Cortés's on his return finds the Aztec…
August 1521 CE
Cortés's on his return finds the Aztec army’s chain of command in ruins.
The soldiers who still live are weak from the disease.
Moving with methodical deliberation, Cortés uses his newly built flotilla of small ships to gain command of the lake, then simultaneously advances assault teams along all three causeways.
The Spaniards fight their way across the city in house-to-house combat, pulling down each building as they clear it and thus demolishing the city.
Largely because he wants to present the city to his king and emperor, Cortés has made several attempts to end the siege through diplomacy, but all offers have been rejected.
The siege of the city and its defense have both been brutal.
During the battle the defenders cut the beating hearts from seventy Spanish prisoners-of-war at the altar to Huitzilopochtli, an act that infuriates the Spaniards.
The siege of Tenochtitlan lasts eight months.
Despite the stubborn Aztec resistance organized by their new young emperor, Cuauhtémoc, the cousin of Moctezuma II, Tenochtitlan and Tlatelolco fall on August 13, 1521, during which the Emperor is captured trying to escape the city in a canoe.
Cortés now orders the idols of the Aztec gods in the temples taken down and replaced with icons of Christianity.
He also announces that the temple will never again be used for human sacrifice.
Human sacrifice and reports of cannibalism, common among the natives of the Aztec Empire, have been a major reason motivating Cortés and encouraging his soldiers to avoid surrender while fighting to the death.