No, it was both certan and luck.
The Aztec civilization was not "discovered" in the traditional sense, as it existed long before European contact. The Spanish conquistadors encountered the Aztecs in the early 16th century, with Hernan Cortes's arrival to Mexico in 1519 leading to the fall of the Aztec Empire in 1521.
The Aztec were constatly fighting most tribes around and forced them into servitude and payment of taxes. Therefore, when the Spaniards came they were seen as an opportunity to get rid of the Aztec which were NOT liked or welcomed.
the Aztecs lived somewhere near Mexico city
Many historians believe that the pyramids built by the Aztecs served an astronomical as well as a ceremonial function.
The Spanish conquest of the Aztecs was due to the fact that the Aztecs at first did not realize that the Spanish were going to try to conquer them. Even when they did, the Spaniards had superior weapons and the Aztecs were unable to defeat them.
Yes, Spain profited from the fall of the Aztecs. It was a very important factor in their colonization of the Americas.
Because the Mayas came and try to take over the Aztecs land.
Spanish exploration
No such word as inevidable in the United States. If you wish to try for inevitable, you could say, the winter is inevitable following the fall.
The fall of the Aztecs and the colonizing of New Spain
the spanish were jelous and destroyed them
They got attacked by Spain Save
A army came with diseases and killed the aztecs.
The Toltecs and the Aztecs were never in direct contact as the Aztects were born from the chaos of the fall of the Toltec empire. The Aztecs used the turmoil to their advantage and built their civilization from the ruins of the Toltecs.
[[They fell due to outside conflict, resource depletion, and inside situations.]]
I can just say that the final fight was NAS-T
The Aztecs had no resistance to smallpox