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Cuauhtemoc (1502? - 1525) was the Aztec
(Nahua) ruler who succeeded Moctezuma II (1466-1520). The Aztecs had a
myth that one day, the god Quetzalcoatl,
described as fair-skinned and red-haired, would arrive over the ocean
from the east and usher in a new age of prosperity. Hernan Cortes (1485-1547),
the Spanish
conqueror of Mexico, was perceived to fulfill this legend when he landed
on the Mexican conquest and therefore welcomed by Moctezuma. After the
Aztec ruler
was killed, the throne was claimed by Cuauhtemoc, who led an ultimately
unsuccessful guerrilla campaign against the Spaniards. Although this version
of events,
particularly Moctezuma's role, has been challenged in recent years,
it was widely believed in Siqueiros' day and it was for this reason that
Cuauhtemoc was adopted
by the Mexican Muralists as a symbol of militant Mexican nationalism,
and Moctezuma -- of short-sightedness and superstitious naivete.