Incas - Lords of Gold and Glory (History Arts Ebook)
Incas - Lords of Gold and Glory (History Arts Ebook)
Incas - Lords of Gold and Glory (History Arts Ebook)
INCAS:
RDS OF G<
im
\ND GLORY
GATE OF THE
EL TORRE6N
DEATH
W
4
SUN-
FEATHERED
BURIAL FIGURINE
Zerro el
Ploms
(Santiago)
A
i
250
i
500
J
miles
\V
wad of
from
Andean
gated earlobes, perforated to hold decorative disks, indicate that the man portraved in this portion of a four-anda-half-inch high, hammered gold statue
was of high rank.
painted by Paul
Breeden, shows the Inca empire at its
height in the earlv 16th century. It
stretched more than 2,000 miles south
from modern Ecuador, deep into Chile
(inset),
arid coastal
on pages 158-159.
INCAS:
LORDS OF GOLD
AND GLORY
TIME-LIFE BOOKS
LOST CIVILIZATIONS
Other Publications:
TIME
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Thomas H.
SERIES EDITOR:
TRUE CRIME
THE AMERICAN INDIANS
THE ART OF WOODWORKING
ECHOES OF GLORY
THE NEW FACE OF WAR
QQ2
Flaherty
Clough
Executive
Art
Director of Photograpln
M. Brown,
Janet Cave,
Assistant
Art
Director: Bill
Writers: Darcie
Shaw
PRESIDENT:
McDowell
Patricia Mitchell
Henrv VVoodhead
E.
and Glory
Norma
Art
Conrad Weiser
Editorial Board: Dale
M. Brown
Robling
Director: Ellen
Dale
UNKNOWN
McKenney
AND
UNUSUAL FACTS
AMERICAN COUNTRY
VOYAGE THROUGH THE UNIVERSE
THE THIRD REICH
THE TIME-LIFE GARDENER'S GUIDE
MYSTERIES OF THE UNKNOWN
TIMEFRAME
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Special Contributors:
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Editorial Operations
Media
Time-Life Books
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Specialist: Parti
is
a division
Aloisi (Paris),
H. Cass
of Time Life
John M. Fahey,
Jr.
TIME-LIFE
Inc.
is
U.S.A.
Library of Congress
Cataloging in Publication Data
Incas: Lords of gold and glorv / bv the
editors of Time-Life Books,
(Lost civilizations)
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8094-9870-7
ISBN 0-8094-9871-5
(trade)
(lib.
bdg.)
Incas.
I.
II.
Series.
92-5149
F.
McEwan
is
associate curator
New World
and
Art
at
and
& NUTRITION
SUCCESSFUL PARENTING
WAR
THE EPIC OF FLIGHT
THE GOOD COOK
WORLD WAR II
HOME REPAIR AND IMPROVEMENT
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1-800-621-
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life.
&
Mound
LOST CIVILIZATIONS
INCAS:
LORDS OF GOLD
AND GLORY
By
Books
c o
ONE
A VIOLENT CLASH OF ALIEN CULTURES
7
35
TWO
ESSAY:
75
THREE
BORROWERS OF GREATNESS
85
ESSAY:
Artisans of the
Empire
111
FOUR
LIVES OF
158
Acknowledgments
Picture Credits
160
160
Bibliography 161
Index 164
149
">V-*
ili
A VIOLENT
CLASH OF
ALIEN
CULTURES
let a little
deep
in the heart
tavernkeeper
so
if such a
humble an establishment
as his
to describe
local
someone with
explorer's imag-
tall,
thin
man
A silver alpaca,
used as a ceremoni-
Yet such disappointments had not deflected him from his overriding
al offering, honors
the woolly
animal
purpose
lost city
lay.
of the
semi- isolation, these proud lords of the Andes had maintained for
Incas
to
em-
pire's engineers.
in defiance
in his search
by
a recently discov-
Machu
rump kingdom
through terracing.
fields at
nearly 35 years a
Incas. There, in
provided
new
last
Inca
His hunch
was that the fabled refuge lay hidden in this densely forested valley,
"designed by nature," he mused, "as a sanctuary for the oppressed."
come
and geography. His keen enthusiasm, springing from an earlier visit to the country, had spawned
to Peru to study
its
the expedition he
rich
history, botany,
now
former classmates.
inly three
ham and
weeks
earlier
Bing-
feet.
from
its
Bingham had
the advantage
of a new route that had been blasted along the riverbank two years
previously.
Bv
traversing
power of its
with
it,"
it,
above sea
spell, I
he had arrived
level.
at this
it
great
River in
this
Urubamba
Moments later,
Bingham himself would crawl across, terrified, on his way to the discovery of Ma-
above the clouds more than two miles overhead, gigantic precipices
of manv- colored granite rising sheer for thousands of feet above the
it
when
the tavernkeeper
names of this
chu and Machu Picchu he persuaded the reluctant tavernkeeper to
lead him to the place with the promise of a silver dollar. But now,
with rain falling, his colleagues who were skeptical of the peasant's
story
already had their minds set on washing shirts and perhaps
hunting butterflies, and declined to go with Bingham. Thus while his
In
The
river valley.
teammates remained behind in the relative comfort of camp, Bingham set out in the drizzle, in the companv of only the guide and a
government-appointed bodyguard.
and
shutter speed
Urubamba.
and
man
one could
single misstep
could
live for
"No
fall in.
an instant in
Bingham
recalled. As his companions
gingerly made their way barefoot over the bridge, Bingham
got down on his hands and
the icy cold rapids,"
bank the
steep
trail,
six
On the oppo-
trio
mounted
grasping vines to
as-
known
to infest
2,000
feet,
The
tavern-
behind and gossip with the hut's owner, while Bingham and
now by
a little
his
old.
hillside
"Suddenly
and moss, the growth of centuries, but in the dense shadow, hiding
in bamboo thickets and tangled vines, appeared here and there walls
of white granite ashlars carefully cut and exquisitely fitted together
good fortune as he
wandered among the overgrown ruins, encountering wonder after
wonder a royal mausoleum, a temple to the sun, more magnificent
(pages 35^15)."
believe his
dream," he exulted.
Yet was
his
this
He could
and
Vilcabamba?
in the course
a series
city.
his
difficult
in the field,
Bingham
after a
now
was Vilcabamba,
after
all.
Ironically,
miles
down
almost the entire length of the Andes, from the southern border of
10
(above), in
which he
route
with a Kodak
4x5
camera
city,
(right).
made
Amazon
headwaters and its western, the sands of the bleak coastal deserts. The
domain Tahuantinsuyu, the "land of the four quarters," a name reflecting the segments into which the empire was
officially divided, with Cuzco at its center. Within it
and very much
Incas called this
-JL<
*e
y^
many
people comprising as
developed
as
succeeded
will
in less
intri-
world
rise
the Incas
more
was followed by
precipitous
fall.
their
of
even
Tahuantin-
was known,
whom
Sapa
riches
due such
Yet for
status.
all its
power,
this
im-
in short order
little
differ
was the Incas' fate that the Spaniards would be aided in their
victory by events taking place within the empire itself.
Rumors of a land of gold had long been circulating among
Spaniards in the New World in the early 16th century, and hearsav
evidence indicated that it lav somewhere south of the equator.
Tempted bv such talk, a veteran of Spain's Italian campaigns named
But
it
mate and
illiterate,
his fortune.
New World
Illegiti-
1502 to seek
the Caribbean, where
in
1513 he accompanied
Yasco Nunez de Balboa across the Isthmus of Panama to become one
of the first Europeans to behold the Pacific Ocean. Settling down in
Panama, he became a landowner, was given a quota of Indian workers, and grew to be quite well-off. But such success left him restless.
Joining forces with Diego de Almagro, another soldier of fortune,
and Hernando de Luque, a priest, they put together an expedition
that in 1524 would take them from Panama on a difficult and frustoday's
Haiti. In
to inspire
him with dreams of wealth and glorv. One of his ships captured a
group of Inca traders on a raft of balsa wood borne bv sails of finely
woven cotton. The Spaniards shrewdlv held three of the captives to
be trained as interpreters, setting the others free. "Thev were carrying
many
pieces
as personal
ornaments," Pizarro
later
and diadems,
bv
belts
listing
and
bracelets,
first,
leading
He
pulled out
12
As
is
map
away from
a grassy plaza
and
itants,
the
The
city's
northern edge.
replicas
desire.
of gold and
living plants
silver.
grew alongside
finely crafted
Pizarro's
at
the head of a conquering force in the near future. But despite the lure
of riches to come,
all
it
would take
In his
home
his discoveries
taking. Excited
by the prospect of
territorial
and
V of
financial gain,
Pizarro
was to have the title of governor and captain-general in the lands that
came under his control. As would soon become apparent to Pizarro
and his cohorts, the delay in setting out, frustrating though it h
been, actually worked to their advantage.
The
13
is
known mainly
the conquistadors
among
had
Soto
eracy,
ters
of the
first
encoun-
civiliza-
scriptions
tions.
Once
who
From both
sets
of
of conscientious
sent to the
Spanish
servants
civil
new colonv bv
rulers, ethnohistori-
when
last days. It is a
sad one.
Embroiled in a fierce battle against each other for the supreme position of Sapa Inca, royal
brothers
glory,
rumors arrived
at the
years,
self, a
great warrior
foretold that
him
off, it
seems
it
14
Huascar
(above,
it is
likely
left)
andAtabual-
war
their enmity
civilization.
their ac-
was smallpox, introduced to the Americas bv the conquistadors. Outpacing the conquerors, this illness reached native peoples
even in lands the Spaniards had yet to explore and probably arrived
in western South America bv 1525, from the Caribbean via Venezuela and Colombia, where the Europeans alreadv had a foothold.
The disease spread so quicklv among the Incas, who had no immunity to it, that armies were decimated and entire families stricken. It
has been said of smallpox that a cup of water offered at the right
moment can save a life, but often there was no one well enough to
provide the dving a drink. Morale plummeted among survivors, most
that
pa
number of heathens,
of
whom
had
lost
numerous
kill
relatives
and
Huayna Capac;
it
friends.
Not
strife.
magro,
whom Pizarro's
brother
after the two
means wild turkey cock, a bird that commanded respect in the Andes.
He had more than proved himself, having spent most of his life at his
father's side in the field
of battle.
had on people,
this
tant
head by demanding
failed to appear,
15
When Atahualpa
egged on
Huascar
by courtiers hostile to
gifts in his p
his brother
the soldiers
from the
fires that
field.
seized the
Huascar
men
armv was subsequently routed, and Atahualpa's men entered Cuzco in triumph.
Thev showed no mercv to the defeated enemv. Tied to a
frame, Huascar was forced to watch while his numerous wives were
butchered. His friends and advisers were also slaughtered, and their
prize
of
remains
all
left tied
will.
Huascar was
fate.
and
He
supplied bv Charles V.
men,
ans'
their
five
16
in stone
This skull
defeated opponent
lined withhold
chicha,
battle.
Christendom,
in
its
had received word that the bearded white men, whose advent had
troubled his father, had returned in their wooden ships. Soon runners from the coast informed him that the strangers were moving
inland. Atahualpa responded by sending an envoy to invite Pizarro
and his men to visit him. The report the Inca ambassador carried back
to his master contained the first of a series of fatal misreadings of
Spanish intentions. As Atahualpa
emissary told
him the bearded ones were not fighting men, and that 200 Incas
would be sufficient to restrain them, if indeed they posed a threat.
The Inca could not have known that Pizarro had fostered such an
assessment by receiving the ambassador in a courtly manner, giving
him
a shirt
Consequently, the
little
glass,
17
death
down
men and
exhausted soldiers'
After a
relief,
week
in the
by
We
fright.
on the
hillside "that
we were
filled
with
position, nor so
many
fear.
it,
much
less
turn
back, for if they sensed the least weakness in us, the yen* Indians
we
killed us."
men
in the
army along
silent ranks
of the Inca
springs a
palace,
pool had been made, and two pipes of water, one hot and
one
men
'"a
later
golden
two
cold, entered
stool,
women and
it;
"with
with
the
all
pipes
many
chiefs near
all
his
him."
at
up his mount so close to him that the tasseled fringe the monarch
wore as a crown was stirred bv its breath, while froth from its mouth
dripped on his clothing. But Atahualpa sat immobile, a perfect model
of the Inca warrior in the face of danger. He expected similar fortitude from his followers; those who flinched he later had executed.
Atahualpa remained
He chided the
interpreters they
Spaniards for
18
iif
opan
iwya I
CHAWPOrAg" ->V
hidden out of sight,
covered by jungle, or perched
on distant peaks, seemingly
ften
ell
reach,
of the
some
but
of the
cient Andean peoples have
revealed themselves to a few
hearty individuals with the
patience, fortitude, and wherewithal to go look for them.
The American explorer Gene
Savoy (below) is one such person, and in the three decades
that he has been trekking
through the Andes, he has
found more than 40 previously
not
beyond
all
lost cities
unknown
settlements that
excitingly
of the socie
ties
that built
AND THE
R GENE SAVOY
EXPL
them
tell
%
N
cnc At
At.
stronghold of the Incas.
it had not
been successful. As far back as
1834, the French Count de
Sartiges endured weeks of exhaustion and thirst searching
for the ruins. Other intrepid
tempts to locate
sive city. In
elu-
1912, Hiram
v
failed attempt
by a 1963
American team that parachuted deep into unexplored jungle, Gene Savoy set out for the
most
that
likely site,
one, ironically,
on but dismissed, 93
miles
northwest of Cuzco.
