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Today In History - November 8

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Featured event for the day:

1519 The first meeting of Montezuma and Hernando Cortes in Mexico…
His full name and title are Hernán Cortés, Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca, but he is known and remembered as Hernando Cortes (1485-1547). History bounces back and forth on whether or not this was a good guy, or a bad guy – it depends on who you read, and the perspective you choose. No doubt, Cortes will always have a place in history due to his exploration efforts, but his largest act was what guaranteed that he'd never be forgotten: he destroyed the magnificent Aztec people, artifacts, and culture.

Cortes was a horrible record keeper, so many of the closer details of his exploits are not known. His interactions with the Aztecs are really all most are interested. One rarely hears about the suspected murder of his wife, or his illegitimate children, for example. In 1519 Cortes had his first meeting with Montezuma, ruler of the highly advanced Aztecs. The Aztecs were quite rich with gold, but did not see the gold as worth that much – Cortes et al did. In 1521 a smallpox plague, brought by the Europeans, wiped out a significant portion of the Aztecs. Shortly thereafter, in their grossly diminished condition, the Aztecs were destroyed and their city destroyed. Surely the worst event in the ultimate demise of the Aztecs is "the massacre in the Main Temple, Tenochtitlán." Two accounts of this horrific incident are included: one from the Aztec perspective, the other from the Spanish point of view. No matter what, the loss of the Aztec culture was a loss to the world.


Famous Persons Born on This Date in History

1572 Johan Sigismund
1590 Francesco Gonzaga
1592 Domenico Mazzocchi
1622 Galenus Abrahamsz de Haen
1622 Karl X Gustaf, King of Sweden
1647 Pierre Bayle
1656 Edmund Halley (Halley's Comet)
1657 Thomas Bullis
1693 Leonhard Trautsch
1770 Friedrich Witt
1772 William Wirt
1785 Friedrich Wilhelm Michael Kalkbrenner
1829 Samuel Wylie Crawford
1830 Oliver Otis Howard
1831 Edward Bulwer-Lytton
1850 Karel Komzak
1854 Jean Reville
1882 Lazare Saminsky
1883 Arnold Edward Trevor Bax
1883 Ethel Clayton
1887 Yury Alexandrovich Shaporin
1888 David Monrad Johansen
1893 John Miljan
1895 Hermann Schey
1896 Bucky Harris
1897 Dorothy Day
1900 Georges Lonque
1900 Margaret Mitchell
1900 Mihailo Vukdragovic
1901 Gheorge Gheorghiu Dej
1901 Szymon Laks
1905 Richard Nicholson
1907 Otto Brenner
1908 Martha Gellhorn
1909 Alberto Erede
1909 Katharine Hepburn
1912 Jean-Louis Martinet
1912 Joseph Fattorini
1913 Robert Strauss
1914 Norman Lloyd
1916 Frank McGuire
1916 June Havoc
1916 Peter Weiss
1921 Douglas Townsend
1921 Gene Saks
1921 Jerome Hines
1922 Christiaan Barnard
1922 Esther Rolle
1923 Dmitri T. Jazov
1924 Joe Flynn
1927 Patti Page
1929 Ken Dodd
1929 Trevor McMahon
1930 Bob Harris
1930 Edmund Happold
1931 Morley Safer
1932 Richard E. Lawyer
1932 Stephane Audran
1934 Roberta Hazard
1935 Alain Delon
1936 Edward George Gibson
1936 Viscount Mountgarret
1938 John Asprey
1938 Pleuni Touw
1938 Richard Stoker
1942 Aleksandr Yakovlevich Kramarenko
1942 Gerald Alston
1943 Martin Peters
1944 Bonnie Bramlett
1944 Rodney Desborough Slater
1945 Arnold Rosner
1945 David Jessel
1945 Judith Lang Zaimont
1945 Roy Wood
1945 Tony Mann
1947 Margaret Rhea Seddon
1947 Minnie Ripperton
1948 Dale A. Gardner
1949 Al Berger
1949 Bonnie Raitt
1951 Larry Burnette
1951 Mary Hart
1952 Christie Ann Hefner
1952 Jan Raas
1954 Rickie Lee Jones
1956 Beverly Klass
1956 Randi Brooks
1957 Yohan Gunasekera
1958 Terry Lee Miall
1959 Simon Davis
1961 Leif Garrett
1962 Ron Johnson
1963 Dwight Smith
1963 Paul Butcher
1964 Chuck Cecil
1965 Bart Latuheru
1965 Jeff Blauser
1965 Mike Peluso
1966 Michael Soles
1966 Ulrich Cruden
1967 Courtney Thorne-Smith
1967 Henry Rodriguez
1967 Jay Taylor
1967 Kim Dugger
1967 Mark Zollitsch
1967 Rhonda Kottke
1968 Jose Offerman
1968 Keith Jones
1968 Michelle Kline
1968 Parker Posey
1969 Devon McDonald
1969 Ricardo McDonald
1970 Qadry Ismail
1971 Anna Katrina Simcic
1971 Twan Scheepers
1972 Chris Fydler
1972 Ken Blackman
1973 Frantisek Kaberle
1973 Nicole Teter
1973 Tara Johnson
1975 Brevin Knight
1976 Brett Lee

