The Inca: From Village To Empire
The Inca: From Village To Empire
The Inca: From Village To Empire
1. Introduction
At about the time Christopher Columbus landed on a tiny island in the Caribbean Sea, Huayna
Capac, a powerful emperor and warrior, was battling to expand his empire thousands of miles to
the south, in what is now Ecuador and Colombia. He and his father and grandfather had fought to
create an empire that at its peak extended over a vast area along the rugged Andes Mountains of
South America. Probably the largest nation in the world at that time, the Inca Empire was sud-
denly conquered by a small band of Spanish soldiers in 1532.
The Inca people originated in the Cuzco Valley of what is modern-day Peru in about AD 1000, and
gradually conquered neighboring tribes. The empire expanded rapidly under three Inca emperors
between 1438 and 1527 until at its height it stretched from what is now the border between
Colombia and Ecuador to central Chile—a distance of over 3,400 miles. At its height, the Inca peo-
ple, who numbered only about 100,000, ruled from 10 to 12 million people from at least 86 eth-
nic groups with their own languages, traditions and religious beliefs.
The empire encompassed wildly contrasting geographic regions, ranging from towering snow-
capped mountains to coastal deserts to Amazonian jungles. The heart of the empire, centered
around Cuzco, was located at such a high elevation that people unaccustomed to high altitudes
suffered from altitude sickness, which includes headaches, fatigue, dizziness and upset stomach.
The empire was often plagued with a variety of natural disasters, including earthquakes, volcanoes,
droughts and devastating floods.
2. Inca Gold
The Spanish conquistadores, or conquerors, came to what they called the New World in search of
gold. Francisco Pizarro, who first came to the Americas in 1502, had heard rumors of a land filled
with gold to the south of Mexico. He and a small band of Spanish soldiers landed on the shores of
what is now Ecuador in 1531. They had arrived in Tahuantinsuyu, the “Land of the Four Quarters,”
known to us as the Inca Empire.
When Pizarro and his men arrived in the Inca capital of Cuzco, they saw a splendid city with
palaces, halls, and temples made of huge stones carefully fit together without mortar. Most in-
credible of all were the temples decorated with gold, silver and precious jewels. The most impor-
tant temple was the Coricancha, or “House of the Sun,” dedicated to the Inca sun god, named
Inti. Its walls and doorways were covered with gold, both inside and out. One building within the
complex contained a large statue of the sun, made of solid gold and embedded with precious
stones. More fantastic still was the garden. A Spanish eyewitness, Pedro de Cieza de León, de-
scribes the sight as follows:
They had also a garden, the clods of which were made of pieces of fine gold; and it was artifi-
cially sown with golden maize, the stalks, as well as the leaves and cobs, being of that metal.…
[T]hey had more than twenty golden sheep [llamas] with their lambs, and the shepherds with
their slings and crooks to watch them, all made of the same metal.*
Early Spanish observers described the Andean people as well fed, healthy and clean. When the
Spanish arrived, the Inca emperor and his assistants supervised a highly organized government that
* Pedro de Cieza de León, Chronicles of Peru. Quoted in The Incas and Their Ancestors: The Archaeology of Peru by Michael
Moseley, London: Thames and Hudson, 1992, p. 8.
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controlled an area of 135, 000 square miles. The Spanish must have been surprised to learn that the
Inca Empire ran very efficiently without three inventions considered essential by Europeans—writ-
ing, money, and the wheel.
How was the Inca Empire able to organize such a vast area and produce enough wealth to provide
basic necessities to its people and support a lavish lifestyle for the Inca nobility and priests? The
answers lie in the many ways the Incas devised to take advantage of their diverse environment.
