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  1. Jul 30, 2024 · Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like Who conquered the Aztecs in 1525?, What happened on September 16, 1810?, How many years did the Spanish control Mexico? and more.

  2. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like what is the name of the priest that led the mexican independence movement in 1810?, what does mestizo mean?, what is the grito de dolores? and more.

  3. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like september 16 1810, What region were the mayans prominant, What were mayan accomplishments and more.

    • Overview
    • First read: preview and skimming for gist
    • Second read: key ideas and understanding content
    • Third read: evaluating and corroborating
    • Religious Syncretism in Colonial Mexico City
    • Gods on boats
    • Layers of belief in Mexico City
    • Strategies of conversion
    • Indigenous strategies
    • Basílica de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe

    The article below uses “Three Close Reads”. If you want to learn more about this strategy, click here.

    Before you read the article, you should skim it first. The skim should be very quick and give you the gist (general idea) of what the article is about. You should be looking at the title, author, headings, pictures, and opening sentences of paragraphs for the gist.

    Now that you’ve skimmed the article, you should preview the questions you will be answering. These questions will help you get a better understanding of the concepts and arguments that are presented in the article. Keep in mind that when you read the article, it is a good idea to write down any vocab you see in the article that is unfamiliar to you.

    By the end of the second close read, you should be able to answer the following questions:

    1.What is the difference between Spanish conquistadors and missionaries?

    2.What were some reasons the Spanish were so eager to get people to convert?

    3.What were some strategies used by the Spanish to try to convert the indigenous population?

    4.What were some things that motivated some Aztecs to convert?

    Finally, here are some questions that will help you focus on why this article matters and how it connects to other content you’ve studied.

    At the end of the third read, you should be able to respond to these questions:

    1.This article focuses on how religious syncretism shaped communities. What are some ways that networks likely played a role in the conversion of Mesoamerican indigenous communities?

    2.This article makes the point that the Columbian Exchange wasn’t just a biological exchange but also a cultural exchange. Can you think of any ways that the biological exchange of plants, animals, and people also created cultural shifts in different parts of the world?

    By Bennett Sherry

    After Spanish conquistadors sacked the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlán in 1521, they tried to convert Mexico City's indigenous people to a new religion. Results were mixed.

    The Columbian Exchange was a system in which plants, animals, people, and diseases were sent across oceans, transforming societies all over the globe. But the Columbian Exchange wasn't just biological. It was also a cultural exchange. When people sailed across oceans, they carried more than what was in the ship's cargo hold. They brought their gods with them.

    Millions of people made the voyage across the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas. Many were forced. Many others came as colonizers seeking to impose their way of life―and beliefs―on those they encountered. But this wasn't a one-way cultural exchange. Religious syncretism is when different belief systems from two or more places blend to create something new. In this article, we'll explore one part of the cultural exchange that took place after 1500: the Spanish conversion of Mexico City's indigenous people. Though the Spanish conquerors sought to force conversions, the processes of religious syncretism were much more complex. How did Christianity change Mexico City? How did Mexico City change Christianity?

    Below is a picture of the Plaza del Zócalo in Mexico City. That big church is the Metropolitan Cathedral, a center of Mexican Catholicism. But this square was once also the center of the Aztec religion. Just across the street from the Cathedral lie the ruins of Templo Mayor, the most important temple in the Aztec capital Tenochtitlán. This one area...

    The Spanish conquistador, Hernán Cortés, sacked Tenochtitlán in 1521, dismantling the city's temples and pyramids and renaming it Mexico City. Historians often describe the motivations of the Spanish conquistadors as "Gold, God, and Glory." They sought to win treasure, spread Christianity, and bring glory to themselves and the Spanish Empire. Let's focus on the second "G"—God.

    The pope, as leader of the Catholic religion, played a large role in European politics in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The Spanish were able to get the pope's support for colonial expansion by promising to convert Indigenous Americans to Catholicism. Spanish efforts to convert indigenous peoples launched a process of conquest, resistance, and negotiation that would last for centuries.

    Soon after Cortés defeated the Aztecs, Catholic missionaries arrived in Mexico. Missionaries are people who travel to foreign places to promote their religion and try to convert people to it. One of the top priorities for the Spanish was Christian conversion. They worried that people would rally around indigenous priests and their religious symbols to organize revolts. Thus, Spaniards burned the temples, symbols, and books of the Aztec and other indigenous peoples. Often, when they tore down a temple, Spanish missionaries built a Catholic church over its ruins, using the stones of dismantled pyramids.