Savoy had prepared himself well,
clues,
voy and
upon
his
men came
the city at
last.
then vanished.
The
ruins, situ-
ated between
two
%.
V.
rivers
on
his sights
on
in
1480, taking,
40
vears to
With
it is
thought,
other lost
ants.
call
rain,
lack
of humans, animals,
and birds, apparendy condors
figures
(background)
One
tirff
helicopter,
his
Gran
suffocating jun-
and
tation,
its
close to
Pajaten. Amazingly,
three-foot-high
found
wood carvwere
ings,
still
Chachapoyas kingdom.
It
took
to locate the
feet
above sea
named this
after
9,400
Savoy
first ruins,
level.
Gran Pajaten,
the famous colonial ruins
site
in the caves,
humidity. As a follow-up, a
90 miles northwest
and came upon dozens of cliff
tombs with mummv cases
Inca roads
circu-
stands on a platform
left,
and
is
divided in half
by a molding,
and
its
^BraBlffffiHBS
upper
with geo-
and
_J
20
Gran
21
k-
members, he
did. It turned
out
who
Some had
to be a collection of linked
looters,
named
river
caves (background)
been shot
down by
Abandoning the Chachapovas region for more accessible areas, Savov would not
return for 15 vears. This time
tioned by Spanish
chroniclers,
These anthropomorphic
were once
Made
with
vegetable fi-
tually to solve
ies.
its
still
await-
of the
Chachapovas, men-
mud and
may
tive center
vivid colors.
canyon,
cases
adminis-
nearby
prove to be
site after a
he was determined to
mummy
were
the
are be-
remains of rulers.
22
of Pueblo de
cliffface.
mummies with
m**
Gran Vilaya is made up of thousands of
white limestone structures like these. The
buildings,
races,
range up
to
23
ter-
"some of my
father's cloth"
wom-
their "entire land." But, cagily, the Spaniards also offered to apply
their military
brief en-
visit Pizarro.
Gazing out
over the Inca campfires, "as thick as the stars of heaven," in the words
of one soldier, they realized there was no turning back. Throughout
for the Spaniards.
officially
hardened
fighters,
character.
by kidnapping
its
Ruminavi, to
them
command of his
general,
his
later
24
At
dawn
the next day, Pizarro stationed his forces within the buildings
As morning turned to
on the nerves of the massively outnum-
arrival.
it
many of the
cortege approached.
It
seems
were
it
"still lives."
25
it
a flimsy
token
compared with the great stone huacas the Incas worshiped, and he
dismissed it, throwing it to the ground. "This says nothing to me,"
he said contemptuously. The friar turned to Pizarro and is reputed to
have said to him and his men: "Throw yourselves upon them forthwith. I give you all absolution."
Pizarro gave the signal for the attack.
The Spanish horsemen charged out of the buildarmor, cutting a swath through the ranks of unarmed
rending the
saint
who
air
The
them
in battle.
many
lost their
hands to the
litter
slice
high in the
of swords
air.
as they struggled
field,
and only
din, "Let
no one wound
the Indian
the
their
above the
a building, there to
was
killed.
own
alive. "It
forces,"
town,
it
his troops,
Atahualpa
26
mid
chief, the
often hundreds
muster
of thousands
strong
cient
sive arsenal
short-
of
armed
force
could
move
most formidable
in South
often the
a distance.
ages of 25 and
dier
would
The
slip
sol-
an egg-
middle of the
w^^AX
headed by
first
was
em-
a group,
soldiers over
formed
Incas
weapons, the
Incas had the
bodied
The
and
long-range
MACE HEAD
Sapa Inca.
supply system.
their impres-
in
and
commander
to the
fabric. Af-
27
BOLA
slam into
nately, fighters
employed
star-
When the
Spaniards invad-
new
targets.
Adapting
tactics,
heavily
on
their
more
right), three
stones attached to
The
it
r-
men
periority to
whom
all
peoples of the
New World,
it.
On
civil
war had
'j*ijfl4*>"
manv of his
men, north to Quito. The other two veteran generals were in Cuzco.
Atahualpa himself was eager to keep his own forces at bav, fearing
that the Spaniards would kill him if thev were attacked bv Incas.
In captivitv, Atahualpa was allowed to maintain the trappings
of a king. His women and servants lived in the closelv guarded
quarters assigned him, and his people
still
came to him
for their
little,
an achievement that
When the
Spaniards
first
offer,
they thought he was joking, but soon became convinced that his
intentions were genuine. After Pizarro
had
a legal
paper drawn up
documenting this proposal, thev sat back to wait while the treasure
was brought to them. It began arriving bv the llama-load tumblers,
vases, and finelv wrought ornaments, including an idol the size of a
28
Of the
vast
To the Incas, gold had little intrinsic worth. They called it the "sweat
was the "tears of the moon") and saw the glittering
metal as being aesthetically pleasing and hallowed, to be fashioned
into beautiful objects or statues of gods to adorn holy places. They
respected labor and put far more value on their extraordinary weavings, each cloth representing thousands of hours spent at the loom.
These fabrics, rather than bullion, were the real currency of the
empire. It was hardly likely, therefore, that Atahualpa could have
comprehended the depth of European gold lust. Sending out orders
to empty Cuzco of its treasures, he little imagined that nothing less
than the entire wealth of the empire would satisfy the Spaniards.
Atahualpa worried instead that the captive Huascar might offer the
of the sun"
(silver
was
who
said,
kill
his
own
his half
were cut to
it
pieces.
The
last act
of the country, attracting newcomers eager for a share of the loot. But
to safeguard the treasure for themselves, Pizarro and his followers
had agreed that the ransom would be divided up among them as the
price for their courage, the lion's share going to the men who had
been present
at
Atahualpa's capture.
The gold
alone,
when melted
down, came
to 13,400 pounds,
29
and the
silver
*
..-jr
NMW
iMWflUfc.,.1
mtfffifc*.
HAUNTING
RUINS OF
INCA DEFEAT
Cuzco
in
city's
man
a
The following
Manco
Inca, sent
ments.
5,000 reinforceresort-
scal-
low.
Although the
Spaniards had won Sacsahuaman,
the Incas under Manco kept up
their own siege of the city, which
went on for a year. Perhaps because of the arrival of Spanish reinforcements or a lack of will on
the part of his men, Manco reseveral days more.
BEHfl
now
objective
for
Atahualpa directed
men from
the Inca's
no
trial
alive.
who
agreed that
or
mv
Tied to the
stake,
he listened while a
if he
were baptized,
friar
assuming that
rites,
his
body
pomp
as
way
Capac,
Cuzco
fac-
residents took
no
not
their
gold
mummies of former emperors. When Pizarro's men arrived, manv welcomed them as restorers
line.
The
Incas soon
much
less
generous. Thev
Vilcabamba.
5r
was to come when Pizarro quit Cuzco for the coast to found a new
capital, Lima. He left his younger brother, Gonzalo, in charge, with
another brother, Juan, to assist him. Gonzalo treated Manco with
undisguised contempt, even abducting and raping his favorite wife.
With reports of Spanish atrocities flooding in from around
the empire, the previously pliable
ance.
He
Manco
balked
compli-
at further
brought back
in chains. Placed in
jail,
who, he
on him
time on there was
later claimed,
urinated
of Francisco's brothers,
Pizarro, another
who had
recently
come
to
moment
were
and transported to the outskirts of Cuzco, without alerting the Spaniards to their movements. Alarming news
reached Francisco Pizarro in his new city: Cuzco was under siege.
The siege was to last for almost a year, during which the Inca
recruited, fed,
was effectively cut off from the rest of the country. A fierce,
two-week battle for control of the fortresslike temple of Sacsahuaman
was won by the Spaniards. During the siege Indian collaborators in
and around Cuzco had sneaked food to the Spaniards. These traitors
included some of Manco's own relatives, who, like others, feared
retaliation for their earlier support of the Europeans if Manco gained
the upper hand. The siege failed when Spanish reinforcements arrived. Manco's followers saw that their best opportunity was gone,
capital
The
results
were
terrible indeed.
bear,
and many
empire deteriorated
all
around them. Estimates suggest that the population of Tahuantinsuyu may have been reduced by three-quarters
after the arrival
in the half-century
33
500,000.
On
those
who were
All aspects
attack.
and the sun temples destroved. The roval mummies were found and burned. Most of the masterworks of
Inca gold- and silversmiths were transformed into ingots. Some of
Palaces were desecrated,
the
most
beautiful objects
as a present for
in
A remnant of the
remote jungle
Manco
There he and
area.
wonder of all
led
Bingham had searched for. Graced with 60 monumental stone buildings and 300 smaller ones and crisscrossed bv
roads and canals, Yilcabamba spread out over two square miles. The
Incas would reign here for another three and a half decades. From
order, the citv
out
at
the empire's
Yilcabamba.
last vestige
of
hegemonv. Reaching Yilcabamba, thev found it nearly deserted; its defenders had fired the city to deny it to their victors before
taking flight. But the Spaniards continued their pursuit deep into the
rain forest, and there the last Inca leader. Tupac Amaru, fell into their
hands. He was taken back to Cuzco. subjected to a show trial, and
beheaded in the town square. With him ended the Inca dynasty.
native
Silence
city's
fell
left
onlv in the
Since
ers
name Spanish-speaking
peas-
Much
last secrets
up
all
been
no one can
fullv told.
grip.
full
story of the
Although
its
Machu Picchu
structures for
man-made
Until
tight-fitting stone. It
is
began their push inland. The photographs Bingham shot that day, the basis of this essay,
show the neglect of centuries. In them, Machu Picchu
defenses. In-
number of
retreat
built
through the overgrown ruins on July 24, 191 1, accompanied by a government-appointed escort and a local
bov, few outsiders had set foot in Machu Picchu since
and beits mvsterious desertion, sometime after 1532
con-
residences,
cultural terraces.
Machu Picchu
temples,
storage and other public uses most
thought that up to
1,200 residents may have lived here and in the oudying
areas, worshiping the sun god, Inti, and farming agri-
of well-cut,
city,
200 buildings
bv the
35
mm
7
.wu
t2ffllfe
'
ra
'
.J3
..:
LPo
^i*5
->--.
'{
-'
wSm%
fKf
HIDDEN CITY
IN THE
CLOUDS
and unmapped, Machu Picchu was still never a lost
Inaccessible
Hiram Bingham
for
site,
he found farm-
"free
when he
discovery. Indeed,
its
arrived at the
ers
although
deserves credit
residence,
officials
teers'
or collecting taxes," as
The blackened
tree trunks in
Bingham's photograph
at left indi-
and gooseberries.
foliage
Bingham and
early excavators
moving
site.
Re-
as well
a vexing waste
of pre-
who
chafed under the irony that Peruvian authorities had warned his
Majestic
Huayna Picchu
rises
behind a
group of structures peering through tangled foliage on the eastern edge of the
city looking west. Hiram Bingham's
1911 photograph
actually two of
the
ofMachu Picchu
is
first
ever captured or
his
tt
'd ^s,
$m
**
">
m.
\i0?k
'
y&i&M
vJS
Jt'i
I
$$**
'-V
\A
ir
i---.
Jl5*
fis
religious, as
tion," but
its
Bingham
sensed.
The
Bingham
attach the
fortress,
"A wonderful
effect, softer
and more
called
the wall
joins
the
named
ently
Now
the
the beauty
and precision
it possessed
from
scholars
likely
functioned as a
that
it
ber.
The building
ritual
cham-
in the fore-
Bingham with
its
mortarless, per-
world."
maconas
stonework
in the
pre-
and nobility
WONDERS
ITS
Two of its
windows of equal
stonemasons'
have served
ruler
Machu Picchus
me spellbound,"
ham exclaimed.
three
Bingham
as
On the north
religious center.
side of a clearing
Ornament Cham-
sight held
brilliance:
Bing-
"the
windows
&'&
Inca
at his
to svmbolize caves,
home of his
fathers
from
ham thought
this
might be the
evidence that
Kr.
crumbled before
Machu
chitectural stvle
first
-#v
;& ;>r<
According
size that
as niches.
;L/V
r\ \
mav
is
Picchu's ar-
late Inca.
its
once-pristine glo-
ry.
the fore-
stone, or
wall.
city's
principal temple
Believing that
is visible.
of the Three
Windows
(below).
He
10
Wl
^
J
/
m
j4_
'.>
"able,
flight
summit
the
in-
sun," in
(Inti
its
colorful translation.
tie.
may ha\e
symbolically teth-
away
at
it
from
mw
stice.
and
itself,
lowing
may have
al-
determine the
priests to
On these occa-
would have
decked the stone with great quantities of flowers and herbs. In particular, during the Inti Ra\mi
equinoxes.
its
The
fall
gy
rituals,
and
effi-
prayers.
i?
a-^*
fi
:'#'
;xf :
-
>j
m
.v***
4iS
j^m^m
'.
'**&!
monument
of its kind
is
still
in existence.
the
43
and granite
buildings
ofMa-
words of
Tale University art historian George Kubler.
The city's beauty lies in its remarkable inte-
-r
Ff'
VY
?\
AN EMPIRE BUILT
BY A MAN
CALLED
EARTHSHAKER
aking
advantage of a pleasant
its
political
domination of
Many
of the Inca
capital collapsed
narrow old
streets
much
As
in earlier
probably sacrificed to
withstood the
had painstakingly
the
sun god,
this sil-
parrot feathers
and
luxurious vicuna
wool
may
represent
fitted
a deity intended as
Cuzco
Domingo and
47
it
a portion
of its monaster)',
remained
the
intact, as
wonder and
had
And
to
tional stretches
colonial structures.
