Family She was a daughter of prince
Tezozomoc and his cousin, princess
Atotoztli II. She was the sister of the emperors
Axayacatl,
Tizoc and
Ahuitzotl and the aunt of
Moctezuma II and
Cuitláhuac.
Marriage Chalchiuhnenetzin married
Moquihuix (d. 1473), king of Tlatelolco, an
altepetl, or city-state. She had a son with him, Axayaca, named after her brother. Moquihuix neglected Chalchiuhnenetzin, preferring the company of other women. Reportedly, he was not attracted to her because she "was quite thin, was not fleshy". He gave the gifts sent to her by her brother to his mistresses, relegated Chalchiuhnenetzin to the position of a concubine, gave her only simple coarse clothing and had her sleeping in a corner; reportedly, he also beat her. The ill treatment she was subjected to angered her brother, and was given as the reason for why the Aztecs attacked the Kingdom of Tlatelolco in 1473. Her spouse died in the
Battle of Tlatelolco, and Tlatelolco was conquered by her brother Axayacatl. After the war she returned to her brother's court. ==Legend==