3. Extreme Environment
The Andes—the second highest mountain chain in the world—create an environment of extreme
climate and weather conditions. Mountain ranges are created when continental plates slide under
each other, creating pressure that lifts and squeezes the land above them, like a tablecloth being
pushed up by a heavy plate. The mountain range was created over a period of millions of years, as
the plate under the Pacific Ocean has been sliding eastward under the South American plate, rais-
ing the mountains and creating a deep trench off the coast. This constant grinding causes severe
earthquakes. In the mountainous terrain, earthquakes can cause mud slides and avalanches. For
example, in May of 1970, a devastating earthquake, followed by avalanches and mud slides, killed
70,000 people in the central Andes. The earthquake loosened a huge block of ice that caused a
landslide which buried an entire town, killing 4,000 people. Periodic volcanic eruptions have also
claimed the lives of thousands.
The region’s climate is influenced by water and air currents that flow north from Antarctica along
the Pacific coast. The ocean current, called the Peru or Humboldt Current, brings extremely cold
but nutrient-filled water to the surface, supporting a rich supply of fish, birds and sea mammals.
But the cold Peru Current causes clouds to release moisture before they reach land, creating one
of the driest deserts in the world along the west coast of South America. The winds, cooled by the
Peru Current, then warmed by the coastal plains, do not precipitate enough water to produce sig-
nificant amounts of rain until they rise high into the Andes, where rain falls seasonally in the
mountain valleys of the western slope. On the eastern slopes, on the other hand, equatorial winds
blowing from the east over the Amazon River hit the mountains, cool, and produce large amounts
of rain. The well-watered eastern slopes of the Andes support lush, tropical vegetation as they
drop to the Amazonian basin.
At irregular intervals, a warm ocean current runs south along the Peruvian coast, pushing the Pe-
ruvian Current farther west. This current, called El Niño, causes heavy rain in the desert coastal
areas and drought in the southern Andes. In 1982, the worst El Niño in 100 years produced heavy
flooding in coastal cities, destroying roads and irrigation systems, while drought in the mountains
killed thousands of animals.
4. The Vertical Economy
The Andes Mountains stretch from Colombia to Chile, creating three distinct geographic areas—
the costa (coast), the sierra (mountains), and the selva (tropical rainforest). (See Handout 1: The
Vertical Economy, page 24.) The costa is a narrow strip of land bordered by the Pacific Ocean to
the west. One of the driest deserts in the world, it is crossed by many rivers that run down from
the mountains and can be harnessed for irrigation. The western slope of the sierra is extremely
dry. Between the two mountain slopes lies the altiplano, a dry, high-altitude plain in southern
Peru and northern Bolivia. Areas at altitudes above 10,000 feet are called the highlands. The east-
ern slopes of the Andes, called the ceja de selva (“eyebrow of the rainforest,”) enjoy warmer,
humid weather. The eastern slopes of the Andes have a montane cloud forest environment, due
to a cool, misty climate that supports thick, low vegetation. To the east lies the selva, the begin-
ning of the Amazonian rainforest.
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bly arrived in South America from the north between 12,000 and 15,000
years ago. For thousands of years, people hunted game and gathered wild “Genetically Engineering” the Potato
foods. Between about 8000 and 3000 BC, some groups gradually began Continued
to supplement their diets by planting some crops. Over time farmers de-
instead of saying “See you in an hour,” they
veloped many new plant varieties by selecting wild plants with desired
would say “See you in three cooked potatoes.”
traits, planting and cultivating them, and using some of the seeds the fol-
lowing year. This process was repeated over a period of several hundred The Inca built special storage bins for potatoes in
years until a new plant variety was created. Highland people developed a naturally cool areas. They devised methods to
variety of grains and tubers, such as the potato, that could survive in the control temperature and moisture and diffuse
dry, high altitude climate. Other plants, such as peanuts, beans, squash, light to reduce spoilage. Potatoes could be
stored in these buildings for up to six years.
