Perufag who just wants to know a bit about his ancestors.
Perufag who just wants to know a bit about his ancestors
sacrifice children and animals to the sun. they also invented an kind of stone clock called intihuatana
being gay
shut up francisco your ancestors decided to kill all of the people with Chad genes and left me with asian tier-height. You could've had good slaves but I guess not.
they mined a lot of gold and they had all the northern chilean mines already discovered and added in their road system
Caral is known to be the oldest civilization in the Americas, contemporary to what was developing in India, China, Egypt, and Sumeria. They already knew how to build structures resistant to seismic activity.
They also used Quipus.
Chimus liked to sacrifice children and Llamas in big numbers.
google.com.pe
>have Puerto Rican grandmother
>take Spanish in highschool
>feel awkward as shit speaking Spanish and Mexicans laugh at my accent
Fuck
Feels bad. It was my first language and then I forgot it like the sperg I am. Fluent in it now though.
I want to hear a Vocaroo of you now and see if you sound like the stereotypical gringo trying to speak Spanish.
Also this. Pic related is from Chimu.
Now that we are talking about faggotry, each region from the Inca empire had different views on homosexuality
>Even though homosexuality wasn't accepted in the South and the central part of the empire, the north tolerated this behavior. According to the Chronicle of Peru by Pedro Cieza de León, Homosexuality was considered as an act of worship, there existed a male brothel that catered to the needs of the troops. The ones serving this role were called pampayruna.
They had a Dinasty system, and almost start travelling the world with expeditions. But it failed thanks to the conquista
>Its the conquistador's fault that I'm a manlet
Peak American posting, we can close this board now.
the conquistadors were unironically manlets
they were top tier builders and had advance organization skills, which allowed them to built long af roads, aqueducts, etc
t. el gigante charrúa
>Believing Wh*toid propaganda
You need to be sacrificed to inti
it's true, google search momia del plomo
Taking about ancestors the Peru royalty carried their dead acsestors around when their king traveled. If the op picture is suppose to be a king a train of mummies on raised chairs would follow him, these dozens of mummies would be followed by thousands of servants specifically for the caring if their dead, which the Incans believe are not dead, just kind of resting. This made it super cumbersome and a huge drain on the state. Since the Cuzco dynasty was newish they hadn't cut down on the swamp so to speak and it became a major logistical undertaking for the royalty to do anything.
When the Spanish conquered Cuzco they actually did take the mummies with them when the fled
>Ignoring the fact that Europeans sacrificed YOU in the name of Jeezus
Kek
That's what they did when they conquered it along with other fanatic stuff, but overall, they put an end to the human sacrifices on Peru. You seem like you're just following the "righteous Incans vs evil conquistadores" circlejerk
inheritance wasn't a thing, rulers kept their wealth after their death, it forced new rulers to expand along the mountainous regions quicker than normally and prevented a solid central idea of being one people, like the Chinese and English had, making the empire prone to instability and rebellion.
They are one of the few empires that expand on a north south axis instead of the vertical east west empires like most other empires.
Most of their easy to find gold artifacts where melted down and sent to Spain for the ransom of their leader.
weapons and armor where kept in central warehouses owned by the empire to be issued to troops that would be dispatched as they got to distribution centers near to a conflict and not issued in permanence or owned by levies, and had large warehouses that stored mass amounts of potatoes.
ameridumb
Yeah, the Inca system in which previous emperors' mummies maintained all their lands and belongings, always forcing the new heir to create a new royal house "Panaka" for its own veneration couldn't be sustained for much longer, otherwise, the sheer number of imperial Panakas would have made a bureaucratic nightmare.
By the time Emperor Waskar (hispanized spelling "Huascar") ascended to the throne, he found himself in a situation where he needed to suppress their Emperors' mummy cults, because they consumed too much of the Empire's resources and had too much influence on decisions he, as Emperor, believed were his.
This alienated him with the nobles of Cusco, i.e. Panakas, as Spanish accounts tell us, Pedro Pizarro wrote Huascar disdained the mummies of his ancestors.
Aggravating the situation, in a fit of rage Waskar publicly said he was separating himself and departing from the kinship and lineage of the Hanan Cusco (Upper Cusco) moiety, because Atawallpa was of theirs.
The Royal Houses "Panakas" were divided in their policy of adhesion or rejection to Waskar, very likely most of Upper Cusco weren't openly hostile to Waskar, In Wiracocha's Panaka, for example, there were influential figures who supported the son of Rawa Ocllo (Waskar). We have the case of Challco Yupanqui, the priest who bind him the royal crown "Masca Paicha", a great defender of his legitimacy to the succession. Other Upper Cusco Panakas, like, Topa Inca and Wayna Capac, for family reasons, were supporters of Waskar. The major exception was the Panaka of Pachacuti, Hatun Ayllu, they led the discontent and which at that time was one of the Panakas with the greatest influence rivaling the Qhapaq Ayllu of Topa Inca, the Inca Civil War was basically a conflict between both Royal Houses.
