Tenochtitlan had been almost totally destroyed by…
September 1521 CE
Tenochtitlan had been almost totally destroyed by fire and cannon shot during the siege, and once it finally falls the Spanish continue its destruction, pulling down most of the city's buildings to create space for their cavalry to maneuver.
They soon begin to establish the foundations of what will become Mexico City on the site.
Cuauhtémoc has surrendered to Hernán Cortés along with the surviving pipiltin (nobles) and, according to Spanish sources, he asked Cortés to take his knife and "strike me dead immediately".
According to the same Spanish accounts, Cortés refused this offer and treated his foe magnanimously.
"You have defended your capital like a brave warrior," he declared, "A Spaniard knows how to respect valor, even in an enemy."
At Cuauhtémoc's request, Cortés also allows the defeated Mexica to depart the city unmolested.
Subsequently, however, when the booty found does not measure up to the Spaniards' expectations, Cuauhtémoc is tortured in an unsuccessful attempt to discover its whereabouts.
On the statue to Cuauhtemoc on the Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico City, there is a bas relief showing the Spaniards' torture of the emperor.
Eventually some gold is recovered, though far less than Cortés and his men expected.
Cuauhtémoc continues to hold his position under the Spanish, keeping the title of tlatoani, but he is no longer the sovereign ruler.
The surviving Aztec people are forbidden to live in Tenochtitlan and the surrounding isles, and are banished to live in Tlatelolco.