sweet potatoes and manioc, were cultivated along the coast and in lower
altitude mountain regions and in the tropical rainforest. The Spanish colonialists returned to Europe with
a variety of plants that had been developed in
The first villages appeared on the seacoast between 5700 and 3000 BC. central and South America, including the potato,
The people obtained almost all of their protein from the fish and shell- corn, tomatoes, peppers, and a wide variety of
fish they caught in the sea. In about 4000 BC, maize, or corn, was intro- beans. The potato had the largest impact on the
duced to Peru from Mexico, but it remained a minor part of the diet for European diet, growing well in the cold climates
many millennia. Eventually, corn came to play a very important role in of northern France, Germany, England and Ire-
Andean culture, both as a food and as the base of chicha, a beer used in land. The Irish became dependent on only a few
religious rituals. People of the Andes also grew the coca plant. They varieties of the potato for a large portion of their
chewed its leaves and made coca tea to deaden hunger pangs, relieve the diet, and when potato blight, a disease that
effects of altitude sickness and provide necessary vitamins and minerals. made the harvested potato rot, spread through-
The plant was so important to the Andean people that it was used in re- out Ireland in the nineteenth century, millions of
Irish people died. Many millions more emigrated
ligious rituals and sacrificed to the gods. Coca was originally used in Coca
to the United States and Canada. Scientists even-
Cola. Today, coca plants are still grown legally in the Andes region for tually developed a potato variety that could re-
chewing and herbal tea. Coca is also grown to make cocaine, an illegal sist potato blight by returning to the Americas,
narcotic drug that causes serious problems throughout the world. By where they found wild potatoes containing a
2500 BC, Andean people had fully domesticated the llama and alpaca, gene that was blight resistant.
two animals related to the camel, which were used for wool, fuel, meat
The Inca were growing 3,000 different varieties of
and transport.
potatoes when the Spanish arrived. Today in the
Beginning in about 2500 BC, coastal and highland people developed irri- United States, only 250 types are grown, and
gation systems to increase agricultural yields. People living in the coastal three-quarters of the entire American potato har-
desert regions built elaborate irrigation systems to harness the many vest includes only twenty varieties of the potato.
rivers that flowed from the mountains to the sea. Between about 1800 Andean farmers continue to develop their own
and 800 BC, the people of the highlands began building terraces to cre- indigenous varieties of potatoes. Their tradi-
ate flat areas for fields and to prevent rainfall runoff and soil erosion. Also tional agricultural methods allow wild potato
during this period, craftsmen began working with gold and copper, and species to grow alongside domesticated varieties,
people began using looms to weave cloth from llama and alpaca wool. resulting in new and possibly useful gene combi-
Andean people started making ceramics, or pottery, in about 1800 BC, nations.
about 2,000 years after it appeared in Ecuador and Colombia.
6. Who Were the Inca?
Before the Inca Empire united the central Andes region, the area was di-
vided into a multitude of political and language groups, which were
often limited to a single river valley. Scientists working in Peru have de-
termined that the Incas originated in the Cuzco Valley sometime around
AD 1000. Because they had no written language, the Inca left no written
record of their history. They transmitted their history orally, and it is dif-
ficult for historians to determine how much of their stories are legend
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and how much is based on actual events. Some versions of Inca oral history list the names of 13
Inca emperors, but the first six were probably mythical.
Between AD 1200 and 1438, the Incas gradually became the dominant group in the Cuzco area.
Wiracocha Inca started to expand Inca territory in the Cuzco region by force. In 1438, a neigh-
boring tribe, the Chancas, attacked the Incas. Wiracocha and his son, Inca Urcon, fled the invaders.
But another son, Inca Yupanqui, rallied some of the Inca soldiers and appealed to surrounding
tribes to defend Cuzco. When only a few soldiers responded to his call to arms, he asked the earth
for help, and cried out that even the stones scattered around the city were turning into warriors
to help his cause. After the Incas captured the Chanca stone idol, many wavering warriors joined
Yupanqui’s army, and he defeated the Chanca. When Wiracocha named Urcon as emperor, the
Inca nobles rebelled, forcing Wiracocha to give up his throne. Prince Yupanqui became emperor,
or Sapa Inca, and changed his name to Pachacuti—which means “earthquake” or “he who trans-
forms” in Quechua.
Pachacuti lived up to his new name by leveling Cuzco and rebuilding it as an imperial capital. He
reorganized the Inca religion, making Inti, the Sun God, the most important Inca god, and estab-
lishing the worship of Wiracocha, the Creator god. He built the Coricancha, the temple dedicated
to Inti that awed the Spanish conquistadores.
