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The Conquest of Yucatán: Francisco de Montejo's Grueling War
Description
Francisco de Montejo, a veteran of Cortés's invasion, spent over two decades trying to conquer the Maya of the Yucatán Peninsula. Unlike the Aztecs or Inca, the Maya had no central emperor to decapitate. Montejo's first expedition (1527-1528) ended in disaster as Maya warriors harassed his forces through the jungle. His son, Francisco de Montejo el Mozo, took over and eventually established Spanish strongholds at Campeche and Mérida in the 1540s using a divide-and-conquer strategy. The conquest was complicated by the region's geography, Maya resistance led by the Xiu and Cocom families, and the Spanish inability to find gold. This episode explores the brutal, grinding war on the Yucatán, the founding of Mérida atop the Maya city of T'ho, and the encomienda system that followed. We discuss the role of Nahua allies, the infamous 'pacification' campaigns, and how the Maya endured through cultural adaptation.