INCA

ĭngˈkə, pre-Columbian empire, W South America. The name Inca may specifically refer to the emperor, but is generally used to mean the empire or the people.

Extent and Organization of the Empire

Centered at Cuzco, Peru, the empire at the time of the Spanish conquest (1532) dominated the entire Andean area from Quito, Ecuador, S to the Río Maule, Chile, extending some 2,000 mi (3,200 km). Although the Inca showed a genius for organization, their conquests were facilitated by the highly developed social systems of some of the kingdoms that they absorbed, such as the Chimu, and the established agrarian communities that covered the area of their conquest. The Inca empire was a closely knit state. At the top was the emperor, an absolute monarch ruling by divine right. Merciless toward its enemies and requiring an obedience close to slavery, the imperial government was responsible for the welfare of its subjects. Everything was owned by the state except houses, movable household goods, and some individually held lands. In addition to cultivating the land, the common people were drafted to work on state projects such as mining, public works, and army service. This obligation was known as mita. From well-stocked storehouses were drawn goods to support priests, government servants, special artisans, the aged and the sick, and widows.

The royal family formed an educated, governing upper nobility, which at the time of the Spanish conquest numbered around 500. To further increase government control over an empire grown unwieldy, all who spoke Quechua became an "Inca class" by privilege and became colonists. Lesser administrative officials, formerly independent rulers, and their descendants were the minor nobility, or curaca class, also supported by the government.

For purposes of administration the empire was divided into four parts, the lines of which met at Cuzco; the quarters were divided into provinces, usually on the basis of former independent divisions. These in turn were customarily split into an upper and a lower moiety; the moieties were subdivided into ayllus, or local communities. Much as it exists today as the basic unit of communal indigenous society, so the ancient ayllu was the political and social foundation of Inca government. When a territory was conquered, surveys, consisting of relief models of topographical and population features, and a census of the population were made. With these reports, recorded on quipus, of the material and human resources in each province, populations were reshuffled as needed. Thus transplanted, and dominated by Quechua colonists, the subject peoples had less chance to revolt, and the separate languages and cultures were molded to the Inca pattern.

Religion, controlled by a hierarchy similar to the government hierarchy, emphasized ritual and organization. Heading the Inca gods was Viracocha. His servants were the sun, the god of the weather or thunder, the moon, the stars, the earth, and the sea. The sun god was foremost among these. Divination, sacrifices (human only at times of crisis), celebrations and ceremonies, ritual, feasts, and fasts were all part of Inca religion.

Inca Agriculture, Engineering, and Manufacturing

Although the Andean area offered a diversity of plant domestication, the handicaps of terrain and climate presented severe obstacles. To overcome them, Inca engineers demonstrated extraordinary skill in terracing, drainage, irrigation, and the use of fertilizers. They lacked draft animals, but domesticated animals (the llama, the alpaca, the dog, the guinea pig, and the duck) were important to daily living; from the wild vicuña, fine wool was sheared.

Without paper or a system of writing, the architects and master masons who designed and supervised the construction of public buildings and engineering works in such cities as Machu Picchu and the fortress of Sacsahuamán built clay models and, in actual construction, employed sliding scales, plumb bobs, and bronze and stone tools. Without wheeled vehicles for transport, the huge polygonal stone blocks for fortress, palace, temple, and storehouse were emplaced by ramp and rollers and were fitted with extraordinary precision. Wall corners were always carefully bonded. Adobe bricks and plaster were common, especially along the coastal desert. Buildings were usually of one story.

One of the most remarkable evidences of Inca engineering skill was an elaborate network of roads, which in many places still survives. Streams were crossed by a log or stone bridge, placid rivers by balsa ferry or pontoon bridge, and chasms by a breeches-buoy contrivance or by a suspension bridge that might be as much as 200 ft (60 m) long. Road sections were maintained by the nearest village, as were the shelters and military storehouses that were spaced a day's travel apart; a village also supplied messengers for its sector. These men, serving 15-day shifts, relayed messages about every mile. About 150 mi (240 km) could be covered daily, a distance that later took the Spanish colonial post 12 to 13 days to cover.

In the manufacture of textiles the Inca utilized almost every available kind of fiber and produced elaborate multicolored tapestries. In ceramics they achieved a fine-grained, highly polished, metallic hardness that stressed functional and utilitarian design. Mining was fairly extensive. Of the metals, copper and bronze were for public use; gold, silver, and tin were reserved for the emperor, the temples, and the upper nobility. Metallurgical processes included the techniques of smelting, alloying, casting, hammering, repoussé, incrustation, inlay, soldering, riveting, and cloisonné.