Pachacuti conquered the densely populated region around Lake Titicaca. His son extended Inca
control as far north as Quito, Ecuador, and took over the coastal and highland regions of Peru. In
1471, the son became emperor, taking the name Topa Inca, and continued to extend the empire
south into central Chile. He conquered large areas of what is now Bolivia, and parts of present-day
Argentina. Huayna Capac, Topa Inca’s son, became emperor in 1493. He extended the empire’s
borders to southern Colombia and added some jungle area in eastern Peru. By 1527, the empire
extended 3,416 miles along the Andes.
After governing for almost 35 years, Huayna Capac died suddenly. Historians think he died of
smallpox, which was introduced by the Spaniards to the New World and spread like wildfire
among Native Americans, who lacked immunity to European diseases. In fact, European diseases
spread so quickly among Native Americans that they traveled throughout the New World even
faster than the Europeans did. Huayna Capac died without naming an heir. Two of his sons, Huas-
car and Atahualpa, fought each other for the throne in a civil war that lasted five years. The Span-
ish arrived on the coast at just about the time that Atahualpa’s forces defeated Huascar.
7. The Spanish Conquest
A small Spanish force, led by Francisco Pizarro, quickly conquered the Inca Empire through a
combination of superior weapons, trickery and luck. The empire had already been weakened by
the introduction of European diseases, especially smallpox, and the five-year civil war. Pizarro
landed on the coast in 1531 with a force of just 260 men. They traveled to Cajamarca, where
Atahualpa was encamped with an army of thousands of soldiers on his way to Cuzco to be in-
vested as the new emperor. The Spaniards hid men, horses and guns in the large halls surrounding
the town’s central plaza. Atahualpa entered the plaza unarmed, along with several thousand
guards. The Spaniards charged on horseback and fired their canons into the crowded square. As
many as 7,000 Incas were killed, and the emperor captured. Not one Spaniard lost his life. The
Spanish demanded that Inca officials hand over a huge ransom in gold and silver in order to free
the emperor. Inca officials brought rooms full of gold and silver objects over several months—an
estimated $50 million in today’s dollars. But even this did not save the Inca emperor, who was ex-
ecuted on Pizarro’s order eight months after he was captured. The Spaniards named Thupa Wallpa,
a younger brother of Huascar, as a puppet ruler.
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The land along the Pacific coast and in the highlands is dry and requires
irrigation to produce reliable crop yields. People living in the arid deserts
along the coast had built elaborate irrigation systems to harness the
many rivers that flowed from the mountains to the ocean. The Incas ex-
panded this system to make it more productive.
In the highlands, farmers had long built terraces to create more surface
area for farming. Terracing involves building large retaining walls on a
mountain slope and filling in the space between the wall and the slope
above with soil. Terracing prevents soil erosion and rainfall runoff. Channels
divert spring water and streams to water the tiny fields. Farmers had been
terracing the slopes of the Andes for centuries, and the Incas greatly ex-
panded the amount of agricultural land by building terraces in conquered
lands throughout the Andes. At the height of the Inca empire, about 2.47
million acres of irrigated terraces were in cultivation. Andean farmers still
use some of these terraces today, but many have fallen into ruin.
Building terraces, irrigation systems and roads requires a high level of or-
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ganization and the labor of many workers. Where did Inca administrators find workers to carry out
these major engineering projects?
F. The mita system
As we have seen, the Incas did not have money, and so the government could not collect taxes as we
know them. Instead, Inca administrators required adult men to work for the state for a certain num-
ber of days per year. This system is called the mita system. As soon as a man married, he became the
head of a household and was obligated to perform mita work. Each person was assigned a specific
job according to his skills. For example, a skilled weaver would be assigned to make cloth, and a fast
runner would be assigned to be a chasqui runner. The foot soldiers in the Inca army were farmers who
were serving their mita labor obligation. Pachacuti rebuilt Cuzco by calling 30,000 men to contribute
mita labor. Both women and men were required to weave a certain amount of cloth for the state each
year. Other activities carried out with mita labor included farming, mining, road and bridge building,
building temples and other public monuments, transportation of goods, building canals, terraces
and irrigation systems, and making pottery and metalwork. Some ethnic groups were considered to
be especially skilled at certain tasks and these were therefore assigned to them. For example, one
group was thought to be especially good at carrying litters (a sort of platform on railings used to
carry important people). Others were gifted stonemasons, dancers or warriors. Some groups were
considered “good for nothing,” but they were assigned mita work anyway. One group was required
to gather reeds, and another to turn in a basket of live lice every four months!