These splendid
built their
friars
had
first
in the Inca
supreme
walls,
deity.
The
Inti,
the
of Inti himself, thev had placed the idols of the peoples thev
rituals
in other
by the high
whom
cler
kiss,
known
in
priests
as the
mocha.
The Spaniards were dazzled bv the Coricancha. The chroniPedro de Cieza de Leon declared Inti's temple to be "among the
richest in
gold and
described
how
silver to
He
covered with sheets of this metal. There was an image of the sun, of
made of
gold, beautifully
48
my
fill.
Here
a long reach
a corner, next a
a fragment,
through the
now
aid of
these
a side altar.
John H. Rowe of the University of California pored over the monastery and mapped out a general
floor plan, which was largely validated when hidden portions of the
Inca structures came to light in 1950.
Earthquakes had forced the Dominicans to rebuild their
church several times over the centuries. But after the extensive damage of 1950, an unprecedented public outcry on behalf of the older
structures compelled restorers to grapple with a dilemma their predecessors had not faced: Which ruins should be saved
the Spanish colonial church or the Inca temple? A team of advisers
sent to Cuzco in 1951 by UNESCO (United Nations
Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Or-
Then,
its
to preserve the
ru's
architec-
monuments of Pe-
Symbolizing the clash of two cultures, the reconstructed Spanish church of Santo Domingo
sits atop its Inca foundation, the curved wall
of the Temple of the Sun, at Cuzco. Built
during the reign of Pachacuti from perfectly
fitted blocks of dark igneous rock, the sacred
wall of the Coricancha "golden enclosure"
and been
49
repaired
many
times over.
to the Inca ruins. Since then, several sections of the church and
in gold, revered
was onlv
bv the Incas
as the
on
political, religious,
a vallev
feet
above
and ceremonial
de Leon, an
"air
would have lansuch had not the hero Inca Yupanqui risen to power there
guished
less
as
50
=f;
of Inca supremacy,
domain
realm that in
height.
The
its
more than
brilliant political
royal
enough, Pachacuti
Under
man and
and
name he chose
Roman Empire
at its
Topa Inca Yupanqui, the Incas subdued every major state and tribe in the Andean region, thus creating
not only the largest empire in the pre-Columbian New World but
also the most carefully planned and administered one. They applied
ancient America, and his son,
with
conquerors almost
as
much
and
did their
were they
ideas
as
Spanish
practices survive
that,
many of their
today among
modern
Incas has
come from
stories passed
from
bol of strength
and power;
the outline
is
still visible
day
city
ma's head
(1)
ten blended the tales they heard into their descriptions of the empire.
is
51
virtues
As
far as
at the
extol,
on occasion, the
AD
1200. That
much
is
known from
list
of their
rulers.
appear in the Incas' own oral histories until mention of the sixth
who adopted
the
title
dwellers themselves
come
to be
known
still
later
ruler,
as Incas.
it,
The
its
acceptance.
who
Inti,
entrusted
groups
Incas
initiallv
in the
The
more inauspicious
fulfill
ruler, Pachacuti.
start as a
voung man:
sons of the eighth ruler; indeed, his brother, Urcon, had already been
named
which,
if
earlv ambition.
nothing
else,
According to
life's
work by
Inti in a
Bernabe Cobo, a
appeared to Pachacuti with
52
tm
subjugate
up Urcon
or bothPachacuti
As the Chancas
prepared to storm Cuzco, he took charge. To augment his own few
troops, he drew men from neighboring tribes. When the Chancas
opened their assault at dawn, Pachacuti was ready. Clad in the skin
of a puma, an animal that the Incas regarded as the embodiment of
strength and power, he led the counterattack. At the critical moment,
say the legends, he summoned supernatural aid. The very stones on
the battlefield turned into warriors, and their ghostly ranks helped
repel the enemy. Cuzco was safe.
Pachacuti now forced his father to abdicate and took the
throne. He then went on to a series of other military triumphs. With
an army composed of men from other conquered tribes but officered
solely by Incas, he gradually extended his dominion north into the
central Peruvian highlands and then south to the shores of Lake
Titicaca. As the SpanishTnca chronicler Garcilaso put it, "A prince's
thirst for
conquest,
like his
refused to leave.
He knew that
They
embarked upon new campaigns singing the grisly victory song that, too often, became literal truth: "From his skull
traditionally
we
shall drink.
will serve as
We
our
shall
his teeth.
His bones
flutes.
them
in
combat.
He would
53
tell
upon which they would be treated with honor and loaded with
presents."
Not
surprisingly, the
gifts,
ca-
first
by Pachacuti and
Topa
his heir,
logically diverse.
Anyone who
encompassed
its
will
be amazed by
geographical extremes.
eler starting
on the
coast near
A trav-
moving
mountains, passes
He
From
down
open grasslands
Mantaro River. And his trip has just begun. He must now cross the
snowfields of the White Cordillera, 16,500 feet up, then descend
through the mist-shrouded forests of the montana to the Apurimac
canyon, only a few thousand feet above sea
level.
Veering southeast,
he reaches the high ridges of the Vilcabamba range, and then enters
the jungles of the
Urubamba
flies,
region.
He
from almost
has traveled
less
than 300
full
54
Massive stone terraces served as agricultural platforms for the temple citadel at
over the
es-
human
turning each breath into a labored gasp. Skin cracks in the dry air, and
toes
and fingers
an energizing narcotic
chewed coca
grows
in the
leaf that
montana.
It
extremes,
much
less
of high-altitude living
The Andes
to ease
are
is
young mountains on
One
its
One
burying an entire
itself.
fiery contents.
such
the hardships
valleys below.
Beyond
at
mud
slides
Earthquakes rumble
lives,
city.
Then there is
arrival
above 10,000
is
feet,
does rain
fall
come
spring,
montana, 90 inches
crests.
and blizzards
W;
ith a
domain so
vast
and
far-
needed the
groups with
little
in
common.
After conquering
all
of
history's
wanted to devote
army to his son Topa Inca in 1463. In the succeeding years, Pachacuti
invented ingenious mechanisms for governing and borrowed others
from the Andean societies his army subdued.
Once Pachacuti had seized a new territory, he set sound policy
calculated to prevent unrest. For example, he allowed conquered
peoples to keep their leaders and gods, although he did expect ther
55
add worship of the sun god to their regular ritual. Unlike the
Spaniards, who insisted on promulgating their religion to the exclu-
to
sion of others, he
welcomed
pantheon,
which was
his
wav
arise
So
and com-
Cuzco, the
official
language.
He
allowed people
still
in
to speak their
words."
Its
pire's legitimacy.
his historians
supersede
woman
all
A master
propagandist, he reportedly
new
One of its
of
lea,
summoned
self-enhancing history to
stories concerns a
who
young
allegedly repulsed
herself, she
Sapa Inca then ordered 40,000 soldiers to dig the canals that
bring the liquid to the parched area.
Through
The
would
village.
this story
Pachacuti
did not seem to matter that this extraordinary engineering feat had,
in fact,
When his
56
Such resettlement
ierarchy,
H;
dominant organizing
principle
was the
as-
life
do not survive,
a description
his person.
While
details
of his
rituals
must have been treated. In all likelihood his food, served in dishes of
gold and silver, would have been brought to him and laid upon a mat
at his feet. In Atahualpa's case, a woman attendant would hold each
of his dishes as he ate; another would extend her hands to catch his
spit if he had to clear his throat. Atahualpa's person was considered
so sacred that his leftover food and clothing discarded after being
worn once was saved and ceremonially burned at year's end.
When
walk
as a
litter
encrusted with
jewels,
sands.
He
held audiences
upon
generally
in the thou-
57
growing
of his position
status
at the
who
bines,
served
him
as
and an
heiress
full sisters.
Being of
right, the
Cova
From
He
mind
later.
strated
when Pachacutrs
of smallpox, before
officiallv
this
themselves as to
Thus
that
war
and
bv her
subjects as
fe-
male workers on the roval estates but also pursued investigations into the natural sciences. She
introduced
aged the
new
art
arrowheads more
lethal.
At the top of
a three-tiered structure
of
Manco
all
of the land
as
most prized
resources, including its llamas, alpacas, and vicunas;
gold and silver, coca leaves, artifacts created by the
finest artisans, and the most beautiful women in
The gold statuette at left exhibits the typical hairstyle of Inca women: long and
parted in the middle. Women of status
donned tapestry-weave gowns and shawls
fastened with an ornamental pin, or tupu
(above*. Xoblemen wore ear spools like
those adorning the silver figurine at
They dressed
the realm.
in knee-length tunics
window
silver.
Wives of
aristocrats
by a sash
or bronze pins,
known
as
and kept
their black
and shining.
right to
An
Inca
Andean
noblewoman held
a claim in her
own
meaning
from
his father,
The
more than
five
hundred.
who
From among
prefects, or apus,
who gov-
many
prov-
59
i
THE WEAVER'S ART: GOODS
MORE PRECIOUS THAN GOLD
To
among
exquisite tapestries.
such
garb
as the
shown below
of a
left
or alpaca cloth
The
ton,
the
wool of alpacas,
vicunas. In
all
llamas,
and
elite
man's tunic
constructed
woven cotton
known as huasca.
relativelv loose
into panels
woven
and
triangle
The checkerboard
garment, with
its
carefully fin-
at right
the
officials
known
as curacas.
Successful rulers before being taken over by the Incas, they had been
worn by
women
skilled
hands of
in religious service.
Most
practice
as part
of the Inca
composed of households.
broke
all
holds.
the
an arm's length
as far as the
examples of Inca
bespeak
the intensive labor and vast quantities
textiles
of material involved:
An
contain
up
to
400
threads per
above them were prefects of 100, 500, 1,000, 5,000, and 10,000
households. The positions were hereditary for all those in charge of
groups larger than
fifty.
lesser extent
in the
of
society.
This included
gifts
of land, servants,
polygamy, to ride
a litter,
and to use
gold and
tier in
Making
To
it,
"to
make
a judicious distribution
as
of die
61
in
Incas,
ail
resources
farms,
rivers,
animal herds
were declared to be
the property of the empire, and the land itself was divided into three
One
part
too poor to pav taxes, the Sapa Inca ordered that each household
provide instead a receptacle
the leader's
filled
with
lice.
Cuzco
demanding
its
due.
lice,
the
62
frogs, as well as
human
and
and gods,
lizards,
beings
this as
intentioned; in
chis-
way
which
of."
else directly
own use.
of homespun
cloth.
cities,
were taxed
in
who
terms of the
as jewel-
towns and
they produced
lived in the
artifacts
using the raw materials the court and nobles provided them.
royal garb:
a red
island in
llama sports
blanket, simulated by a
coloring of cinnabar,
llamas of various
during fertility
colors,
rituals.
63
would
place
among
wondrous
of llamas and
creations
and wildcats,
all
wrought from
liz-
pre-
sing,
the mifa,
literallv, a
The
owed
a silver or
copper mine.
litter
deeply ingrained in the Incas that even in the later days of Spanish
communitv
at
some
task."
of a rudimentarv welfare
time of need.
went
toil,
state,
center.
"it
ill,
has been checked that there was relief from the Sapa Inca's ware-
Much
it is
hard to imagine
many
from the depots. In return for being so well taken care of,
the men were expected to show restraint; "pillaging cities was forsupplies"
64
la
pon
U!
Pachacuti's retirement in
panqui, already in
command of the
By Topa
Inca's death in 1493, the Inca domain would extend a length of some
2,500 miles. With Cuzco at its center, the empire included the northempire, expanding
it
to almost
its
ultimate boundaries.
its
all,
and extending into northern Chile. At its peak, Tahuantinsuyu contained at least a hundred different ethnic groups, all of whom were
pressed into the Inca mold.
What
is
astonishing
is
that Pachacuti
and
The
Incas,
unique
however, developed
among human
many
It
colors
work
in a particular
month
men
all
the statistical
granary in the land. Thanks to the quipu, the Incas were able to take
a census
precise, according to
65
one Spanish
was overlooked.
r
empire," wrote another chronicler, "was governed by the quipus."
Andean peasants still make and use primitive quipus for noting the
number of animals in their herds and the volume of their harvests.
The code the Incas used for recording numerical data on the
strings was partially worked out in the early part of the 20th century
by the archaeologist L. Leland Locke of New York's American
had
a surprising
revealed,
among
other
understanding of important
Mu-
UNRAVELING
A KNOTTY
CODE
brilliant
and subtie medium of expression bevond being a recorder of numbers. The American ethnohistorians Marcia and Robert Ascher have
painstakingly analyzed nearly half of the
400
Like other scholars, the Aschers believe that colors, location of the
and even the knots themselves mav well stand for concepts,
things, and verbal patterns such as the repetition of a phrase or a series
of related phrases, instead of just numbers. Garcilaso noted that the
quipumakers, known as quipu camayocs "keepers of the quipus"
were "not only the accountants, but also the historians." He also
strings,
To
bv the Incas to
individual quipu
fin-
all
these accounts."
often by grave-
where the
dry air has preserved the cotton or wool strings.
