Isabel Moctezuma is one of the most powerful and complex women in the history of Mexico, and her presence in the LAS DOรAS collection honors her role as the living bridge between Ancestral Mexico and La Nueva Espaรฑa. Dressed as a bride, she becomes a visual symbol of the union of two worlds, an embodiment of lineage, survival, and transformation during one of the most defining moments in our history.
Born Tecuichpo Ixcaxochitl, daughter of Emperor Moctezuma II, she inherited not only royal blood but the weight of a civilization in transition. Her life was marked by alliances that reflected the political and cultural negotiation of her era, and through these marriages she became the thread that linked Indigenous nobility to the emerging colonial order.
Before the fall of Tenochtitlan, she was married to Cuitlahuac, her uncle and the eleventh Mexica ruler, who died shortly after assuming power. She later married Cuauhtemoc, the last emperor of the Mexica, standing beside him in the final defense of their empire. After the conquest, her lineage made her one of the most sought after alliances for the Spaniards, and she was married three more times: first to Alonso de Grado, then to Pedro Gallego de Andrade, and finally to Juan Cano de Saavedra, with whom she built a family that played an important role in the early society of New Spain.
Because of her heritage and her unique position between Indigenous royalty and Spanish colonial society, Isabel Moctezuma has long been considered a symbolic bridge between two civilizations. Her life embodied the tension, adaptation, and resilience that defined the meeting of cultures, two legacies intertwined through her story.
In the LAS DOรAS collection, Isabel Moctezuma appears as a bride not in the traditional romantic sense, but as a figure representing a monumental union, the merging of two worlds that shaped the identity of modern Mexico. Her gown blends ancestral motifs with the visual language of colonial influence, honoring a woman who carried an entire history within her steps.
Through this portrayal, Isabel Moctezuma stands not only as a historical figure but as a symbol of continuity, strength, and the enduring truth that Mexico was forged through the meeting of worlds, woven together by women like her who lived between them.

CREDITS
Executive Producer: @ararom.producer
Film and Content Producer: @lotusocialmedia
Photography: @doc.shots_