History

The Empire's Growth

Since the Inca combined much Aymara mythology with their own, their origin myth is obscure. The most common belief is that the legendary founder, Manco Capac (who seems to have been a historical figure), brought his people from mountain caves to the Cuzco Valley. During the early Inca period (c.1200–c.1440) the tribe gradually established its hegemony over other peoples of the valley and under the emperor named Viracocha (the name also of the supreme creator in Inca cosmology) allied themselves with the Quechua. However, it was not until the reigns of Pachacuti (c.1440–1471) and his son Topa Inca, or Tupac Yupanqui (1471–93), that the Inca made their great conquests. The present Ecuador (the kingdom of Quito) was subjugated by Huayna Capac, giving the empire its greatest extent and power. At his death it was divided between his sons, Huáscar and Atahualpa, and a long civil war ensued from which Atahualpa emerged triumphant just as Francisco Pizarro landed on the shores of Peru and the Spanish conquest began.

Spanish Conquest

When Francisco Pizarro landed in South America in 1532, he was welcomed by Atahualpa. By strategem the conquistador lured the emperor into his camp, captured, and then executed him. Shortly thereafter (1533) Pizarro entered Cuzco. Although the Spaniards did not immediately subdue the Inca, the highly personal and centralized political structure of the Inca facilitated the Spanish conquest. Despite the heroic resistance carried on in many sections and the rebellion (1536–37) of Manco Capac, the conquest was assured. Under Spanish rule Inca culture was greatly modified and eventually Hispanicized. The natives were reduced to a subordinate status, and only in recent years have efforts been made to make the indigenous Peruvian population (about 50% of the total) an integral part of the national life.

Bibliography

See chapters on the Inca in the Handbook of South American Indians, Vol. II (1963). For accounts by early historians, see P. de Cieza de Léon, The Incas (tr. 1959) and G. de la Vega, The Royal Commentaries of Peru (tr. 1966).

See also W. H. Prescott, The History of the Conquest of Peru (1855, repr. 1963); C. R. Markham, The Incas of Peru (1910, repr. 1969); P. A. Means, Ancient Civilizations of the Andes (1931, repr. 1964) and The Fall of the Inca Empire (1932, repr. 1964); H. Bingham, Machu Picchu: Lost City of the Incas (1948, repr. 1969); V. W. von Hagen, Highway of the Sun (1956); L. Baudin, A Socialist Empire: The Incas of Peru (tr. 1961) and Daily Life in Peru under the Last Incas (tr. 1962); J. A. Mason, The Ancient Civilizations of Peru (rev. ed. 1968) and A. Métraux, The History of the Incas (tr. 1970); G. W. Conrad and A. A. Demarest, Religion and Empire; The Dynamics of Aztec and Inca Expansionism (1984).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Inca  - 2903 results

