Monday, February 22, 2010

The Conquest of Mexico - Genealogy

In an earlier post, I mentioned that there were "many" Spaniards with Hernan Cortes during the conquest of Mexico. Some additional research has shown me that historians consider the actual number to have been about 2,000 soldiers. Of those, roughly one-fourth to one-third died in battle.

Of those who survived, almost all remained in Mexico, and are the progenitors of nearly the entire population living there now. Here's how it breaks down:

The population at the start of the conquest is estimated to have been about 20 million Indians. Some eighty years later, by the year 1600 that population had dwindled to about one million due to war, disease, starvation, and forced labor.

Today there are 125 million Mexican citizens but during the three centuries between 1600 and 1900, very few people emigrated to Mexico and the country's population grew to only about 15 million.

This means that the roughly 1,500 Spaniards who survived the initial conquest of Mexico were the ancestors of those 15 million and they, in turn, formed the basis for today's 125 million Mexicans. --Not to mention those who migrated north to America or in the opposite direction to Central and South America.

So if you are of Spanish/Mexican descent, and if you have a fairly common Hispanic last name such as Avila, Gonzalez, Vasquez, Moreno, Rodriquez, Garcia, Alvarado, Lopez, or Villalobos (plus 2,000 others), you might want to take a look at the web pages located at  The Conquistadores of Mexico.

You may be surprised to find that someone with your surname fought alongside Cortes. It's worth a visit.

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