About This Book
The essay reconstructs the first encounter on the continent involving mounted troops by reassessing the battle's locality, the native group engaged, and the toponym. Using contemporary eyewitness accounts, it narrates a coastal landing at a palisaded Maya village, a movement inland to a maize plain where infantry were hard-pressed until cavalry and firearms routed the defenders and led to a submission, then examines variant spellings and linguistic roots of the place-name in Nahuatl and Mayan. The author concludes with an identification of the indigenous affiliation and a description of ruins he interprets as marking the battle site.
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