    The early years of the Spanish conquest were brutal. The Spanish not only forced their religion, but they also forced people into slavery, tore families apart, and killed those who resisted. This started a cycle of indigenous resistance and Spanish violence. Indigenous peoples also watched millions in their communities die from European diseases that their immune systems were not prepared to fight. The Spanish, who had stronger immunities to the diseases they brought, had a lower mortality rate. This led many indigenous people to question the protection provided by their gods, motivating some to convert willingly.

    The conversion of the Americas often gets called a "religious conquest". But conversion was more than conquest and resistance. It was also a negotiation that blended elements of both religions. Some indigenous peoples were more receptive to Catholicism because they saw similarities with their Aztec religion. For example, each had a strong priestly class with a hierarchical structure and shared similar symbols and rituals. Just like the Spaniards, the Aztecs imposed new gods on conquered peoples as a political tool. So, societies in Mesoamerica were familiar with the concept of adopting the gods of their conquerors. The Spaniards might have expected total conversion, but indigenous peoples often did not totally abandon their old rituals and gods. Thus, Catholic missionaries, to their frustration, often found images of Jesus and the Virgin Mary alongside statues of Aztec and other indigenous gods. As you'll see later in this article, evidence of syncretism can still be observed in modern Mexico.

    Some indigenous people converted because they sought the protection of priests against the cruelty of conquistadors. One of the best known was the Dominican friar Bartolomé de las Casas, who convinced the Spanish king to ban the enslavement and abuse of indigenous peoples. For many other indigenous people, conversion was an opportunity. Becoming Christians gave indigenous people a better position in colonial society. Regardless of the motivations, conversion was not a simple act of acceptance or rejection.

    Perhaps, the most important examples of religious syncretism in Mexico City is the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe. According to later accounts, in 1531, an indigenous man named Juan Diego had a religious experience on the Hill of Tepeyac, on the north side of Mexico City. He claimed to witness visions of the Virgin Mary, who spoke in the indigenous language Nahuatl. In his vision, Juan Diego claimed she directed him to build a church, and that her image miraculously appeared on his cloak. Juan Diego convinced the Catholic clergy to build a shrine and church, which they dedicated to "the Virgin of Guadalupe." By the seventeenth century, the shrine was a popular pilgrimage site. The image of the Lady of Guadalupe emerged as an important symbol of belief, especially for indigenous converts, who saw her as their protector.

    Some historians argue that this story was a Spanish conversion strategy to justify the building of a Catholic church on the ruins of a shrine to the Aztec mother goddess, Tonantzin, also a protector. Other historians claim that this tradition is the result of syncretism between the worship of the indigenous Tonantzin and the black Virgin of Guadalupe of Extremadura1‍ . Eventually, the piety for these two religious images blended into one.

    Whatever the truth, the Catholic Church embraced the story of Juan Diego and the apparition as the popularity of the virgin soared among both Spanish and indigenous communities. Eventually, the Catholic Church named Guadalupe the patron of the Americas and the original small chapel has expanded into a modern massive basilica. The Lady of Guadalupe also became a symbol of Mexican nationalism. Revolutionaries carried her image into battle during the Mexican War of Independence in 1810 and again during the Mexican Revolution in 1910. The Basilica is visited by 20 million people each year―more than visit the Vatican in Rome.

    The Lady of Guadalupe is an example of the complicated negotiation between indigenous belief and colonial conversion. This place served as a pilgrimage destination for centuries before the Spanish arrived, and it remains so centuries later. The Spanish destroyed a shrine to an Aztec mother goddess and replaced it with a shrine to the mother of Jesus. In images, she is portrayed in a European style but with dark skin. She stands on a moon, wreathed by the sun—important elements in the Aztec religion. Indigenous converts adopted the Lady of Guadalupe as their protector, and some still call her Tonantzin. They might have been praying to a different figure, but they were praying for the same reasons and at the same site as their ancestors. And three centuries later, Guadalupe remained a symbol of Mexican unity.

  4. Download free-response questions from past AP Spanish Literature and Culture exams, along with scoring guidelines, sample responses, and scoring distributions.

  5. In the aftermath of the Reconquista and the Inquisition, Catholicism dominated the politics, social relations, and culture of Spain, shaping Spain as a state and the Spanish as a nation. Key Terms. the Catholic Monarchs: The joint title used in history for Queen Isabella I of Castile and King Ferdinand II of Aragon.

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  7. The Mexican War of Independence, which began in 1810, accelerated the decline of Spanish rule. After Father Miguel Hidalgo's initial revolt, a decade of brutal warfare ensued. In 1820, the Spanish Crown adopted a more liberal constitution, which weakened the power of the monarchy and alienated conservative elements in New Spain.