Gerónimo de Aguilar claimed that he tried to convince Guerrero to leave with him, but failed. Guerrero was now already well-assimilated into the Maya culture and was looked upon as a figure of rank by the local Maya. Aguilar claimed that Guerrero had a Maya wife and three children at the Maya settlement of Chetumal where he was now living.[56]
Aguilar would prove himself to be a valuable asset as a translator for Cortés expedition into the Yucatán. He had lived with the Maya for so long that he was now quite fluent in speaking “Yucatec Mayan,” along with a few other local indigenous languages.[57]
Gonzalo Guerrero's fate was never known. It is assumed that for some years that he fought alongside the Maya warriors against the Spanish Conquistadors. He provided the Maya with military counsel on tactics to fight and resist the Spanish invasion. Although unconfirmed, Guerrero is believed to have later been killed in a battle.
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The quest for gold kept the attention of the Spaniards in the Mexico region for a few years. By 1511, the Spanish Conquistadors led by Cortés had defeated the mighty Aztec Empire with the use of modern weapons and the assistance of thousands of Mesoamerican allies.
It was the Spanish Conquistador Pedro de Alvarado whom was granted the privilege of conquering the Maya after he and his brothers had proven themselves in the ranks of Cortes’ army. In the year 1523, he set out with approximately four hundred Spanish Conquistadors and about ten-thousand Mesoamerican allies to conquer the