But the fact that these come from what was
robbers
its
center leaves
its
of
which was probablv known onlv
to the quipu's creator,
acted as
its
interpreter.
who also
But
in
unique,
L. Leland
"never
is
feature shared bv
cilaso,
tally
remain
Locke deciphered
all
quipus:
kev
The
on
away
rotted
in the moister
The quipumaker
is
believed to have
all
who
it.
many
cases
standardization
yellow
at
the
final interpre-
The
tation
said to be punishable
As
by death.
none
in the tens,
and
a five-looped
was
last
reference point:
never
who sometimes
full.
who
"those
see all."
ry
marvel of engineering,
miles of highway,
Over
inces,
it
was
this
at
a vital
stopping
known
tocoyricocs,
element
in
and agents
way
who
at regularly
placed stations
67
time
King
Andean
ui
life
and
reached
its
intended
German
it
at the
is
}53
ELQVARTO(A0TAM
AM 0)0 MADOPESDESTEPEIHa
is
a general.
spools against
enemy
He
leads
soldiers of Charcas.
mm
to
show
A pair of nobles
Ill
lif
(WER\mOtoELKCmmSREA&
60VBPKA3)OW)EU>SP^Em'KTER.
mmmsmA
The Inca in charge of the Guambo rope bridge (foreground) allows a traveler to cross. Many workers died
repairing these spans, wrote
Huaman Poma,
lauding
u
ns
mwmmu
W
DEPOOTODEliUfiA
u>
VM
*~
jtt>" Kt
ff\ HtYK
He
is
.x*
j-j"
C*
vnO
Inspecting a group of eight storehouses, or qollqas, holding cotton, coca, sweet potatoes, and corn, the emperor
capital.
Relav runners,
known
as
Thev constituted
what Cieza de Leon called "a system of posts which was the best that
could be thought of or imagined. It may be certain that news could
not have been conveyed with greater speed on swift horses." The
chasqui runners, were stationed several miles apart.
the thin
mountain
air,
in
full tilt.
With the white feathers on his cap streaming in the wind, he announced his approach by blowing on a conch-shell trumpet. The
second runner, thus
alerted,
fell
from the
B
bind together his empire, Pachacuti
future generations if the empire as
through the
fresh fish
relay.
ut however effective
all
this
in helping to
still
who had become curacas to attend school with the offspring of his
own nobles in Cuzco. These voung men eventually would go home
as potential
while, they served, like the provincial idols kept in the Coricancha, as
friendly hostages to ensure the
known
as
people.
this training
as to their forefathers."
At age
Flowers, parrots,
and women
in elegant
rare for
hard on the arms and legs with cane whips," Garcilaso reported, "to
test their resistance to pain,
and
70
slightest
and
other deities.
sign of suffering
their
was
pitilessly
banished."
He
also
noted how, in
special
weapons,
less
exercises, so
known
as acllacuna,
women, prepared
or chosen
females for
lives as priestesses,
Cuzco stood on the main square near the Coricancha and next to one
of the Sapa Inca's most important palaces; scholars take its prime
location as an indication of its significance within Inca society. Similar
women,
skills as
dyeing
women who
called cumbi,
tival
place,
71
final selection
took
who
would
serve as wives,
these brides
wanted to
went
some
for himself,
to political allies
cultivate, "thus
some
and to
him with this sort of price," wrote the chronicler Father Cobo. A
modern scholar, the ethnohistorian Irene Silverblatt of the Univerfor
sity
tool
women were
rewards
of Inca imperial policv "distributed
yet another
to grease the
as
Borne on a litter by servants, the mummy of an emperor enjoys the same privileged treatment he had during life. By
the time of the conquest,
empire's wealth
went
to
much of the
maintaining
72
L.
longed.
An
exception was
made
who
occasionally
visited the
Of
all
A panaca was
male
line,
which
The
of the
relatives.
mummy of the
its
true leader
73
members. As Pedro Pizarro, a cousin of the conquistador, wrote, "The greater part of the people and the wealth were
in the possession of the dead." The expense of maintaining all those
roval mummies and their relatives became too burdensome for
Pachacuti's great-grandson, Huascar. But when this Sapa Inca tried
and
servants
staff
in
Cuzco, the
as
of the
citv
When
1559
that the
mummies were
still
being worshiped in
secret,
he
two Coyas,
all
dressed as
fingers
wood."
it
as
hard
as
he
their faces
bathed in
The government,
tears.
Manv
mummies
in death
a formi-
conquistador to modern
From
have beheld the imposing
of
tourist, all
ruins
who
thetic reasons
at the intricacy
blocks.
highlighting
stonework.
To
be sure, the Incas did not develop their skills in a vacuum; the Andean practice of
building with stone predates their empire by several
centuries. In fact, the Incas adopted many of their acarchaeologists alike.
fitted
skill.
The
Incas even
The
carved for
area
with
its
ritualistic
shrines of the
that
75
ZiilJi
vPii \r:
\fflpi
and the
Many of the
effort required
pounded
faces.
is
small."
Protzen
during
own
many jetas
are
sized
building aids.
tas
had
More
likely,
the
je-
practical function.
Stone steps
and
a massive
ret ami
:;
size,
,m
*r~
>
^ '-:" ^
\>l
surrounding wall embodies the culmination of the polygonal style. Its blocks bear
many of the enigmatic jetas, whose purpose remains shrouded in doubt.
straight rows
tmliPk
HARMONY OF STRUCTURE
AND ENVIRONMENT
While few
crude
traces
mud
remain of the
of upper-
onstrate
how
dem-
Inca architecture
environments
or later construction
is
the
the residential
compound
The cancha
consisted of
and storage buildings grouped around a central
courtvard. When this lavout was
evolved.
living quarters
considerations and a
flect climatic
certain uniformitv
mark
Machu
longing to a
re-
of stvle.
the site of a
Picchu be-
elite.
The buildings are of the stone-and-mudmortar construction called pirca. the most
common form of Inca masonry. The stone
gables once supported steeply pitched,
_r*L_
Ym
As a
and
airy aspect.
and seems
priate for
mountain
its
altogether approsetting.
n
I
also served
|PBter)
Temple of the
approach. Cotn
the central
P: sac's design
tivation,
Wfff
fortress at
WpaWnperial
res\
During the heyday of the Inca empire, its supreme rulers built several
and then,
mobilized the em-
irrigation canals to
by royal
worldly wealth.
pire's
fiat,
real-
estates
remained
in the
hands of
augment
his
manent
"*S|
\M
"S^T**)*
'
'
>
'
VUtHE-^-H^*
S^tgrr
1*E%'~' f
Hugging
cliff,
the diz-
The
zying road to
trail
Machu
Picchu
typifies the
this
*
REVERENCE
FORTHE
LIVING ROCK
The
as a
omnipres-
is
(
i^onstaeri
sits be-.
W^^eath
Tath the
the so-called Temple of the Sun at
Machu Picchu. Stonemasons carved steps,
altars, and nici ts into its granite interior and constr ^kd a wall, at right,
to link it to tht
mnple
above.
mous craftsmen
ments to
monu-
created
Broad
rain.
referred to a
>
'
ti
|ll
1 1\
m
1.1
A
\iilt
Will//
&-
Pi
#
|,
m1
VQmv^
^r
\W\
\kSralH
Wr\
\
A^|>
BORROWERS
OF
GREATNESS
they
may have
achievements.
all
that they
seemed to
What the Spaniards did not know is that the Incas had
from
all
the
it, little
Incas' rise to
These hammered-gold
gauntlets probably
sheathed the hands
Chimu
mummy. The de-
of a noble
signs
warriors in
battle dress
and geo-
metric patterns
reflect the
Chimu
practice of tattoo-
were
largely the
in the
had originated with the Incas. The truth is that civilized life in
the Andes went back at least 3,000 years. Archaeologists have found
temples in the highlands and great cities in the coastal deserts that
were as remote in time from the age of Inca greatness as is the Athens
of Pericles from the Athens of modern Greece. But if the Incas were
inheritors, they were able to mark the accomplishments of those who
preceded them with the stamp of their own genius.
From the beginning, life in the areas that would become the
plied,
85
who
inhabited
them. In valleys leading to the coastal desert, for example, the climate
was so dry that no more than an inch or two of rain fell in any single
year. While some groups made their living along the coast as fishermen, harvesting the rich protein bounty churned up by the colder
temperatures of the currents sweeping north from Antarctica, others
in the valleys tended garden plots of squash and beans, and eventually
corn, on small green patches made possible by water from rivers
gushing from the heights. Settlement spread as people began moving
inland, there to meet other challenges posed by the extremes of
weather and altitude. Towns grew up around ceremonial centers,
then turned into
cities filled
with
all
10 stories
life.
tall at
a site called
Pampa de
las
Llamas-Moxeke.
me of the
first
students of An-
who come
86
rampart
cuts
the
southern portion of the Kingdom ofChimor. What had looked like disjointed
piles of rock
the ground
Some of the
tons.
fitted
to 100
not used, nor even necessary. Already in ruins by the time the Incas
in the
is
at the
is
a massive
of the Sun, hewn from a single block of stone. Carved on its lintel is
the figure of a god with round, staring eyes, and a halo of serpent and
feline heads. In
each hand
is
a staff,
condor head.
The god's image appears not only at Tiahuanaco, but throughout the
Peruvian Andes. Uhle, excavating at Pachacamac, a shrine on the
coast near Lima that had been revered from ancient times through the
Inca period, found an abundance of Tiahuanacan motifs. In coastal
jr.
images of the
across
named
influence
Huari, so
of their
-;<>&
capital city.
its
deity. Clearly,
87
:.
among
Chimu
craftsmen were
much of the Inca gold that later bedazzled the conquistadors was wrought bv Chimu hands. Confronted by
the best in /Vmerica;
absorbed the
Chimu
When
came
and present,
as
work
own
to power, he
they
for
them
\assals.
Andean
cultures,
it
is
of their accomplishments but also to surpass their collectiye imperial grandeur. Ear-
man
the ciyic
tures: the
monuments of two
earlier cul-
great walled
Pikillacta,
only
precision of a military
monumental stature,
long. The walls of these structures consisted of fieldstone set in mud
cement smoothed oyer with coats of clay and gypsum plaster; from
88
document a long
succes-
Incas.
One
of the
sites
he investigated
and
come
to light.
up
nearly
50
feet
from
some measured 6
their foundations.
feet thick
and rose
A system of underground
city plan
street
became standard
for dwellings in
the Inca imperial style. But Cuzco's true glory lay not in
its
mimicry
formed
its
And
finest buildings.
for these
the inspiration
ments of Tiahuanaco.
Tiahuanaco counterpart,
Inca stonework is massive and finely hewn.
Like
The
its
Incas cut
in the wall
fashion;
of the Hatun
outer face,
all
them
in
even rows
like
made
they
forming
its
brickwork.
would
fit
To
laid
en-
and hold,
on
and
bottom
surface.
would
By keying or locking
could with-
down
is
lift
would
into position.
how
the Incas
the Sacsahuaman fortified temple. "Three carts could not earn' even
the smallest of them."
He
89
carts
could
fit
inside
it.
is
is
so large tta
Another
chronicle
El Inca Garcilaso de
la
Vega,
a casual observer
demons
rather than
Men
might
built
by
men."
tell
not
fortifica-
still
were recruited from the region of Tiahuanaco and came with skills
that had been passed down to them from their ancestors.
The sheer phvsical effort expended at even- stage of construc-
must have been extraordinarv. Just getting the stone to the site
called for enormous energy and ingenuity. Cuzco's architects favored
tion
90
may have
round pebbles.
area.
Carved with meticulous detail, Tiahuanacan deities decorated the huge doorways of the city. Many of the figures display tear tracks below their eyes a feline
to
many Andean
ologists
influence
was widespread.
iron,
or the plumb bob, nor any of the other kinds of equipment and
artisans use."
Not
all
finished blocks
the stones
still litter
made
several
it
there.
Numbers of semi-
some
as
at
hammers
pound
like
shape. But
labor paid
all
off.
to
Inca construction
is
as stable as die
"so
stro;
=4
BRAIN
SURGERY
BE FORE
ITS TIME IN ANCIENT PERU
When Ephraim George
Squier,
voyage of discoverv.
He was
But then, on
a visit to a pri-
Howev-
those excisions
let-
have determined
Some-
on
Drilling, cutting,
and
scrap-
used
tools
Peruvian surgeons
such as knives,
tweezers, chisels,
and scalpels
(left)
hammers,
with re-
pa-
headaches.
tions
BC;
tech-
Despite extensive
the victim, on
done, lived, as
damage
whom a
is
to this skull,
trephination was
also neu-
world
exists."
And
so far
it
it
long
of earth-
sites for
construction materials.
Chosen Women,
bowed
landmark
at
Machu
toward the
And
with ingenuitv. The wall that connects the curving tower with
two-and-a-half-story house
thev
or locked ones, the Inca master masons created a series of braces that
Not
all
its
monuments
like these,
though, and large numbers of purelv functional, vet imposing, structures dotted the countrvside. Take, for example, the qollqas, the store-
Most were
built of mud-plastered fieldstone, often in the silolike shape of some
traditional village dwellings. Thev stood in great formal clusters on
along the highwavs and outside the provincial
capitals.
the hillsides, where rain drained off quicklv, their contents dry and
94
i_
Two
main
arteries, linked
by numerous
The
coast
Maule River, just south of presentday Santiago. The highland route, called
Chile's
===a
and reaching
its
terminus
The
moun-
and the
two
montana
stretched
miles.
had been
laid
in the north,
by
Causeways
built
of adobe or of
'
Quito
ucamac
<4&rU
^ti
'v2
:*
<
,.
*:
4
'
<S3
''
INS >:v
TAe
and communi-
and sometimes
as many as
250 miles a
The
day.
of this network
main
is
size
and
complexity
depicted on the
map
north-south highway
right; the
96
Jtiago)
at
might be
plas-
Along the hardpan of the coast the road was left unpaved;
but stone pillars marked the shoulders, and along some stretches low
walls of stone or adobe were built to keep out the sand and to prevent
the llama caravans or relay messengers from straying. On the main
routes, boundary stones marked the distances.