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37 Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui conquers the province of Collasuyu I29 38 Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui sends Capac Yupanqui to conquer the provinces of Chinchaysuyu 131 39 Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui establishes mitimaes in all the lands he...
...Cuzco in days of Viracocha Inca, BV 172. For Viracocha Incas desire to destroy the...Huanca belief in a pre-Inca creator, RGI I, 85...testimony regarding a pre-Inca Viracocha people, RGI I, 210. Viracocha Incas Sons and the Yucay Valley...
...Cuzco and Titicaca 1. Maita Capac, the fourth Inca, seizes Tiahuanaco. The extraor dinary monuments...surrender, others are conquered, and the Inca punishes the Indians who used poisons 52 4. The Inca conquers three provinces and reaps a hard...
...impractical. The allocation of produce from Inca fields does not seem to have involved a...time. There is a puzzling description of Inca lands in Castro and Ortega Morejons "Relacion...the Chincha Valley. Lands of the first Inca, the second Inca etc. are said to have...
...Chuqui Urpay, wife of Inca Huascar, 244 Chuy, a...Juan de, schoolfellow of Inca Garcilasso, 265 Cintu...valleys: conquest by the Incas, 93 , 173 , 223 ; valleys...187; defeated by the Incas, 188 , 189; conquered, 190 ; contingent of the Inca army, 191; sent away...
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...grants and flocks of the Inca, and state storage. The Inca economy was ... built...communities, although the Incas tried to mask the exploitation...been confiscated by the Incas. In comparison to capitalism, Inca mass production did not...
...de los mismos Reyes Incas ... (254) <br...nos confiesa el Inca, estyn estructuradas...de los mismo Reyes Incas" con que habya comenzado...primera parte. Asy el Inca nos asegura que ambas...la. "Elogio del Inca Garcilaso de la Vega...Comentarios Reales de los Incas. Ed. yngel Rosenblat...
The Last Days of the Incas. by Brian S. Bauer The Last Days of the Incas. By Kim MacQuarrie...522. $30.00.) The Inca Empire was the largest...description of the fall of the Inca is John Hemmings magnum opus (The Conquest of the Incas) written in 1970. Although...
The Sacred Landscape of the Inca: the Cusco Ceque System by David J...hardcover. When the Spanish arrived in the Inca city of Cusco in 1532 one of the first...like each kin group that comprised the Inca polity, was ritually located in symbolic...
...Unveiling the Mystery of the Incas. by Tamara L. Bray BURGER...unveiling the mystery of the Incas. viii, 230 pp., maps, figs...provenanced collections of imperial Inca objects anywhere in the world...almost certainly one of the Inca emperor Pachacutis royal country...
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...the Mystery of the Incas, published by Yale...David--where the Inca ruler could go to...followed the method the Incas employed." For Iberian...Luis Millones, the Inca followed a different...stretches of ancient Inca roads until they reached...book Lost City of the Incas, which details the...
...lances were the weapons used by Inca warriors. Amid the bonfires...soldiers began to weaken the Inca army, which was finally defeated...of the Upper Urubamba. Manco Inca and his men plunged into the...occupied by the last of the royal Incas, the remote and mysterious...
...the last of the great Incas, who ruled from 1493...turbulent tenure of the Incas, and of Tomebamba, their northern capital. Of all Inca cities, none was finer...palaces of the Lord-Incas were covered in sheets...planning the palace, the Inca had chosen not only the...
Royal Commentaries of the Incas: 400th Anniversary. It has...Los Comentarios reales de los Incas was published in Lisbon. This work of El Inca Garcilaso de la Vega--called Royal Commentaries of the Incas in English--is considered...
...role in the ransacking of the Inca world, Francisco Pizarro is...conquistadores and historical Inca testaments. Pizarros greatest...stems from his execution of Inca Atahualpa, the Sun King, at...puppet emperor and carved up the Incas lands between his brothers and...
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...festivals. Then the Inca spread a huge banquet...and corn loaves. (Incas ate bread only during...mortar. The imperial Inca army enters at a trot...strewers sweep the Incas path. The royal entourage...on ground where the Incas made their last bloody...but for a day, the Inca empire lives again...
...NOTHING... Now Incas Blazing Trail on Road...Teak tough Brave Inca is back in the Prestbury...backfired. Brave Inca was ruled out of action...Murphy and Brave Incas owners harboured the...the spoils, Brave Inca was the chief talking...In January, Brave Incas superb win in the...
...COLMS REAL BRAVE HEART; Incas in Mood for Champion Battle...diehards. And tomorrow, Brave Inca and Tony McCoy are expected...stables, describes Brave Incas rise to the top of the hurdling...proven a huge bonus as Brave Inca has now been beaten only...
...us a rare glimpse of what the Inca Empire was capable of at the...truly became the "Lost City of Incas." Hiram Bingham, a young...while searching for another lost Inca city. Fortunately, he was...His book "Lost City of the Incas" details the daunting challenges...
Horse Racing: Macs Joy or Brave Inca? BANK ON THE CHAMP. Byline: Peter OHEHIR BRAVE Inca should crown a superb season by confirming his...Cheltenham. Going into that championship race, Brave Inca had the best form and, once again, he fought...
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...C. R. Markham, The Incas of Peru (1910, repr...and The Fall of the Inca Empire (1932, repr...Picchu: Lost City of the Incas (1948, repr. 1969...Metraux, The History of the Incas (tr. 1970); G. W...Dynamics of Aztec and Inca Expansionism (1984...
MANCO CAPAC , legendary founder of the Inca dynasty of Peru mang ko kapak , legendary founder of the Inca dynasty of Peru. According to the most frequently...Roca). Authorities concede that the first Inca chief to be a historical figure was called...
MANCO CAPAC , d. 1544, Inca ruler d. 1544, last of the Inca rulers, son of Huayna Capac...1536 laid siege to Cuzco, the Inca capital; the defense was commanded...during the ensuing eight years the Incas name became a terror throughout...
...formed a small polity known as the Ichma, which established an alliance with the Inca. Following the expansion of the Inca empire, Pachacamac became an important Inca administrative center, while maintaining its status as a religious shrine. The...
...Huancayo , Ayacucho , and Cuzco , an old Inca center. The eastern region includes more...cent. a.d., the Quechua-speaking Inca settled around Cuzco, and in the mid...had defeated Huascar for control of the Inca empire by 1532, when Francisco Pizarro...
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