Although every man was expected to contribute work each year for the empire, only a few men in
a village would be called to work at one time so that other family members could take over their
work at home. The length of time a person was expected to do mita work varied according to the
task assigned, but usually lasted no more than two to three months per year. The person assigned
a specific task could get family members to help him in order to make the length of mita service
shorter, so it was beneficial to have a large family. Although mita work was required, and probably
resented by non-Inca ethnic groups who became incorporated into the empire, it was really an ex-
tension of the Andean custom of each individual working for the group. Now each head of house-
hold was performing labor for a certain period of time for the Inca state.
Workers and their families received something in return for the labor they contributed to the state.
Both curacas and the Inca emperor hosted festivals periodically, in which they gave food and drink
to everyone in the community. These festivals were rewards after workers had completed plowing,
planting, harvest and canal cleaning chores. The emperor also gave textiles and metal objects as an
expression of generosity and to symbolize his gratitude for mita labor. For example, soldiers re-
ceived blankets.
The Inca Empire also employed fulltime skilled craftsmen to produce luxury textiles, elegant pot-
tery and exquisite objects of gold and silver. The emperor gave these luxury goods to leaders of
conquered people, to members of the Inca nobility and to Inca religious leaders. They were also
placed in the graves of important people.
G. Quipu
The Inca ruler and his administrators needed detailed information on what was happening in all parts
of the empire. They needed to know how many people lived in each province, how much each province
was producing, and how much it owed the government in agricultural products and mita labor. How
did Inca bureaucrats keep records of all this important information if they did not have writing?
The Inca used an ingenious tool that had been developed by an earlier civilization in the region for
keeping track of all kinds of information. The object, called a quipu, is simply a long string held
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horizontally with shorter strings of many colors tied to it. (See drawing).
Each of these threads can have other threads tied to it. The threads have
different types of knots to represent the numbers 0 to 9. For example, a
knot representing the number 6 tied at four inches on a 10-inch string
could represent 6,000 (its position at four inches from the main string
would be read as the thousandths column). Quipus could not be used to
add, subtract or multiply. Specially trained administrators called quipu-
camayocs learned to “read” the quipus. They used stones and counting
trays similar to the abacus for doing calculations, and then transferred
the information back to the quipu.
The quipu was used to record all kinds of information, from the number
of births and deaths in a province, the number of llamas or alpacas in a
village herd, the amount of corn stored in a storehouse, the amount of
gold produced in a province, or the amount of mita textiles a community
owed. Colored strings represented different things—for example, a yel-
low string might represent gold, and a white string silver. The quipu was
also used to record historical events and legends and could be used to
represent ideas. For example, white might represent peace and red, war.
The quipu was lightweight and compact, and could easily be carried by
chasqui runners.
Reading a quipu was difficult. Quipucamayocs spent many years learning to
read and interpret the quipu. They worked in every provincial capital col-
lecting and recording important information about the province. They
would send regular reports back to the emperor in Cuzco. He and his ad-
visors then decided how much the province owed in agricultural products
and mita service. Being a quipucamayoc was often hereditary, with quipu
readers passing their skills down to their sons. Sons of Inca nobility and A quipu.
provincial rulers learned to read the quipu at a school in Cuzco. From The Inca Empire, by Dennis Nishi (San Diego: Lu-
cent Books, 2000), page 34. Used with permission.
This complex system for collecting information collapsed after the Span-
ish Conquest. When the Spaniards saw the Incas using the quipu, they
had little understanding of its meaning. They often destroyed them,
thinking they were ungodly. All we know about what information quipus
contained is from early trials, in which quipucamayocs interpreted quipus
and Spanish court officials copied down what the quipucamayoc said.