On This Date in History

392 Emperor Theodosius declares the Christian religion as the state religion
618 St. Deusdedit I ends his reign as the Catholic Pope
911 Duke Koenraad I chosen the German King
1322 Pope John XXII names John van Diest the Bishop of Utrecht
1494 Uprising against Piero de' Medici in Florence, Italy
1519 The first meeting of Montezuma and Hernando Cortes in Mexico
1575 The French Roman Catholics and the Huguenots sign treaty
1598 Spanish troops under the command of Bernardino de Mendoza conquer Doetinchem
1620 Battle of White Mountain
1627 The English fleet under George Villiers leaves Rhe
1638 Anne Hutchinson is banished from Massachusetts
1658 Battle of Sont
1701 William Penn presents the Charter of Privileges
1731 In Philadelphia, Benjamin Franklin opens the first U.S. library
1734 Cook Vincent la Chapelle forms the Free Masons Lodge
1789 Bourbon Whiskey is first distilled from corn by Elijah Craig in Bourbon, Kentucky
1793 The Louvre in Paris opens
1805 Lewis and Clark reach the Pacific Ocean
1833 A Train derails at Hightstown, NJ killing two people
1837 Mount Holyoke Seminary opens
1842 Belgium King Leopold I establishes child labor laws
1861 Battle of Mount Ivy
1861 The US removes Confederate officials from the British steamer Trent
1864 Abraham Lincoln is elected to his 2nd term as president
1870 A Democratic governor is elected in Tennessee
1880 Sarah Bernhardt made her U.S. debut at New York's Booth Theater
1889 Montana admitted as a US state
1892 Grover Cleveland is elected president
1895 Wilhelm Roentgen discovers X-rays
1900 Theodore Dreiser's novel "Sister Carrie" is published
1904 President Theodore Roosevelt defeats Alton B. Parker
1910 The first Washington State election in which women could vote
1917 The People's Commissars gives authority to Lenin, Trotsky, and Stalin
1917 The Telephone Company runs its first ad for Army operators and gets 7,000 applicants
1923 Hitler stages an unsuccessful "Beer Hall Putsch" in Munchen
1924 Austria chancellor Ignaz Seipel resigns after an assassination attempt
1924 The Fortune Theatre opens in London
1926 George Gershwin's musical "Oh, Kay," premieres in New York City
1928 George and Ira Gershwin's musical "Treasure Girl," premieres in New York City
1932 Franklin Delano Roosevelt is elected the 32nd president - for first time
1933 Franklin D. Roosevelt creates the Civil Works Administration
1939 A failed assassination attempt on Hitler in Burgerbraukeller, Munich
1940 The RAF bombs Munich
1942 The Allies, under Eisenhower, land in Casablanca
1942 Hitler proclaims the fall of Stalingrad from a Munich beer hall
1942 Operation "Torch" began
1942 Vichy-France ends diplomatic relations with the US
1944 25,000 Hungarian Jews are 'loaned' to the Nazis for forced labor
1944 Last German troops at Walcheren surrender
1945 A riverboat sinks off of Hong Kong coast and kills 1,550 people
1950 The first jet-plane battle occurs over Korean
1956 The U.N. demands that the U.S.S.R. leave Hungary
1957 Great Britain performs an atmospheric nuclear test at Christmas Island
1960 John F. Kennedy beats VP Richard Nixon in the election for the 35th U.S. president
1962 The Canadian government orders changing their nickel back to round shape
1964 The IMF grants Great Britain a credit of $1 billion
1965 "Days of Our Lives" premieres on TV
1965 The British Indian Ocean Territory formed
1966 Actor Ronald Reagan is elected the Governor of California
1966 Edward W Brooke becomes the first black elected to the Senate
1966 Frank Robinson wins MVP
1967 Silver hits a record high of $1.951 an ounce in London
1967 The U.S. performs nuclear tests at Nevada Test Site
1968 Cynthia Lennon is granted a divorce from husband John
1973 Nevada approves pari-mutuel betting on Jai Alai
1974 British Lord Lucan disappears
1979 ABC broadcasts "Iran Crisis: American Held Hostage"
1980 Voyager 1 space probe discovers the 15th moon of Saturn
1983 Martha Layne Collins is elected the first female governor of Kentucky
1983 W. Wilson Goode is elected the first black mayor of Philadelphia
1984 Anna Fisher becomes first the "mom" to go into orbit
1987 11 people die from a bomb planted by Irish Republican Army explodes
1987 Yuko Moriguchi wins the LPGA Mazda Japan Golf Classic
1988 900 people die from an earthquake in China
1988 George Bush beats Mike Dukakis for the US presidency
1988 Rafael Fernandez Colon is elected if President of Puerto Rico
1989 Douglas Wilder is elected the first U.S. black governor
1990 100,000 additional U.S. troops are sent to the Persian Gulf
1990 Gina Marie Tolleson of the USA is crowned 40th Miss World
1990 Saddam Hussein fires his army chief and threatens to destroy the Arabian Peninsula
1991 The Carol Burnette Show premieres on CBS-TV
1992 Betsy King wins the LPGA Mazda Japan Golf Classic
1994 Haitian government of Smarck Michel is formed

