Two shiploads of Spanish soldiers, dispatched by…
December 1520 CE
Two shiploads of Spanish soldiers, dispatched by Governor Garay of Jamaica for the succor of the decimated Piñeda expedition, had put in at Veracruz and joined Cortés, thereby replenishing his army.
Cortés has also built thirteen sloops for Lake Texcoco.
Xicotencatl the Younger, however, seeks an alliance with the Mexicans, but is opposed.
Cortés has sent Diego de Ordaz, and the remnants of Narvaez' men, on a ship to Spain, and Alonso de Avila on a ship to Santo Domingo to represent his case in the Royal Courts.
Cortés has been able to pacify the country, after the natives realized the Spaniards put "and end to the rape and robbery that the Mexicans practiced."
Finally, Xicotencatl the Elder, baptized as Don Lorenzo de Vargas, agrees to support Cortes' expedition against Texcoco.
He sends more than ten thousand warriors under the command of Chichimecatecle as Cortés marches on the day after Christmas 1520.