Road widths varied with the terrain, from nearly 20 feet in the
flats, along the desert and puna, down to 3 feet in the mountain
passes. Wherever possible, the roads were laid out with linear precision. The Inca engineers seemed to prefer to surmount obstacles
rather than evade them. And since the highways were used only by
pedestrians or surefooted llamas, there was virtually no limit on the
and
clay.
made
for
rugged
On
Machu
lad-
Picchu and
another place, the road passes through a tunnel-like rock cut, 15 feet
long,
made by
The
sloping tunnel
is tall
enough for a man to walk through and has low steps cut into its floor.
'he road builders faced their
t:
when spanning
the region's
to spanning the deep river gorges of the montana, the road builders
often rigged an oroya, a kind of cable car that
hung from
a heavy rope
of twisted vines or ichu grass strung from one bank to the other. The
passenger, crouching in a reed basket that dangled from the cable,
would be pulled across by men on the far side. But sometimes there
was no basket, and Father Cobo tells what happened then: "They just
tie
the
cannot
man
fall,
hook, he
is
securely so that if he
and hanging
in the air
97
to the
cavalry.
While
this
dividual travelers
something more
mountain
on secondarv
substantial.
To
in-
demanded
These rank
woven of ichu
Cobo.
Two
the roadbed,
To
and,
later,
the
re-
litters
whose only
task
was to
in repair.
98
erected
tambos (roadside
shelters) at intervals
of 15 to 30 miles, and
around 1,000 in all. Colonial records report an attempt by the Spaniards to keep the tambos going as an integral part of the highway
network, but with
These way
importance
of storage to the smooth running of the Inca empire. But they would
have been of little use had the Incas not created an effective agricul-
Made
modern
reconstruc-
is
an-
on either side of the gorge. These gracefill spans represented the pinnacle of Inca
gation
to
public service.
of the Colca
and
hundreds of other
at
Some
it
could not
have been conducted before. (In Peru todav only about 6 million
acres
work
The
Incas,
some of the
wide and
as
top for a few rows of corn or vegetables. Most terrace walls are of
fieldstone,
and
as
as to
Others
near Cuzco,
for
example
filled."
type of cut- stone blocks that were used to construct the royal palaces.
After building the retaining walls, laborers poured in rubble
fill
dumped on
top thousands of
'hroughout
t:empire
scarce
this
relief bv
digging
the Inca
sought
much of
The
earliest
farmers
of the water
table, thev
100
The curious terraces of Moray, huge coneshaped depressions cut 33 feet into the
limestone plateau northwest of Cuzco,
are a singular example of Inca agrono-
pose.
site
could have
from
top to bottom,
number of deep
pre-Columbian
irrigation system in
Moche
dug
its
rainy season,
and cotton.
Mama Mi-
ry
may
sto-
Mo-
and Chicama
river
The parched
valleys.
gion
receives less
re-
than an
abundant flow of
Andean rivers and make
tap the
nmhology
for the
out by
the
had
in fact
been carried
Chimu.
hand of the
effi-
Incas.
own purposes.
example
is
A striking
the
Urubamba
graded
produce
many more
acres
was
be-
water
thus
Puyupatamarka complex
(above),
with
its series
baths stepped
down a
side, suggests
that
it
of
hill-
may
high priority
among
the
dering
mountain water
urban dwellers. The
fresh
to
103
refuse.
in the
work of
intricate net-
a gently sloping
re-
all
the
carried
implements.
Some
in
tandem
used stone and bronze tools to cane the rock. Boulders standing in
engineers chose the most likelv slopes and best routes for canalization
is
Chicago's Field
some
sort
Museum
a tripod,
with
a water-filled
a sighting
tube
running through
it.
museum
in
ological
a function.
Chimu
hydraulic engineers to
maintain a steady but rapid flow, with stone sluice gates allowing the
104
local inhabitants to
ed by a venerated 'first race" who dominated the region prior to the Incas.
Although
in quantities that
fell
were
of
To
ensure that the corn would receive a steady flow of water, the Incas
many
miles long,
carved out of the most difficult terrain with the simplest of tools. In
at least
one
At
extended to
and Ollantaytambo, the mighty Urubamba River was straightened and canalized
and
its
Pisac
thermal and regular springs so that some royals could enjoy the
luxury of hot and cold running water. Reportedly, Pachacuti was
Water and earth intertwine
cient
an an-
in
still
in
and Ecuador's
Cuzco,
a project
undertaken to
two
through
of
the
first in
the
Andes to harness
good of society. In
it
for the
fields for
farming,
show
BC
that
some
ar-
date
ar-
America.
One of the
largest
remnants of this
Fahrenheit helps moderate the harsh extremes of the puna climate, making cultiva-
tion possible despite the 12,500-foot altitude. But even with this
advantage,
if the local
first
up earth was exceedingly fertile, and the platforms' elevation improved drainage and minimized the effects of flooding. The channels
did much more than provide moisture during times of drought; they
acted as heat sinks, absorbing the warmth of the sun during the day
and releasing it at night when the air temperature plunged. An in-
Chimu
Indeed, in many
if their
were not.
Using smooth, hard stones
as both hammer and anvil, the
metalsmiths pounded out the
basic shape of the object from
raw ingots. They then added
tools
freehand with a
stylus.
tools.
benefit of steel
Scholars are uncer-
106
sulating blanket
at
vields
from the
wildest expectations.
per acre.
The
first
With
why were
One
became depopulated
as a result
for their
their
some
new
its
char-
&&T
Andean men had
times gold
and some-
the
and noted
108
years old.
By
Chimu
files, chisels,
109
Unlike
silver,
mines did
exist,
deemed
Spaniards, whose
demands
air
of the high
altitudes;
wives
to stav with their husbands while they paid off their labor tax
cooked for their men, holidays were frequent, and each worker could
return to his home after working his turn.
Bellows and blast furnaces were unknown; smelting temperatures of more than 1,000 degrees centigrade
cotta
wind furnaces
were reached
in terra-
where
of wind
built, the
a lack
workers, noted
more
force.
and
and gold began to run out, the terraces and irrigation canals
were abandoned, the bridges were allowed to rot away, and the
surviving buildings were neglected and left to decay. The legacy of
silver
ments and
in their
would
live
on
in the spirit
of their accomplish-
.9
fc#
W
t
the peak of
its
L600
miles
Chimu, whose
voted themselves to
When
Chan
Chimu
de-
production.
palaces of the
tariat,
arts
many as 12,000
Chan
cramped workshops
ingots,
suggested a hasty
exit,
probably
at the
ham-
textiles.
left in
The
the ruins
.....
THE GOLDEN
CITY OF THE
DEAD
sprawl
is
of a portion of its 10-square-mile expanse and in the schematic map (below) of the city's core area. The map shows
locations of the walled ciudadelas, or royal compounds
(gold), the barrios, or artisans'
sunken gardens
(light gold),
and
quarters (brown),
also identifies
and
important
the photograph.
had plazas and boulevards, Chan Chan's core was a succession of royal compounds ar-
other
cities
cities)
(little
first
thought
but
ally,
later research
seems to
compound was
own abode,
rest in his
tion of worldly
male
sacrificial victims.
erty, in turn,
The prop-
passed to his
residence in a
Smaller
rela-
took up
new compound.
compounds adjoining
formed
a buffer be-
were thought to
and aggressive. But its
theocratic (kings
be divine),
with
its
walls-within-walls palaces
that ultimately
its
own
draw
directly
on the water
table.
Re-
grettably for the Chimu, the plots did not produce enough
More
Burial
mound
2 Sunken garden
3 Ceremonial plazas
relief planes in a
knives
in
technique similar
ocher
Chan
palaces. In a city
Chan
of straight
thing in
surrounding earth,
the friezes, most of which had
maritime themes, were originallv
plastered and in
filled
ly painted.
pale
like the
lines
is
some
cases bright-
and mvthical
creatures.
textile patterns
-->
Though
recognizing the
Dragon
(above),
Chan Chan,
Huaca
del
as
walls
had no
expert,
One
seg-
y^vr
The
Chimu
moon goddess,
ia ^
who, rath-
cated to the
Si,
VL
'.<*
*
T&
*3
<*S*
bas-relieffriezes in the
Ciudadela
called
caballito (little
On
the boat's
area
prow
to
sits
and
other marine
life still
Diamond-shaped carvings
this
now
roofless audiencia,
room, in a
es
and
Chan Chan
or receiving
palace.
The nich-
The
walls'
AN OYSTER AS
REVERED
AS GOLD
An old
spiny oyster
tells
The
shells.
species
was held
Chimor. Archae-
in
high esteem in
crushed to powder
burial site.
at every royal
The
its
Chimu
king, com-
"?
importance
Nino storms
is
linked with El
that periodically
may
Despite
%V.x
By this
move south
warm El
Nino currents
ters
in the
that
kill
most of
water
fish.
thus an
They were
Spiny outside,
and,
omen of death
shells
of the
per-
colorful interior.
Pizarro's
When
men captured a
bal-
lit
^i
<V
In a society without wheeled vehicles, the
wondrously decorated wooden litter below
Hi,
found near Chan Chan was the equivalent of a royal limousine. The gold, turquoise, shells, and wooden carvings artfully added to the back of the litter, seen
here, depict masked and bewigged figures
A*
fc
*m<*0tttin
uimn*
"
'
Sue
******
S-:
**i
jf c^jSi
.
A^&T^S
L^
J^ 'J^^-mh,
m-
shell itself.
i '4
f
Made from
yellow
macaw
like the
one at
left, this
species
ducks
and paradise
tanagers.
RESPLENDENT RAIMENT
FOR THE CHOSEN FEW
Chimu workshops were
^ team
brilliantly
barrios frequently
metalsmithing in the
ogists sifting
through the
dust of 600-year-old
at
doubtless
would have
for
women
a horizontally
ly
"
*"
it
sb
r
'
Chimu
textile
The
wrapped
***
explanation:
as re-
1*1
JL4.
^5
l~i*J
>
mW
ft
?Sff
The
tassels
and
-.-
had
to be
WrW
**;
!*!
III
#.
*?** A"*?#5I
:%L*S>*
Since wool
XXI
imported,
it
was
the familiar
rich-
patterned cloth.
far-
The wool
Curiously,
Chan Chan
dyed; there
dress,
\~
basin,
facilitated
Amazon
colored feathers or in
enterprises. Archaeol-
in
boat.
The
slits
many Andean
r>i
Chimu
times gold
The ore
like
those
shown
was pounded
into sheets with small stone hammers and fashioned into implements, decorative pieces, and ornaments for glittering garments
ingots, the metal
elite
could garb
themselves in gold.
The
lords
of
>r^3
-';
w!"3
St- Jl
5
^ Jg
Xni
c.*c.
r* **__b
<b^**i
^ ^**>
h.*Jj!l
*J&
^#J
c^il
m9m
t_-
*M
9
Spangled with 18-carat gold platelets,
this
quest
may
shoulders of a Chimu
efCbimor by
the Incas. It
2k.
Chimu
band with
symmetry.
3*
5f
V^;-
-v.
hP^"^^P
%'
>
\'
W-t>\
'
frogs, and human faces along with geometric shapes that may have held em-
Chimu
society
was regarded as a
di-
and siblings.
The bag at right, with layers of quadrangular gold disks covering its cloth base,
was probably a gilded fashion accessory
for a Chimu noble. Similar bags were
employed by the Incas for holding coca
leaves, the mildly narcotic stimulant that
nobility, in keep-
may have
used.
V.VJ
my.
LIVES OF
HARD WORK
AND JOYOUS
PLAY
highway that wends el&t of I5ima, Peru, was being constructed, laborers cut through a massive burial mound at the city's borders,
exposing pre-Columbian graves and their contents bits of pottery,
wooden implements, mummy wrappings, bones, and skulls to which
patches of dried skin and clumps of hair were still attached. To the
inhabitants of Lima this would not have been regarded as a particularly unusual occurrence, since the grounds of many of their modern
homes conceal such grim mementos and, as one observer wrote,
coastal
"In cultivating their flower gardens, the residents are as likely to turn
up
skulls as stones."
Desecrated by huaqueros
local ^rave-
it
Lima
bears
mute
flicted
damage
on
it
in-
by
treasure hunters.
sites
known
as huaqueros.
Looking
123
in
1976,
on the
blun-
It
my
artifacts
AD
'he Incas
ethic.
class
of
below the nobility, willing and able to wrest from the mountains and deserts the means to feed not only themselves but also a
religious establishment that consumed enormous resources and an
upper caste bent on creating a high culture. In the Andean peoples,
the Incas had a vigorous peasantry' that proved a worthy match for
citizens
revealed
how
creatively they
of their
lives,
124
communal
their
existence.
in
seeming con-
pose
reduced
the productivity of
nate
to
izenry that
made
cit-
Inca.
Lima
and
assiduously photograph
rope pieces of a loom (bottom, center) buried with these remains of a wellborn but
woman
life
have pro-
much data on
as
lives.
whom
might
dress,
marrv.
even
they might
minute
made
The dual
it
of the
common
citizen
of Tahuantinsuyu.
round of endless
tasks
its
The
Incas superimposed
on
125
official
the form of agricultural produce and cloth. But for the ordinary
family
the
it
was the
members happened
to belong.
ayllu,
upon marriage,
received
from the Sapa Inca an allotment of land, or topo, that was just large
enough to support himself and his wife. The size of the topo varied
according to the
fertility
if,
topo
for example, a
skillful
catch.