End Notes:

This is part of the Aztec account of the incident…
Here it is told how the Spaniards killed, they murdered the Mexicas who were celebrating the Fiesta of Huitzilopochtli in the place they called The Patio of the Gods

At this time, when everyone was enjoying the fiesta, when everyone was already dancing, when everyone was already singing, when song was linked to song and the songs roared like waves, in that precise moment the Spaniards determined to kill people. They came into the patio, armed for battle.

They came to close the exits, the steps, the entrances [to the patio]: The Gate of the Eagle in the smallest palace, The Gate of the Canestalk and the Gate of the Snake of Mirrors. And when they had closed them, no one could get out anywhere.

Once they had done this, they entered the Sacred Patio to kill people. They came on foot, carrying swords and wooden and metal shields. Immediately, they surrounded those who danced, then rushed to the place where the drums were played. They attacked the man who was drumming and cut off both his arms. Then they cut off his head [with such a force] that it flew off, falling far away.

At that moment, they then attacked all the people, stabbing them, spearing them, wounding them with their swords. They struck some from behind, who fell instantly to the ground with their entrails hanging out [of their bodies]. They cut off the heads of some and smashed the heads of others into little pieces.

They struck others in the shoulders and tore their arms from their bodies. They struck some in the thighs and some in the calves. They slashed others in the abdomen and their entrails fell to the earth. There were some who even ran in vain, but their bowels spilled as they ran; they seemed to get their feet entangled with their own entrails. Eager to flee, they found nowhere to go.

