another unexperienced lieutenant, Pedro de Olmos, crashed the entire expedition. A second effort by Francisco de Castellanos the following, though, would finally capture Uspantan and end the banditry. However, being a mountainous land with little gold and such, the rest of the Cuchumatanes indigenous would remain independent for almost two centuries, with Spanish control being only established 1696 out of a desire to connect provinces separated by their territory.

In 1531, Alonso de Ávila and Francisco de Montejo, helped by the latter's son, also named Francisco, initiated from Tabasco the conquest and settlement of northern Yucatán. Although the Mayan states of Xiu, Chel and Pech allied with them, others like the Canul, would have to be submitted by war. The Cupul state, famous by the city of Chichén Itzá, feigned alliance with Francisco Jr before trying to murder him, after which they threatened an attack that made the Spaniards retire quietly to take refuge in the allied lands. As the more successful UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheIncaEmpire had started grabbing the attention of the soldiers, and due to a legal struggle between Francisco Sr and Pedro de Alvarado, no action of punishment was taken, and the Montejos returned to México in 1534, leaving a handful of cities built.

Six years later, De Montejo and his son led a new expedition to Yucatán, accompanied now by his nephew, who was ''[[OneSteveLimit also]]'' named Francisco de Montejo. The conquest seemed to go smoothly the first years, as the powerful lord Tutul Xiu converted to Christianity and popularized peaceful adhesion around the western lands, but eastern tribes were still unconvinced, so Francisco the nephew was sent with orders to attract their friendship by the pen or the sword. Despite his efforts, an alliance of hostile states including the Cupul rose up in 1546 and attacked the Spaniards and their Mayan allies, requiring the three Franciscos de Montejo to team up and defeat them. The area was finally declared conquered, with many of the surviving rebels fleeing to the southern, densely forested lands of Petén. Those would not be attacked and conquered until the end of the 17th century, putting an end to the last rebel Mayan kingdom.

Top