Images of traditional
life
are rare;
and
the
human figure,
concentrating
religious establishment.
husband,
it
man and
cating their complementary and thus equal share of the tax burden.
But who,
in fact,
concluded that the plebeian wife, with small children, bore the brunt
of the
toil.
virtually slaves
women
status. Just as
a life
as
who
being
of drudgery.
women
It
women
Father Bernabe
Cobo saw
these peasant
Huaman
Within the
ayllu, a sense
idarity prevailed.
of sol-
to-
126
newlvweds; and
called to serve
a stint in the
of his topo on
army or on
who stayed
behind took
At the time
ecclesiastical
hardened
wood or
bronze.
us-
up
the clods.
ayllu
of the
soil
es, chili
all,
potatoes, of
which
there were
127
Doing double
duty, a peasant
woman
strapped to her
shoulders.
manding environment; no
the usual
workaday
tasks
respite from
was taken,
And
food.
still
in addition to
all
was
The
sick
At the same
time,
employment through
deaf,
the blind
like disability
from
By law, a
could only marry someone
with a
citizen
at
around
A per-
fifty.
No
vanced years were exempt from mifa service and freed from taxation.
Although women worked in the fields and cared for the children, they still were expected to weave. The woman of Ancon may
have been a prodigious weaver; in any case, she was buried with a vast
amount of cloth. There were about 17 yards of fabric in her wrappings alone, representing, by one scholarly estimate, more than 850
hours put in on spindle and loom. Two wicker workbaskets in her
mummy bundle were packed with the implements and materials she
had used. Women, including even noble Inca ladies, were forever
spinning as they walked and talked, as they kept an eye on their
youngsters, as they watched over their cooking.
Men, too, were known to weave, although they more commonly took care of a family's apparel needs by cobbling sandals of
untanned leather from the thick hide on the neck of the llama, tying
their handiwork with woolen cords. Father Cobo describes a typical
sandal as having a "sole which was shorter than the length of the foot,
so that their toes extend out beyond the end of the sole, permitting
them to grip with their toes when they are climbing uphill."
128
and
hoe.
and
har-
In the
rigid framework that regulated Inca agriculture, a part of each farmer's yield
vesting of crops on the family plot.
respite
from the
daily grind.
The mother-to-be
drugs
accomplished
by beatings,
fetal
who
massages, and
as
long
as possible.
its
Once
parents observed
the
friends.
at-
Here, the
of the youngster's
hair.
Other
at
In
this
drawing, a
woman
a hoe similar to
the example shown on the opposite page, while a man turns
the soil with a taclla, or foot
plow. With no large draft anpotatoes with
gift,
till
bears
as
gard for
and
was a
drink.
129
usually cloth-
ing or wool.
The
fingernails
were
also
nail
and hair
wawa, or baby.
a provisional
name
Now,
life,
was given
of its birth
At
that time a
newborn
ly
rests in
new
handsome
clothes,
and
from an ear
On
bathed, dressed in
outfit.
lives.
nent
name and
lectured her
ture conduct
on her
fu-
her parents
at all times.
commoners
re-
no formal edu-
ceived
130
cation.
As one Inca
is
down
is
It is
and
crafts.
had a say. The Incas imposed a wombto-tomb uniformity over jobs by dividing all subjects into 12 categories according to age and sex. Within these every man, woman, and
child, from five years old on, had designated tasks to fulfill. In the
early years, girls assisted in minding babies and making chicha, fetch-
state
after the
began weaving
as early as possible.
9 and 12, they were also responsible for the gathering of medicinal
and culinary herbs and plants used in making dyes for textiles. In
adolescence,
some worked
as shepherdesses,
at
131
&3i
was not
Father
Cobo wrote
regarded
as a
was
that "virginity
for
selves loved
is
wife for not having had any lovers before their marriage.
one
specific
town and
who had
village,
On
the appointed
official,
Each
all
likelihood, this
had
raca
it
a bride for
cate in
him.
He
Only
like these
were used
to fasten
ders
and
also
and
Most were
their intrica-
social status.
loss
partially
brought about
was to
The
a degree offset
the
less
it
society.
Valued
in
its
own
For
yacolla,
a.
132
a loincloth,
and the
the
chest or
woman
of Ancon
similar
ankles;
she
en draped a
lliclla,
a kind
some
beige,
and gray. For other clothing, they created colorful designs using a spectrum
of dyes made of substances from nature.
roon, and yellow threads, and organic and mineral substances prob"
While the
state
since
cial
long.
the one
most
shown
common
here,
type
made of cactus
were the
and were
spines or long
thorns that
ly
On
coastal plains,
gular huts
could
have
flat
roofs, covered
133
cases,
stone and
mud, with
roofs of straw.
At the center of
these one-
household
utensils.
tail
high."
or when
it
as the
weather permitted
it,
air;
At bedtime,
the family stretched out on the floor of the hut, sometimes on a little
straw. Parents and children slept together under coarse woolen blankets known as chusi, still wearing most of their day clothes, husband
and wife shedding only their cloaks.
Two meals a day were eaten, one soon after dawn and the
other an hour or two before sunset. The food was cooked in earthenware pots placed on several round openings cut in the top of the
stove. At mealtimes, the family squatted or sat on the ground. Father
Cobo, having observed one couple, reported their sitting posture as
an extremely comfortable one: "With their feet together, they bend
their legs as much as they can; their knees come up so far as to almost
indeed, under Pachacuti, eating outdoors became law.
so that the whole body fits into the tunic, except for their heads." The
tunic, pulled tight, held the legs.
like barley.
up
in
cooking
as
hot
chilies
on
Titicaca.
when
were raised
eaten, a practice
much
for food,
and
in
some
as food.
When
they were
135
VARIED FARE
SUITED TO
from
a number of cultivated plants other than corn, including quinoa and
oca. If the corn was old, the pulp needed to be chewed; the saliva
ation and in great quantities at festival time, could be produced
broke
down
The
ensuing paste was spat out into jars of warm water, which were sealed
It
and infirm,
specified
it
Long
miles, hardy
idle, officially
potatoes
yam
women
frost resistant,
oca, a type of
could be mashed,
dried,
dehvdrated form.
in
women
and
and
and stored
spent a great
a staple
as such.
Young, able-bodied
become
sure that
INCA NEEDS
Andes
prior to
produced
As
keep for
below freezing.
The potatoes were laid out on the
ground to freeze so that the cell
at
12,000
feet, fall
adaptable, utilitarian
crop.
Rendered in bronze,
ears of corn
much
moisture
these
may have
been a
masters
walls
move
The new
as possible. After a
and
virtu-
made from
The
cornstalks.
woman ofAncon
were
in effect
correctly maintained
be.
mummy
(right)
found in
bundle of the
(page 152)
offerings
and
life,
reproduction.
meant
curacas.
around Lake
and
And
home
twice a year a
inspector
among
One of the
cas.
Incas' greatest
The
exten-
known
as a llnctacamayoc
the
which
were paid to them by the
state,
demanded
all
the
Andean
peoples,
the In-
The
al-
Incas
it
that clothing,
Under Inca
was
for
life.
If a
law, marriage
man threw
out his
wife, he
it
law made
all
acts
of habitual disobe-
also
his
first,
legitimate
life,
last
and
when committed
religious institutions.
the dropping of
a height
from
hiwaya
reprimand.
Commoners were
a
and
of three
terrible
feet.
of the
pit."
pits
flints
might be
incar-
no buildings designated
fense,
swift,
immediate, and
either banished to
work on coca
plantations in the
as jails.
first of-
they were
Andean hotiands
from
cliff.
was empowered to
deal with minor misdemeanors, but he had to refer the most serious
the Inca legal svstem.
At the
138
condemn
Four
The llama
They
dals,
wove
high
at the shoulder,
is
enough to be
pack animal and can
used
as a
carry as
to
much
20 miles
as
a day. In addition to
100 pounds up
its
many uses,
was revered
in Inca
(below, left),
feet
slings
during religious
rituals.
Pure
was prized
Found only
as
an emblem
was domesticated
high
at
to
feet
(above)
is
wool of such
when
its
na
for
denounce
own
of power.
injustices or abuses
vincial
call
of corruption.
And
It
anv
official
tocoyricoc,
found
or "he
who sees all," sent bv the Sapa Inca, was supposed to ferret out abuses
committed bv the governor.
Remarkablv few subjects openlv rebelled or even broke the
law. The Spaniards often remarked on the honestv and discipline of
the people thev saw. Indeed, this aspect so deeply impressed one
conquistador, Mancio Sierra Lejesema, that he was moved to declare,
in a testament
drawn up
Cuzco
in
in
1589: "Let
it
be
known
to His
among
was not
man, or
meaning,
"Do
not
steal,
do not
lie,
lazv."
Bv adhering
to
scape near
tices
them, even- citizen could expect adequate support from birth until death.
Thereafter, his or her destinv
would be
'
Lake
mountain land-
to re-
Since their construction nearly five centuries ago, they have suffered
i-yr*
'
r*
damage
The
Incas
as the uni-
powers
der,
as Illapa, the
Pachamama, the
Mama
and
er,
earth
moth-
Quilla, the
moon
goddess. Chief
ties
god of thun-
was
whom
Inti,
among
these dei-
descend, which
made
entwinement of
church and state.
for a neat
and Inca,
Inti
Ecclesiastical authority
political hi-
the Villac
Umu,
or head priest
whose
power was
sec-
The head
priest in
Two
cliff rising
rough
to the depredations
ransacked,
and
dis-
into
Umu
headed
a staff
priests, priestesses,
similarities
religious
women,
munion,
between Inca
in
which the
all
141
faith
th<
wav
similarities
who
took their
sins
reli-
Religious observances interrupted an otherwise rigid working routine, frequendv for prolonged periods of time. In even'
month
major
the Incas observed at least three feast davs, and usuallv one
week or more;
in even' vear.
There were
up
festivals to
when
homage
to the dead.
to
and
an earth-
quake, or the onset of war prompted the Sapa Inca to seek the
intervention of the gods.
Although these extravagant public ceremonies reduced productivity and consumed vast amounts of food reserves, they were
worth the price because thev proved to be a major source of the Incas'
between the empire and its subject peoples
and the laboring masses were given reward and emo-
were
fortified,
and industrv.
No less
importandv, the
At these
festivities,
mock
battles,
as a luxury,
In the
first
cocaine
month of the
all
its
is
mild stimulant
distribution.
rainv season, to
mark
the
December
festival,"
During the first part of this celebration, huarachicoy maturity rites were carried out in Cuzco; so sacrosanct were these that
non-Inca residents of the citv had to leave its confines and remain at
least six miles from its borders. With the rites over, the exiles returned, bearing fresh produce from the lands of the state and the
religious establishment. But before the} could take part in several
days of feasting, drinking, and dancing that followed the huarachicoy, they had to exhibit their loyalty to the Sapa Inca by participating
in a communion-like ritual in which thev were offered, on silver and
gold plates, cakes made of corn flour mixed with the blood of sacrificed llamas. Then, as Father Cobo reported, the priests told them,
"What vou have been given is the food of the Sun, and it will be
took
place.
142
THEOLOGY
ROOTED
IN
THE NATURAL WORLD
A
The
from a
which,
among some
agram at
Peru-
ceques
the
Cori-
left).
and
all
(di-
Each of these
their huacas
single locus
jects,
tains,
which emanated
called ceques,
reli-
es
on proper
occasions.
The Spanish priest and chronicler, Father Bernabe Cobo, noted that the Incas made no dis-
tinction
between the
and the
terrestrial.
celestial
The term
grouped along
in conjecture.
He
Father
Cobo
also described
a series
of
how
lines,
monies at the
site.
(above) contains
if vou
ever
this
impor-
Huanuco
On
the
site
of
one square mile. All the buildings radiate outward from an enormous rectangular plaza, 600
yards long and 400 yards wide, dominated by a colossal raised platform, which is approached from the south by a monumental staircase. A series of formal gateways linked the central plaza to two
area of about
and
artificial
compound of
pools.
was designed to
provide huge open spaces and that myriad shards of pottery suggest
hea\y consumption of food and drink here, archaeologists have concluded that this city was more than just a base for administering a
section of Tahuantinsuyu. It was, they believe, designed also as a
ceremonial center, with space enough to accommodate between
Taking note of the
in the
of the Sapa
Inca.
Leon
when
describing the
Hatun Raymi
festival
marking the end of the harvest of potatoes, corn, quinoa, and oca:
"After having eaten and drunk repeatedly, and all being drunk, inOnce
plex at
Huanuco Pampa
served as the
and
cluding the Inca and the high priest, joyful and warmed by the liquor,
the
men
assembled a
little
after
quest, counted
dances at a
40
festival.
different
He saw
dance by
bear-
still
by both
more
colorful,
"danced
with
and a gold or
A pan flute,
made
of several unequal
are
still closely
moun-
145
u
*
from ear to ear; the tune was played on the dried head of a deer whose
horns served as a flute. One dancer led off the dance and the others
followed with perfect rhythm."
modeled
in clay,
and
these instruments,
made from
bound
the
reeds
poems
that
had been
passed from one generation to the next through constant oral repetition.
The bulk of
of
official epic
of Viracocha, the god of creation. Traditional romantic ballads, generally involving tales of unrequited love, freighted with nostalgia and
filled
Some of the
One of these
sun. In
sion
is
the
some of the
myth of Inkarri,
tellings,
god
hidden
updated versions.
of the
stays alive,
in
in a secret place,
where
it is
growing
head
new body.
its
former splendor.
