Teotlalco

Teotlalco (Nahuatl pronunciation: THEO-LAL-COH) was a Nahua princess of Ecatepec and Aztec empress—the Queen of Tenochtitlan.

Teotlalco
Empress of the Aztec Empire
Reign1502–1520 (estimated)
PredecessorsWives of Ahuitzotl
Wives of CuitláhuacSuccessors
EmperorMoctezuma II
IssueIsabel Moctezuma, etc.
FatherMatlaccohuatl

Family

Teotlalco's husband, Moctezuma II

Teotlalco's father was King Matlaccohuatl.[1] She married Emperor Moctezuma II of Tenochtitlan. The first contact between Indigenous civilizations of Mesoamerica and Europeans took place during his reign, and he was killed. Teotlalco was Moctezuma's principal wife and mother of Doña Isabel Moctezuma,[2] wife of the king Cuitláhuac.[3] Her grandchild was Leonor Cortés Moctezuma.

See also

References

  1. Arqueología de superficie en San Cristóbal Ecatepec, Estado de México: un estudio del desarrollo de las fuerzas productivas en el México prehispánico by Humberto Domínguez Chávez, Wilfrido Du Solier
  2. Moctezuma's children: Aztec royalty under Spanish rule, 1520-1700 by Donald E. Chipman
  3. Chipman (2005), pp. 40-41, 60
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Wives of Ahuitzotl
Queen of Tenochtitlan
1502–1520
(estimated)
Succeeded by
Wives of Cuitláhuac
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