False
The arrival of Cortés The death of Moctezuma II <-----(apex)
the arrival of cortes
The Inca Empire was the largest empire in the Americas prior to the arrival of Europeans. It existed from 1438 to 1533.
The Spanish wanted to control the Aztecs empire but they were driven out of the city
Who was the leader of the Spanish army that conquered the Inca Empire? Francisco Pizarro in 1535 Who conquered the Aztec empire? Herman Cortes conquered the Aztecs in 1519.
The group of people that ruled an empire in Peru directly before the arrival of Spanish explorers were the Incas. The Incan empire lasted from 1438 to 1533 with the arrival of the Spanish conquistadors.
The Aztec civilization.
The arrival of Cortés The death of Moctezuma II <-----(apex)
Internecine warfare preceded the arrival of the Spanish conquistadors in 1632, and the epidemics of European diseases began to affect the defeated empire in 1632 and 1633.
Moctezuma II did not explore; he was the ruler of the Aztec Empire from 1502 to 1520. He focused on expanding and governing his empire in Mesoamerica until the arrival of the Spanish conquistadors in 1519.
The Aztecs under Montezuma II dominated what is now Mexico at the time of the Spanish arrival in 1517.
Both Spanish (1521-1821) and French (1864-1867).
The decline of the Inca Empire was primarily due to the arrival of Spanish conquistadors led by Francisco Pizarro in the 16th century. The Inca were vulnerable to Spanish diseases, conquered through military tactics, and weakened by internal divisions that the Spanish exploited. This ultimately led to the fall of the Inca Empire.
The area in South America that is now called Colombia was inhabited by the Inca Native American Tribe. Later Spanish explorers made Spanish settlements there and conquered the Inca empire.
Civil war among Inca rulers weakened the empire and made it susceptible to outside conquest. Additionally, the arrival of diseases introduced by the Spanish, such as smallpox, decimated the Inca population, further destabilizing the empire and making it easier for the Spanish to conquer.
The Spanish invaded the Incas in search of wealth, resources, and to spread Christianity. They were also driven by a desire for power and control over the indigenous people of the region. The arrival of the Spanish ultimately led to the downfall of the Inca Empire.
The Inca Empire.