Tl
An-
deans
in the modern republics
c
who may
be regarded
see their
world
as
being divided
still
descendants
five-sixths
made
who
as
of them
also
many
persons
most strikingly
evinced bv the reenactments of the death of the Inca emperor carried
belief in a restoration
is
146
but beheaded
change
is
that
like
it
is
in the
not garroted,
The
as
Andes. In
all
was Atahualpa,
significance of the
son of the sun, and by linking him directly with Inkarri, suggests that
he too
is
Messianic redeemer.
undergoing
revival. Inca-built
life
are
now
many
The age-old
work
of the region brilliantly
harnessed by the Incassurvives among
ethic
their descendants
so
and
reflects the
abiding
being reclaimed.
And in a twist,
new
influence
147
conquerors. But
other produce
now
commonly consumed
in Inca times.
is
wheat, or corn.
rice,
on
It is
being
dis-
is
now grown
commerciallv in California.
SS^S
^1^^^^
'
"I
early as
where corpses resisted decay for millenpreserved by the arid climate alone. The mummy
bundle shown above is one of these, found in 1896 on
the Peruvian coast near Lima bv the German archaeologist Max Uhle. Within lies a 12-year-old girl, confined
in a basket covered bv a woven woolen shroud, where
she had remained almost intact for more than 500
years. Her family had simply placed her body, carefully
wrapped but unembalmed, in extremely dry soil.
Such models of natural preservation bolstered the
practice of ancestor worship that took hold as societies
grew increasingly complex. Some communities began
coastal deserts
nia,
using
artificial
These
They
also
enhanced the
status
ft
mumrites.
sessors,
who would
consult
mummified
relatives
on
Cocaine
is
chewed to
employing these
forcement, a team of four pathologists and an anthropologist tested for traces of coca in the hair of 163
mummies from
different regions.
They discovered
that
is
uador, about
3000 BC.
its
in
order to
presumed origins
in
Ec
must be supposed
some way,
for bodies,
was onlv an
&
mummies
found, either
LONG LIFE
with
resins, oils,
and herbs.
of cotton
cloth.
suggested that
separate burial
I2K
Some 5,000 years
ago, on the
:*'.m
To demonstrate
mummy
bun-
Max
chaeologist
N>'
1,200 years
old. Textiles
and feathers
man
to relate
more comfortably
to the dead.
and a mouthpiece
dec-
when he
eight inch-
lived,
some-
AD.
and
,'
stretcher
bound
to the third
shroud
making
it
as
beams
u
JL
*. "F
M,
^til
..
Bound
in
mummy
pears as archaeologist
saw
"^
P_~"
first
jH^r
it.
Karen
Stothert
styles
]-
^i
Lifting the third shroud revealed a cloth
parcel, ears of corn, gourds,
distaffs.
Among
black (above),
69
A bowl, painted
and several
and a
found
age of the
mummy.
to well-established
woman's burial
during the period of the Inca empire, between 1476 and 1532. Inside the bowl
are chunks of a mineral used to fix dyes.
took place
intricately
mummy
bundle of a
woman
on
a large piece
beads
were
laid across
her chest.
wicker
and various
After her trappings were removed, the woman's skeleton appeared. All the flesh was gone,
microscopes,
mummy
many of
early cultures
*
*
ly half that
groups settled into sedentary societies, sanitation problems led to an increase in tuberculosis, pneumonia, and intestinal parasites.
Verified also
y
*^*
Lung
from
tissue,
this
1,300 years
old,
was taken
(right),
then rehydrated in the laboratory. Bacteria found were tested to reveal that the
child
had
is
the terrible
toll
exacted
in the
was unknown
in
Eu-
On
the
new
research fron-
of molecular archaeology,
scientists have found a way to
isolate, in the tissues of mumtier
mies,
DNAthe
chromosome
forms.
the
As they
DNA,
all
life
replicate
these pioneers
PjF
may
also
The
proc-
diseases arose.
The first recorded case of hookworm infestation in the Americas was that of this
Tiahuanaco mummy (right), dating from
sometime around AD 900. Using a scanning electron microscope, pathologists discovered hookworms attached to the interior of the
mummy's small
intestine.
J
/
"iL
*>?
HV
\l
T-'
|P
It
human
sacrifice after
as earth-
ars
for centuries.
Then,
ar-
of mummies.
a collection
Manv
of
assuring
to their
coronation. Perhaps
ish use
fA
in
first
solid
of young
women
Inca objects
who
Bent
in
He conclud-
At heights
that challenge
own
religion.
Thev
voung
victim's grave.
expres-
ed with
cbicba,
then buried
alive.
tunic
Among
(left)
(above).
El Plomo's eight-year-old
(right)
ornaments,
wears a
an alpaca
paint.
and pouches of
own baby teeth,
nail parings, and hair.
and two
llamas,
the youth's
Y *t *
FLOWERING
Long
came to dominance,
al
sever-
ished in the
gion.
The
Andean
first
EARLY
INTERMEDIATE
EARLY
HORIZON:
1400-400 BC
CULTURES
OF
MIDDLE
HORIZON:
AD 550-900
PERIOD:
BC-AD 550
re-
hunters and
3000 BC,
fishing villages
moved
peaks, settling
on
the for-
GOD
MOCHE VESSEL
Now
cities.
STAFF
and
methods
using irrigation
that
on the
Named
Chavin de Huantar,
in a small
emerged around
1400 BC and reached the peak
of its influence by 400 BC.
sophistication.
on an
Archaeologists classify
Andean
artifacts
bv time
Thev use
the
religion
who
allegedlv
could see the future, fight disease, and petition the gods, the
religion, or cult, gradually
spread south. It reached the
area of modern Lima by
1000
BC
and technology.
so
eral
es.
They introduced
the
loom
STAFF
to
room
for at least
40
bodies.
leav-
its
Nazca
lines
The
Moche
culture
BC
and spread
control more than 150 miles
its
gold and
silver.
Among
the
gy,
around 1000 BC
and began to construct the city
of Tiahuanaco about AD 100.
settled the site
Bv
AD
Meanwhile, Huari,
houses were served by an underground water system. Weaving counted as one of the culture's artistic traditions.
jor legacy
traits (above).
stitutions
Amazon
expressed
significandy in
When
a setde-
art
GOD SCULPTURE
around
AD
900, they
left a
main-
state.
lowlands.
LATE
INTERMEDIATE
PERIOD
LATE
INTERMEDIATE
PERIOD
(COASTAL):
(HIGHLAND):
AD
600
of
36,000 inhabitants, the lords of
Chimu ruled a society of rigid
classes, where highly skilled artiwell-irrigated desert capital
pre-
highland Inca
power with
rivals.
AD
1476-1532
1532-1572
PIZARRO PORTRAIT
INCA FIGURE
KILLKE PITCHER
AD
AD 900-1476
900-1476
GOLDEN TUMI
Chimu
EARLY
COLONIAL PERIOD:
LATE
HORIZON:
Its
power
ture soared to
its
zenith.
A vast
Manco
brother,
as a
ly thereafter
by
By
Spaniard
made
of the Inca
coast.
Soon
revolt.
afterward,
He was
Manco
Inca
ultimately forced
where Pizarro
ruled until he was murdered in
1541 by supporters of a rival.
Within the year, a viceroy
arrived in Lima to govern the
to flee Cuzco,
Andean
territories as prov-
inces of Spain.
and
killed
Manco
Inca,
still
em-
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The
editors wish to
individuals
and
Fleming, University
versity
Museum, Uni-
of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia;
Calogero
Linden-Museum Stuttgart,
Anthony Shelton, Depart-
Stuttgart;
D.C
PICTURE CREDITS
The
volume are
left to
Credits from
listed below.
ed by dashes.
London;
berg, Zurich.
inset.
End
Paul Breeden. 6:
RAPHO,
Paris
Museum
Riet-
paper: Art by
Hans
Silvester-
American Museum
New
Haven, photographed
by Wiiliam K. Sacco
Yale Universi-
Museo
e Instituto
tion
ry, New Haven; Tom Owen Edmunds, London. 44, 45: W.P.S./
Ricciarini, Milan. 46: Loren
Munich/Museo de la Universidad
Cuzco; Det Kongelige Bibliotek,
Copenhagen; Musee de l'Homme,
Paris,
160
Museum
Milan
(2)
Robert Hard-
chitecture
American
Museum of Natural
Histo-
ry.
lin
Loren Mclntyre/Museo
e Instituto
Hans Silvester-RAPHO,
Paris; art
103:
104,
Memori-
Museum
e Instituto de Arqueologia,
Universidad de San Antonio Abad
del Cuzco; from "Inka-Peru" (Vol. 2
AAM 46.7.286.
109: Francisco
Hidalgo, Paris; Bildarchiv Hansmann, Munich. Ill: Michael Holford, London. 112, 113: Art by
Stephen R. Wagner; 1982 David
L. Brill. 114, 115: Christopher B.
Donnan; Michael E. Moseley (2)
G. Dagli Orti, Paris. 116, 117:
Trans, no. 2574(2) (photo by Richard P. Sheridan), courtesy Dept. of
Library Services, American Museum
of Natural History Alana CordyCollins; G. Dagli Orti, Paris (2).
118: Don Bleitz; Textile Museum,
Washington, D.C. 119: Trans, no.
3420(2) (photo by Beckett/Hollembeak), courtesy Dept. of Library
Services, American Museum of Natural History
Textile Museum,
Washington, D.C, 91.729. 120,
121: Foto Ferdinand Anton, Munich/Museo de Oro, Miguel Mujica
Gallo Foundation, Lima; Francisco
Hidalgo, Paris (2). 122: Loren
Mclntyre. 125: Neil Maurer. 126:
Stuttgart,
photo
Amano Museum,
lige Bibliotek,
Bibliotek,
Copen-
Linden-Museum
Det Kongelige
Gordon
McEwan/Denver Art Museum;
Hillel
138, 139:
Loren Mclntyre. 140: Daniele Pellegrini, Milan. 141: Wolfgang Kaehler
New
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BOOKS
Adorno, Rolena. Guaman Poma.
Austin: University of Texas Press,
1986.
Anton, Ferdinand. The Art ofAncient Peru. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1972.
Ascher, Marcia, and Robert Ascher.
Code oftheQuipu. Ann Arbor:
University'
of Michigan
Press,
1981.
Baudin, Louis. Daily Life in Peru.
Translated bv Winifred Bradford.
New York: Macmillan, 1962.
Beals, Carleton.
Company, Book
Division, 1961.
161
Window
on
Ames: Iowa
Oklahoma
Press, 1963.
ed by Patricia
J.
Lvon. Blooming-
1980.
edited bv Victor
Oklahoma
Hawkes, Jacquetta
Wolfgang von
Hagen. Norman: University of
Press, 1959.
Cobo, Bernabe:
(Ed.). Atlas of
Companv, 1973.
of Texas
Press, 1979.
Inca Religion and Customs. Edited
Hemming,
John:
Press, 1990.
AD
i.
1982.
Huaman Poma
Letter to a Kinn.
Nuav
Cordnica
Buen
Gobierno.
1936.
Hvams. Edward, and George OrThe Last of the Incas. NewYork: Simon and Schuster,
1963.
Hvslop, John. Inka Settlement Planning. Austin: University of Texas
Press, 1990.
dish.
Jackson.
tors
plorers
series).
1983.
Katz, Friednch. The Ancient American Civilizations. Translated bv
K. M. Lois Simpson. New York:
Praeger Publishers, 1974.
Kendall, Ann. Everyday Life of the
Incas. New York: Dorset Press,
1973.
The Land of the Incas. Photographs
bv Hans Silvester, text bv Jacques
Soustelle. Translated by Jane
Brenton. London: Thames and
Hudson, 1986.
Lanning, Edward P. Peru before the
Incas.
Englewood
Cliffs, N.J.:
Prentice-Hall, 1967.
162
series).
New
York:
Time
An-
Man
Inc.,
1967
Lewis, Brenda Ralph. Growing Up in
Inca Times. London: Batsford Ac-
New
York: Praeger
Publishers, 1972.
&
Dav
(Eds.).
E.,
and Kent C.
'
1987.
Oro
del Peru.
Photographs bv Fran-
Miro Quesada
) .
New
York:
1986.
Rome,
Jesus,
Ancient Peru.
Translated by Peter
J.
Tallon. Bar-
Rowe, Ann
Pollard. Costumes
&
1954.
Amazon.
New
Silverblatt, Irene.
George
E.,
and Gene
Stuart. Discovering
Man's Past
in
Washington, D.C.:
National Geographic Society,
Herman
J.,
Institution, 1991.
Voyages of Discovery:
TimeFrame
AD
&
Graber.
PERIODICALS
Marvin
J.,
Daniel Mendoza,
Hair." Latin
2,
Marvin
Hookworm
J.,
et
al.
"Case of
Infestation in a Preco-
Alternative
"Guaman Poma de
ral History,
Ayala." NatuSeptember-October
1961.
Ortloff, Charles R. "Canal Builders
of Pre-Inca Peru."
Scientific
Ameri-
December 1988.
Petrich, Perla. "The Return of the
Inca." UNESCO Courier, Februarv
1990.
Protzen, Jean-Pierre. "Inca Stone-
no. 2.
1985.
NIH Research,
no.
1989.
3.
Fleming,
S. J.,
(University of Pennsylvania),
1983,
Vol'. 2, no.
5.'
Hagman, Harvey:
1973.
Allison,
Human-Mummy
can,
in
(Eds.).
S.
the Americas.
Viola,
Bingham, Hiram:
in
Stuart,
No
Spring 1991.