Some tried to escape, but the Spaniards murdered them at the gates while they laughed. Others climbed the walls, but they could not save themselves. Others entered the communal house, where they were safe for awhile. Others lay down among the victims and pretended to be dead. But if they stood up again they [the Spaniards] would see them and kill them.

The blood of the warriors ran like water as they ran, forming pools, which widened, as the smell of blood and entrails fouled the air.

And the Spaniards walked everywhere, searching the communal houses to kill those who were hiding. They ran everywhere, they searched every place.

When people outside the Sacred Patio learned of the massacre, shouting began, "Captains, Mexicas, come here quickly! Come here with all arms, spears, and shields! Our captains have been murdered! Our warriors have been slain! Oh Mexica captains, [our warriors] have been annihilated!"

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Then a roar was heard, screams, people wailed, as they beat their palms against their lips. Quickly the captains assembled, as if planned in advance, and carried their spears and shields. Then the battle began. The Mexicas attacked them with arrows and even javelins, including small javelins used for hunting birds. They furiously hurled their javelins at the Spaniards. It was as if a layer of yellow canes spread over the Spaniards.

This is the Spaniards' account of the incident…
Cortés wanted to entirely understand the cause of the Indians' rebellion. He interrogated them [the Spaniards] altogether. Some said it was caused by the message sent by Narváez, others because the people wanted to toss the Spaniards out of Mexico [Tenochtitlan], which had been planned as soon as the ships had arrived, because while they were fighting they shouted "Get out!" at them. Others said it was to liberate Moctezuma, for they fought saying, "Free our god and King if you don't want to die!" Still others said it was to steal the gold, silver, and jewels that the Spaniards had, because they heard the Indians say, "Here you shall leave the gold that you have taken!" Again, some said it was to keep the Tlaxcalans and other mortal enemies out of Mexico. Finally, many believed that taking their idols as gods, they had given themselves to the devil.

Any of these things would have been enough to cause the rebellion, not to mention all of them together. But the principal one was that a few days after Cortéz left to confront Narváez, it became time for a festival the Mexicas wanted to celebrate in their traditional way. . . . They begged Pedro de Alvarado to give them his permission, so [the Spaniards] wouldn't think that they planned to kill them. Alvarado consented provided that there were no sacrifices, no people killed, and no one had weapons.

More than 600 gentlemen and several lords gathered in the yard of the largest temple; some said there were more than a thousand there. They made a lot of noise with their drums, shells, bugles, and hendidos, which sounded like a loud whistle. Preparing their festival, they were naked, but covered with precious stones, pearls, necklaces, belts, bracelets, many jewels of gold, silver, and mother-of-pearl, wearing very rich feathers on their heads. They performed a dance called the mazeualiztli, which is called that because it is a holiday from work [symbolized by the word for farmer, macehaulli]. . . . They laid mats in the patio of the temple and played drums on them. They danced in circles, holding hands, to the music of the singers, to which they responded.

The songs were sacred, and not profane, and were sung to praise the god honored in the festival, to induce him to provide water and grain, health, and victory, or to thank him for healthy children and other things. And those who knew the language and these ceremonial rites said that when the people danced in the temples, they perform very different from those who danced the netoteliztli, in voice, movement of the body, head, arms, and feet, by which they manifested their concepts of good and evil. The Spaniards called this dance, an areito, a word they brought from the islands of Cuba and Santo Domingo.

While the Mexica gentlemen were dancing in the temple yard of Vitcilopuchtli [Huitzilopochtli], Pedro de Alvarado went there. Whether on [the basis of] his own opinion or in an agreement decided by everyone, I don't know, but some say he had been warned that the Indian nobles of the city had assembled to plot the mutiny and the rebellion, which they later carried out; others, believe that [the Spaniards] went to watch them perform this famous and praised dance, and seeing how rich they were and wanting the gold the Indians were wearing, he [Alvarado] covered each of the entrances with ten or twelve Spaniards and went inside with more than fifty [Spaniards], and without remorse and lacking any Christian piety, they brutally stabbed and killed the Indians, and took what they were wearing.

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