For gold. The Spanish were greedy and obsessed with gold.
Cortes travelled to the New World across the Atlantic Ocean from Spain, and eventually to Mexico, where he explored Baja California and the Mexican west coast.
Cortes first landed on the coast of Yucatan.
yes any thing on the coast
Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes (1485-1547) qualifies as such.
Santa Anna's Army as consoliating, resupplying and recuperating from their long march and a second front was advancing along the Gulf Coast.
Cortes travelled to the New World across the Atlantic Ocean from Spain, and eventually to Mexico, where he explored Baja California and the Mexican west coast.
Cortes first landed on the coast of Yucatan.
Yes. Along the shores of the Mexican Gulf Coast and on central and southern Mexico.
The state of Veracruz, with 745 Km (463 miles) of coast, representing 29.3% of the Mexican coast along the Gulf of Mexico.
Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes.
No. There are however, several maintenance shops along the Mexican Pacific Coast (such as in Mazatlan and Los Cabos), which are used by the U.S. Coast Guard for repairs and maintenance works.
Hernan Cortes crossed the Atlantic Ocean from Spain to reach the Caribbean islands. From there, he sailed along the eastern coast of present-day Mexico, crossing the Gulf of Mexico. Cortes then continued his journey inland, eventually reaching the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan (present-day Mexico City).
Magellan
Magellan
Cortes first landed on the coast of Yucatan.
Magellan
Along the coast