Princess Eréndira
Princess Eréndira of the Purépecha was the princess of the Purépecha from about 1503–1519.
Life[]
Eréndira was 16–17 when the Spanish came to Mexico. The Tarascan state's cazonci (monarch), Tangaxuan II, had given up his kingdom and people to the Spanish after he saw the downfall of the Aztec Empire to the Spanish.
The story of princess Eréndira's subsequent role as a heroine is based on tradition and may or may not reflect actual events, since there are no contemporary records of her existence. According to the folk legend she led a war on the Spanish. Setting up base on a hill, she attacked the arriving Spaniards. She is said to have killed a Spanish horseman and stole his horse, later using it to train others in horsemanship. During one battle, some Spanish warriors found and murdered Eréndira's father in his sleep. Eréndira heard of his death and went to see him. According to the tradition, this was when the Purépecha began to lose the war. There are many theories as to what happened to her. Some of which include her suicide by drowning, her leaving to train others for war and that she killed herself for falling in love with a Spanish monk. One legend even claims that she was kidnapped by her own people and put into a temple so that the Spaniards should not find and kill her.
Legacy[]
When Lázaro Cárdenas was governor of Michoacán, he built a house in Pátzcuaro, which he named "La Quinta Eréndira."[1] She had been a regional figure, but as governor and president, Cárdenas raised her name recognition significantly. She became a symbol of indigenous resistance to the Spanish conquest, specifically as a foil to the role of Cortés's indigenous cultural translator Malinche.[2] Cárdenas commissioned muralist Fermín Revueltas to paint murals of Purépecha history and reshape the national narrative from one focused on the Aztecs to one rooted in the indigenous of Michoacan. The story of Eréndira was also used to reshape "Mexico's nation-building ideology of mestizaje" and put "Purépecha past...as the ideal origin of the Mexican nation."[3]
Reference in Media[]
The movie Erendira Ikikunari (Erendira the Untameable) is based on the story of Eréndira.
References[]
- ^ Jolly, Jennifer. Creating Pátzcuaro, Creating Mexico: Art, Tourism, and Nation Building Under Lázaro Cárdenas. Austin: University of Texas Press 2018 pp. 188-193.
- ^ Ramírez Barreto, Ana Cristina, "'Eréndira a caballo': Acoplamamiento de Cuerpos e historias en un relato de conquista y resistencia."e-misférica: Performance and Politics in the Americas, 2 no. 2 (2005)1-19.
- ^ Jolly, Creating Pátzcuaro, Creating Mexico pp. 192-93
Further reading[]
- Jolly, Jennifer. Creating Pátzcuaro, Creating Mexico: Art, Tourism, and Nation Building Under Lázaro Cárdenas. Austin: University of Texas Press 2018. ISBN 978-1477-314203
- Ramírez Barreto, Ana Cristina, "'Eréndira a caballo': Acoplamamiento de Cuerpos e historias en un relato de conquista y resistencia."e-misférica: Performance and Politics in the Americas, 2 no. 2 (2005)1-19.
- Salas, Elizabeth (1990). Soldaderas in the Mexican Military: Myth and History University of Texas Press (ISBN 0-292-77638-1)
External links[]
- Purépecha people
- 16th-century indigenous people of the Americas
- 16th-century Mexican people
- 16th-century Mexican women
- Indigenous Mexicans
- Mexican folklore
- National symbols of Mexico
- Native American women in warfare
- Women in 16th-century warfare
- Women in the Conquest of Mexico
- 16th-century women rulers
- Indigenous Mexican women