(See mita handout, From Tribute to Taxes, page 31.) But these quipus
were not preserved. So the secret of deciphering the quipu died with the
last quipucamayoc. Although scholars have studied the quipu extensively,
no one can decipher a quipu with certainty today. Some Andean herders
still use a simplified version of the quipu to keep track of their llama
herds. It is less complex than the quipus used during Inca times, with
fewer cords, types of knots, and colors.
H. Inca religion
Perhaps because they lived in a harsh and unpredictable environment, the
Inca practiced religious rituals designed to win the favor of the gods, who
were often associated with natural forces such as the sun, water, or weather.
The Inca people gave precious things to the gods to earn their favor.
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The Inca religion grew out of the beliefs of Andean people regarding natural forces. Andean peo-
ple have long worshipped the natural world around them, including mountains, rivers, lakes, the
ocean, and constellations. They identify natural features such as especially high mountains, springs
and large stones as sacred places, called huacas.
The Inca worshipped the sun as the ultimate giver of life and celebrate festivals to assure that the
sun will continue to appear each day. They used felines and snakes as symbols in their religious art.
Pachacuti reorganized the Inca religion. He created a special relationship between himself and the
sun, proclaiming that the Inca emperor was the sun’s son. Pachacuti built the elaborate temple to
the sun in Cuzco that awed the Spanish. Wiracocha was the god of creation who was believed to
have created all things, including the sun, moon and stars, as well as the earth and human beings.
The Inca people believed that Illapa, the thunder or weather god, controlled rain. He was asked to
provide enough rainfall at critical points during the agricultural cycle. Mama-Quilla, the moon
god, was the wife of the sun. The festival of the moon was held near the spring equinox, at the be-
ginning of the planting season. Pachamama, the god of the earth, and Mama-Cocha, the god of the
sea, were also female gods. Many other local deities existed to protect herds of llamas, wild ani-
mals and crops.
Andean people also considered the bodies of dead people to be sacred. The bodies of Inca em-
perors were mummified after death. The mummies were brought out for display during festivals
and given things to eat and drink. Founding ancestors of ayllus were also mummified. Ayllu mem-
bers honored them by displaying them during festivals and providing them with ritual offerings,
including food and chicha.
A large group of male and female priests worshipped the many gods and maintained their shrines.
The highest priest, usually the brother or uncle of the emperor, worshipped the sun. A group of
women called aqllakuna made textiles and chicha for the temples. The priests and attendants of
Inca gods were supported by the agricultural goods produced by the portion of the land under
Inca control.
Major festivals took place in December at the beginning of the rainy season, and included danc-
ing, drinking and sacrifice. Another important festival occurred in May to celebrate the corn har-
vest. Many llamas were sacrificed, and the meat was either eaten or burned. In June, a festival to
the sun god Inti took place near Cuzco. Only royal Inca men could participate. The festival in-
cluded llama sacrifices, dancing, and drinking chicha.
Inca beliefs required people to observe many rituals tied to the agricultural calendar. These rituals in-
volved the sacrifice of precious objects, including textiles, coca, chicha, and llamas. Children were sac-
rificed only on rare occasions after natural disasters, war, or during the crowning of a new emperor.
9. Learning About the Inca
Because the Incas had no written language, scholars studying them have had to rely on other
sources of information. These include:
—reports made by Spanish observers who conquered the Incas;
—archaeological remains left by the Inca people, such as buildings, pottery, textiles, tools, metal
objects and burial sites; and
—studies of people living today in the Andes who still practice some Inca traditions.
Each source of information has biases or other limitations. Biases arise from the observer’s opin-
ions or points of view. The Spanish officials, soldiers and priests were biased in their reporting of
Inca life, because they wanted to justify their conquest of the Inca. Most portrayed Andean reli-
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gion unfavorably and some exaggerated the scope of human sacrifice. Early Spanish observers
often misunderstood Andean culture and language. For example, they called the Inca’s language
Quechua, which was the Inca word for “highland valley.” The Incas called their language runasimi,
or “human speech.”
