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Tetlepanquetzal (died 1525) was the
fourth Tepanec tlatoani (ruler) of Tlacopan,: 65 and
reigned after 1503 as a
tributary of the
Mexican emperor Moctezuma...
- Mexicalcingo, that Cuauhtémoc,
Coanacoch (the
ruler of Texcoco), and
Tetlepanquetzal, the
ruler of Tlacopan, were
plotting his death. Cortés interrogated...
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Itzquauhtzin of Tlatelolco †
Cacamatzin of Texcoco †
Coanacoch of Texcoco
Tetlepanquetzal of Tlacopan
Tangaxuan II
Various local rulers and
chieftains Pánfilo...
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Aztec Triple Alliance.
Chimalpopoca (?–?)
Totoquihuatzin (?–1519)
Tetlepanquetzal (1519–1525), son of Totoquihuatzin.
Tlacopan was
mostly leaderless...
- Cuauhtémoc, the last
Aztec Emperor; Coanacoch, the King of Texcoco, and
Tetlepanquetzal, King of Tlacopan. The
small contingent of
Spaniards controlled central...
- with him the
captured Aztec emperor Cuauhtemoc, and
Cohuanacox and
Tetlepanquetzal, the
captive Aztec lords of
Texcoco and Tlacopan. Cortés
marched into...
- is the tree
under which Cortés wept. The last
ruler of
Tacuba was
Tetlepanquetzal, who was
tortured by Cortés, who
suspected that he was
hiding treasure...
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under which Cortés wept. The last pre-colonial
ruler of
Tacuba was
Tetlepanquetzal,
tortured by Cortés
under the su****ion that he was
hiding treasure...
- Cuitláhuac (East),
Cacama (North),
Tetlepanquetzaltzin (originally
Tetlepanquetzal, West) and
Coanacoch (South). The base also
includes two inscriptions:...
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native rulers sit below,
representing Cuauhtemoc,
Coanacoch of Texcoco,
Tetlepanquetzal of Tlacopan, and
Temilotl of Tlatelolco. Next, the
beginning of Christianization...