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Cortés and the Tribute System: How Indigenous Wealth Funded Conquest
Description
In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Spanish conquest of Mesoamerica was financed not by Spanish gold but by Indigenous tribute networks. They trace the Mexica tribute system—recorded in the Matrícula de Tributos—which funneled cacao, cotton, maize, and jade from 38 provinces into Tenochtitlan. After 1521, Cortés repurposed these same mechanisms through encomiendas, demanding labor and goods from native communities to fund expeditions into Oaxaca, Michoacán, and beyond. The discussion highlights figures like Moctezuma Xocoyotzin, Cuauhtémoc, and the cihuacoatl Tlacaelel, whose administrative genius was co-opted by the conquerors. The episode also touches on the tribute's human cost: macehualtin forced to produce for both native lords and Spanish encomenderos, leading to famine and rebellion. A detailed look at one province, Tochtepec, reveals how a single region supplied rubber, feathers, and warriors—first for the Aztec Empire, then for Cortés.