After the Spanish Conquest, some people with Inca heritage learned to write Spanish, and several
wrote accounts of life during Inca times. But these accounts were also biased in that they may have
portrayed Inca rulers as more just and powerful than they actually were. These individuals also
tried to use these accounts to increase their personal status. They were also Catholic, so they were
often critical of the Inca religion.
Archaeologists have studied the physical remains of the Inca culture extensively. They have re-
constructed the elaborate road system, examined gravesites to learn about burial customs and re-
ligious beliefs, and studied Inca crafts such as pottery, metal objects and textiles. They have also
excavated Inca cities to learn about how people lived. This source of information, while valuable,
is incomplete. The Spanish destroyed much of the Inca’s treasure when they conquered the Inca
Empire. For example, they melted down practically all of the precious gold and silver objects made
by Inca craftsmen and sent it back to Spain. Over the centuries, people have looted the graves of
Inca and other Andean people, leaving little behind for archaeologists to examine. As we have seen,
some artifacts, like the quipu, are indecipherable, since the ability to read the quipu died with the
last quipucamayoc. Many important objects, such as textiles and things made of wood, rot in
humid climates. In addition, many aspects of Inca life left no physical record. Religious beliefs and
legends, while very important to Inca culture, cannot be learned about solely from the physical
objects that have survived until today.
10. Modern-day Andean People
Today, millions of people still live in the Andean highlands. They use some of the crops and sub-
sistence practices developed in Inca times. Using terraces built by the Inca, they grow potatoes,
herd llamas and alpacas, and weave beautiful textiles. Some continue Inca traditions such as drink-
ing chicha and eating cuyes (guinea pigs) during religious festivals. Seven million also continue to
speak Quechua, the language of the Inca state.
Social scientists called anthropologists study these people to learn about cultural traditions that
may go back to Inca times. But many traditions have been modified by contact with Spanish cul-
ture as well as modern influences. For example, an Indian group called the Qero still produces
beautiful textiles. They hold a religious ceremony at Easter that involves blessing the finest textiles
produced during the year. The festival begins with people parading two crosses under an arch
hung with textiles and continues with a ceremony where participants drink chicha. In another fes-
tival, known as Qoylluri Riti, Quechua-speaking farmers make a pilgrimage to a snow-capped
peak. The shrine near the summit, however, is dedicated to the Virgin Mary, thus combining
Catholicism with earlier traditions of mountain worship. These festivals illustrate how Inca cus-
toms and Spanish traditions are often blended into a new ritual. Anthropologists have to deter-
mine how these practices, and their meanings, have changed over time.
Today, the people who live in the Andes Mountains have a culture that is a mixture of Inca, colo-
nial Spanish and more modern influences. Isolated by imposing mountains, some villages have pre-
served their culture more than many other native groups in the Americas.
But many highland traditions are disappearing. Many highland people have moved to the coastal
cities in search of an easier way of life and greater opportunities for their children. They are re-
placing their diet of potatoes and quinua, a high protein grain, with pasta and rice, which, while
easier to prepare, is less nutritious. They drink bottled beer rather than locally made chicha. Oth-
YALE PEABODY MUSEUM • 20 • SOCIAL STUDIES CURRICULUM
ers remain in the mountains but adopt modern practices such as wearing machine-made clothing
rather than weaving their own textiles.
11. Conclusion
The Inca Empire was one of the most highly developed civilizations of its time. Unlike the Roman
Empire, it was at its peak when it was conquered by outsiders, with superior weapons and the
horse, which gave them an advantage on the battlefield. European diseases introduced by the
Spanish decimated the Inca people even before the invaders arrived on their shores.
The Inca culture is of interest to scholars because its leaders developed a highly organized state
that ruled over millions of people living in a vast territory without the aid of money, writing or the
wheel. By building on indigenous institutions, such as the ayllu, mita labor, the quipu and the ver-
tical economy, Inca rulers controlled a vast empire and managed to provide basic shelter and food
for millions of people in an environment of harsh extremes.
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