New Spain, Mexico
The Culture of New Spain: the Rise and Fall of Mexico
The conquest of New Spain defined contemporary Mexican culture to a great degree. But that conquest has been ongoing and did not stop with the conquistadors and the implementation of Catholicism and Spanish customs in Mexico. From the time Columbus brought the Spanish flag to the West Indies (1492) to the 19th century, New Spain was informed by a Catholic culture and the Mexican Aztec culture was suppressed. In the 19th century onward, the Spanish Catholic culture began to be dominated by the American liberal culture of the United States. The glories of New Spain were lost in revolts and revolutions. The Cristero War of the 20th century proved a major turning point in the battle between New Spain's ideals and 20th century liberalism. The conquest of New Spain by the conquistadors brought many new influences into Mexico -- but so too did the infiltration of Mexico by the United States, which had by the 19th century surpassed Mexico in terms of Industrial and military strength. A new era had begun, a new power shift taken place. The Aztec Empire was conquered by the Spanish Empire, the Spanish Empire in New Spain was conquered by the United States Empire in the 20th century (Stone, Kuznick). This paper will show how at the end of the 16th century Mexico was one of the most powerful civilizations in the West, yet by the 20th it was being ruled by a puppet regime whose strings were pulled by the great nation which had arisen in the north.
Spain and Tenochtitlan
The roots of New Spain grew out of Imperial Spain, which was at its height in days of Queen Isabella. Spain itself had grown out of the Castilian kingdom and the Muslim invasion in the Middle Ages. Spaniards spoke Castile and were Roman Catholic in belief (rather than Muslim). Everywhere the Spanish Empire expanded, the religion of the Spanish Empire took root -- whether in the Philippines or in New Spain (Mexico).
With the death of Isabella, the Spanish Empire began a slow decline. Its power and glory extended all across the globe, but its wealth was diminishing. Nonetheless, Spain's influence in Mexico was just beginning to be felt. This influence had many facets. It reshaped the culture of Mexico for a great long time. But it also dealt with various conflicts within that time. Some of the conflicts had to do with the Aztec culture it replaced.
The Aztecs had founded Mexico City in 1325. To them it was known as Tenochtitlan. By the time the conquistadors arrived in the early 16th century, the Aztecs had developed an Empire which stretched from the Pacific coast to the Gulf of Mexico. The Aztecs reigned supreme in this area -- but the Aztec empire had its own problems, problems which the leading conquistador Hernando Cortes was able to use to his advantage, when he landed in Mexico in 1519.
Conquest
The actual history of the conquest of the Aztec Empire is difficult to relate for the fact that so many differing accounts exist -- that and the fact that reports to Imperial Spain were often designed to make events look more favorable (Fitch). By most accounts, however, the invading Spanish conquistadors were taken as gods by the Aztecs, led by Montezuma. While this may be a simplistic rendering of historical detail, it does provide an insight into what was surely a disproportionate match of strength between Aztec and Spanish.
Cortes and his soldiers were welcomed into the Aztec Empire by Montezuma, who showed them his temples, built in honor of their divinities. Catholic priests were with Cortes and the Spanish displayed small amount of reverence to what they surely would have considered "devils." In fact, it is most likely that Cortes and his men displeased Montezuma with their lack of respect for what the Aztecs considered to be sacred. Here was a major conflict between the two meeting cultures: the Aztecs viewed the divine in a much different light than the Catholic Spanish. It was part of Cortes plan to conquer the Aztec Empire by instituting the religion of his land -- Catholicism (Pratt-Chadwick 41).
While the Aztec Empire was plenty strong, it was not exactly what might be called a "unified" empire. Also, the Aztec culture suffered detrimentally from the practice of human sacrifice. Cortes had hoped that he could peacefully wrest control of the land from Montezuma without resorting to war. His plan rested on the implementation of the Catholic religion....
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