"Lost and Found in the Andes." Discover, April 1985.
"The Lost City." Time, August 28,
1964.
Mclntvre, Loren M.:
Discovery,
163
September/October
Rogan, Peter K., and Joseph J. Salvo. "Molecular Genetics of PreColumbian South American
Mummies." Molecular
1990, pp. 223-234.
Ruiz, Jesus F. Garcia.
Evolution,
"A Labyrinth
Scientific
American,
of Farming."
November
22,
1988.
Stothert,
Karen
E.:
Mummy
Nawpa Pacha
no. 19.
con. Peru."
tute
_
19 8. no. 16.
"Unwrapping an Inca Mummv
Bundle." -4 rchaeoloa\, Julv August
19~9.
( alif.
September
October 1984.
OTHER PUBLICATIONS
"The Andean Civilizations" Vol. 2
of Handbook of Smith American
Indians, edited bv Julian H. Steward
143. Washington.
DC.:
U.S.
Government Printing Office. 1946.
Bauer. Brian S.. and Charles Stanish.
letin
DC.
Washington.
DC:
Textile
Muse-
um. 1992.
Hollowell.
J.
L. "Precision
Andean
Curnng
in Prehistoric
Walls: Re-assessment of
at
s\mposium held
at
Dumbarton
DC.
Oaks. Washington.
October
12 and 13. 1985. Washington,
Dumbarton Oaks Research
Library and Collections. 1990.
Oro del Pent. Catalog of exhibition
at the Palazzo dei Consen atori,
Rome. November 1981- Jan uarv
1982. Milan: Electa, 1981.
"Researchers Seek Understanding of
Ancient Surgerv." Press release.
Smithsonian News Sen ice. March
1990.
Sweat of the Sun. Tears of the Moon:
Gold and Emerald Treasures of Colombia. Essavs published in conjunction with exhibition at the
Natural History Museum of Los
Angeles Counrv. Julv 4- September
6. 1981. Los Angeles: TERRA
Magazine Publications. 1981.
DC:
MUSEUMS
Readers interested in viewing Inca objects will find outstanding collections
EUROPE
Linden-Museum
Museum
Museum
Stuttgart, Stuttgart
Yolkerkunde. Berlin
fur Yolkerkunde. Frankfurt
Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum,
fur
Cologne
Rijksmuseum voor Yolkenkunde.
Leiden
Museum
fur Yolker-
kunde. Munich
PERU
Museo Arqueologico. Cuzco
Museo del Banco Central de
Reserva. Lima
Museo del Oro del Peru. Lima
Museo Nacional de Antropologia v
Arqueologia, Lima
Museo Nacional de la Culrura Peruana, Lima
UXTTED STATES
Museum of Natural
New York
American
tory.
His-
Museum. Brookhti
Denver Art Museum. Denver
Dumbarton Oaks Research Library
and Collections. Washington.
Brookl\Ti
DC
Metropolitan
Museum
of Art,
New
York
Peabodv Museum of Archaeology
and Ethnology. Cambridge
Textile Museum, Washington, D.C.
Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art, Tulsa
INDEX
Xumerals
in italic indicate
an
illus-
A
Aiilaatna
Acllahuasi
Worn.
"lOO-lOl
Agriculture: 136; present-day
com-
12"
Alpaca: 139
Amautas:
Amazon
American
164
Museum of Natural
New
Histo-
York 66
Ancon: mummified remains discovry
55. 119
91;
Cajamarca: 17, 18, 24, 29, 95; Atahualpa seized by Spanish at, 26
(residential
Machu
across, 98
Apurimac River: 95
Apns: 59
Carrasco, Sergeant: at
chu, 4041,
Pic-
4243
Ceques: 143
at,
157
at,
23
Ciudadela Velarde:
143; and
Chimu manufacturing
human
sacrifice
by
In-
cas,
mummies,
73;
on Inca women,
on Pachacuti,
52-53
Coca: cover, 58, 100, 127, 142; bag
for, 121, 157; use for relief of fatigue, 55,
Chancas: 53
51
reliability as chronicler,
Ciudadelas: 112
149
159;
116-117; excavations
Coricancha (golden enclosure): 4849, 52, 71, 77, 91, 141; and local
idols of Inca empire, 56, 70; relationship to huacas, diagram 143
Cortes, Hernan: 24
wood
Chimu
at,
center,
112-113;
Ascher, Marcia: 66
Ascher, Robert: 66
Atacama Desert: coastal road in, 96
Atahualpa: 14, 57, 74, 95, 103,
115
ing
28
Avenida Progreso: pre-Columbian
graves uncovered during construc-
123
Ayacucho: 158
Ayllu: 125-127, 138
Aymara: language widely used
Inca empire, 56
tion of,
Aztecs:
B
Nunez
de: 12
Bingham, Hiram:
of
Bola:
(audiencia), 112-113,
Charcas: 68
Coya
Chicama
Chicha (beer): 127, 129, 131, 135136, 145, 156; jug for, 127
Chimor, Kingdom
of:
Machu
27
mummies
Curacas
of,
73, 74
111, 112;
Cuzco:
22, 28,
Acllahuasi
trade network
in,
119. See
also
Chimu
in
24
Balboa, Vasco
room
119;
165
in,
stonework
at,
77,
dia-
in,
(qollqas) in,
64
D
Denevan, William: and raised
at Lake Titicaca, 1 06
fields
49
Duho: 134
El Nino:
116
El Torreon (temple): 13, 38, 39, 83,
94
Erickson, Dr. Clark: experimental
at Lake Titicaca
107-108
Espiritu Pampa: 10, 34
archaeology
sites,
of the Sun: 71
of Natural History
(Chicago): 104
Food: amaranth, 148; arracacha,
148; cherimova, 148; chuno, 136;
corn, 127, 129, 135, 136-137;
enduring Inca legacy, 147-148;
Festival
Field
144-145
Huaqueros: 123, 124, 140, 141
Huaraca: 27
Hnarachicoy maturity rites: 130, 142
Huari: 75," 87, 95, 158, 159; as cultural ancestors of Incas, 88-89;
mosaic-backed mirror, 94; wooden scepter, 95
Huasca: 60
Huascar: 14, 16, 32, 58, 74, 95,
148, 159; death of, 29;
proclaimed Sapa Inca, 15
Huavna Capac: 14, 15, 32, 58, 148,
159; mummy of, 74
Huavna
Garcilaso de
la
Vega
156; on Inca life, 61, 62-63, 6465, 70-71, 126; on Inca skills, 64,
89-90, 105, 110; on Pachacuti,
Pajaten: 20, 21
ruins at,
23
Guambo: rope
bridge
at,
69
H
in,
89
economy
of, 7,
of,
civil
warfare
in,
of
Chimor, 87, 104, 109, 112; distribution of resources in, 61, 63,
14, 16, 28, 58, 74; conquest
de Ayala, Felipe:
III,
1 1
1,
131; engineering
67, 82, 98, 99;
groups, 85;
63-64; ayllu, role
of, 125-127, 138; childbirth, infants, and children, 129, 130,
earlier ethnic
166
skills of, 7, 1 7,
festivals, feasts,
of household
textiles as
mummies,
of,
72-73, 74;
work
ethic
also
mvth
Inkarri:
146, 147
of,
104
48, 50,'
156; and mvthic origin of Incas,
52-53
Intihuatana
43
Inti
Ravmi: 42
J
16
Jauja:
Jetas: 76,
77
map
from
10
141
Hispaniola: 12
Illapa (deity):
fects of,
Huaman Poma
56
tem
Gulf of Guayaquil: 95
Huatras:
at,
Museum
fish,
90
Gran
Gran
K
Kenko
Kero
(huaca): 143
vessels: 32,
144
King's Group: 13
Kipling, Rudyard: 35
44
Mummies:
L
Lake Titicaca: 53, 63, 65, 75, 86,
95, 135, 137, 158; funerary towers near, 140; and mythic origin
of Incas, 52; raised fields (camellones) at, 104, 105-106
Lampa (hoe): 127, 128
Law: Inca legal code, 125, 129,
135, 137-140
Lima: 54, 74, 87, 144, 158, 159;
burial mounds and tomb excavations at, 122, 123-124; founding
of, 33
Llactacamayocs:
thropomorphic
137
Llamas: 135, 138-139; in Inca symbolism, 63; ritual use of, 108,
139, 142
Llautu: 57
133
Lloque Yupanqui: 148
Lliclla:
mummy
cases, 22;
Chimu,
154
Ninan Cuvuchi: 58
Nueva Coronica y Buen Gobierno
(Huaman Poma de
map
ritual
cover,
at,
Avala): draw-
130
16, 159;
Incas, 12-13,
Hernando: 15, 33
33
Pizarro, Pedro: 74
Polo de Ondegardo, Juan: on life of
Inca commoners, 63, 64; and royal mummies, 74
Protzen, Jean-Pierre: research in
at, 54, 77
Ornament Chamber (Machu
chu): 40
Oroya: 97
64
Machu
II:
Philip III:
Pizarro,
66
Looms: 125; backstrap, 61; rope
for, 60
Luque, Hernando de: 12
Philip
Pisqoynyo: 131
in,
81
129,
Pic-
76,83
Pueblo de los Muertos: 22
Puma: symbolism of, 51, 53, 91
Puma Chupan (Cuzco): diagram 51
Purics: 126, 136
Puvupatamarka complex: 103
Pyramids: pre-Inca, 86
104
Mama
Mama
52
Pachacamac: 95; excavations
Quechua:
Micay: 102
Mamanchic: 58
Quilla (deity): 141
Manco Capac:
ing of Cuzco, 52
Manco
and
founding of Vilcabamba, 34
Mantaro River: 54, 95
Maule River: 95
Mayta Capac: 58, 148
World by Europeans,
New
34, 154
Moche
Moche
Moray:
101
culture:
150;
mummies
discovered
at,
87,
at,
151,
156
99
Incas,
158
of royal
name, 51; construction commissioned by, 54, 80-81, 88, 89; and
tural terraces, 100; choice
ing,
67
Pachamama (deity): 141
Pajaten: 20
Pampa de las Llamas-Moxeke:
Inca temple pyramid at, 86
65-67
167
mummv
bundle, 153
mummies, 149;
pre-
rites:
mummy
Machu
146
130
Quipus: 66-67; and Inca recordkeep-
Quicochicoy puberty
of,
language of the
official
158;
Chimu
Chavin
sacrificial rites,
43, 83, 143; Inca beliefs in after136, 150; Inca deities, 11,
13, 24, 35, 43, 47, 48, 50, 56,
62, 70, 72, 103, 141, 146, 156;
Inca ecclesiastical hierarchy, 141;
life,
women),
tol-
mamaconas (chosen
garments, 60-61;
stone (in-
ritual
of Inca trephina92-93
Smallpox: spread of in New World,
Skulls: as evidence
tion,
amazement over Inca achievements, 17, 47, 48, 85, 91, 140;
conquest of Incas, 7, 11-14, 1618,24-26,28, 31-34; and de-
Spain:
struction of royal
mummies, 74;
Tocoyricocs:
67, 140
mummification, 32;
Tucuman: 95
Tumbes: Inca town
als,
sacrificial ritu-
49
Kutuchicoy naming
at,
rites:
Squier,
91
129-130
woman
of Ancon
mummy
bundle,
Sacsahuaman, temple
gram
40, 42
30-31, dia-
in, 13,
of:
33
74; prerogatives
60, 61, 62, 134; succes-
of, 57,
Sartiges,
title
of Inca
rul-
52
Count
de:
Vilcabamba, 19
Savoy, Gene: 19; search for lost
ies in
cit-
in
New
fashioned
49
Urubamba
at,
ments
105
to, 102,
Urubamba
valley: 54,
79
also
Vicuna: 139
Vilcabamba: 32, 97, 159; Bingham's
Inca empire
Taino Indians: 12
Tambo
81
Tambos: 67, 69, 99
Tambo-toco: mvthic birthplace of
at,
Incas, 35, 40
Temple of the Sun (Cuzco):
tombs
39, 48-
49
Temple of the Sun (Machu Picchu):
38, 39, 83
Temple of the Sun (Ollantavtambo):
77
Temple of the Sun (Pisac): 80-81
Temple of the Three Windows (Machu Picchu): 40 Al
Textiles: Chimu, 119; as commodities,
49
Urcon: 52, 53
Saihuite Stone: 62
as military
of
World, 154
u
Uhle, Max: 49, 89; mummv finds
by, 149, 150, 156; and study of
pre-Inca cultures, 86-87
UNESCO: restoration advisers from,
University of California:
16
153
1 16, 1 1 7,
of, 13,
Tumi
Spondyliu shells:
87
133
Vilcabamba range: 54
Villac Umu: 141
Viracocha (deity): 103, 141, 146
Viracocha Inca: 53, 148
Virgins of the Sun: 48, 72
w
White
54
of Ancon (mummv): 128,
133; unraveling and scientific examination of, 124, 152-153
Women: and childbirth, 127, 129;
Cordillera:
Woman
Inca: 83
Tiahuanaco: 75, 90, 91, 158; excavations at, 86-87, 88-89; mummy
from, 155; stonework at, 87, 89,
90; temple complex at, 87, 88
Ticlo Pass: 54
Throne of the
168
Y
132-133
Yahuar Huacac: 148
Tacolla:
44
DEATH MASK
ClFIC
cAii
i>
'
FEATHERED
BURIAL FIGURINE
Cnro
el
Plotm
^-v (Santiago)
250
i
500
miles
^^.
f
I
ISBN 0-8094-98^0-7