At the end of the Civil War, the Apuskispay "General" Quizquiz stormed Cuzco, where he burned the mummy of Topa Inca, executed all the Wayna Capac's sons, to secure Atawalpa ascension, also executing all the members he could find of Topa Inca's lineage "Qhapaq Ayllu" in which Waskar was born as his mother belonged to it.
In Andean custom you were born in your mother's lineage independently of your father's affiliation although most of the time both belonged to the same lineage clan as the mother usually moved to her husband lineage unless she didn't want it, and it was relatively common for nobles i.e. Incas to change to a different Panaka in their teenage/young adult years.
Manco Inca, one of the ~500 sons of Wayna Capac, was one of the few survivors of that genocide, one of the few survivors of Qhapaq Ayllu Panakan, he was 16 years old at the time. A year later he meets Pizarro in Jaquijawana, near Cusco, the young prince explained how he was living as a fugitive and had spent much of the previous year "fleeing constantly from Atahualpa's men so that they would not kill him. He came so alone and abandoned that he looked like a common Indian".
Pizarro quickly realized that not only was Manco Inca a possible heir to the throne, but that the royal prince also belonged to the Incas' Cuzco faction, precisely the faction that Pizarro wished to be perceived as allying himself with. Since Pizarro has already executed Atahualpa, nothing could be better than for him to arrive in Cuzco with a member of the same faction that had suffered under Atahualpa. Pizarro and his troops could thus position themselves as liberators, a perception that they hoped would forestall any native resistance.
Manco Inca "said to the Governor that he would help him all that he could in order rid the land of all those from Quito (Atahualpa's occupying army), for they were his enemies and they hated him".
Please note that Cuzco and Quito factions are synonyms to Huascar and Atahualpa factions and don't necessarily mean the place they were born.
Quizquiz, for example, was born as a commoner in the lesser districts of Cusco, he joined the army and ascended ranks while campaigning in the north with the Emperor at the moment, Wayna Capac, when he fell ill and rapidly died he swore allegiance to Atahualpa and commanded the veteran northern army along with Challcochimaq in the Civil War.
He was killed by its own soldiers as now they were fighting against the Spaniards aided by Maco's troops and Quizquiz wanted to retreat them the dense and remote forest of the eastern Andes and turn the war into a guerrilla warfare as he saw it as the only chance to succeed, but his soldiers were tired of endless wars and hoped for the long-awaited peace.
According to Pedro Cieza de Leon, "Quizquiz went with the Huambracuna back to Quito, without having accomplished anything that he had intended. He had been praised for being a very brave and wise captain and of good judgment. The very Huambracuna who went with him killed him near Quito in the village of Tiamcambe... Huaypalcon attacked him, and others joined in with battle axes and clubs and killed him."
Aymaras and quechuas are ultramanlets. Look for any pics of remote villages in Peru and Colombia. It's Patagonia where Spaniards found some tall Chads.
Callcochimaq dead is little different, by orders of Atahualpa he camped with his army in the Jauja Valley, securing the area for Atahualpa's march to Cuzco and to end some of the last remaining pockets of resistance as Hatun Xauxa used to be of the main headquarters for Waskar's army. While in Cajamarca Atahualpa is captured by the Spanish for nine months, while imprisoned Atahualpa ordered him to execute Waskar, he had Waskar thrown with his hands tied to the Angasmarca River, and since the ransom payment took to long they sent a couple of Spaniards to Cusco in order to supervise the ransom being brought to Cajamarca, in the way back to Cajamarca they meet with Callcochimaq and told him Atahualpa wants to see him alone, he's wary but goes anyway, back in Cajamarca he's imprisoned and after some months he is accused of secretly communicating with Quizquiz and poisoning Toparpa Tupac Walpa, the short-lived puppet emperor before Manco Inca, things he rejected as he was heavily guarded by the Spaniards at all times, he's burned at the stake on the way to Cusco as he refused to be baptized.
With both dead chances of a native uprising go down greatly but it happens anyway when Manco Inca rebels against the Spaniards due to the constant abuses committed against him, and creates the neo-Inca state of Vilcabamba, where the Inca resist for 36 years, Manco Inca is assassinated by Spaniards who he had under his protection after they killed Francisco Pizarro.
The new viceroy agrees to pardon them if they kill Manco Inca, thing they do only to be quickly murdered by the soldiers of Manco Inca before they can flee from Vilcabamba.
The next to last Emperor of Vilcabamba Titu Cusi saw his father Manco Inca assassinated in front of his eyes in his childhood years, Manco last words to his son were "Do not believe their sweet words, they are all lies, if you believe them they will deceive you as they did with me"
the inca tried to invade the amazonian tribes but got btfo by the weather, diseases, insects, wildlife and locals.
they local tribes would pick away at incan columns trudging through the rain forest by shooting at them with poisoned darts
>had large warehouses that stored mass amounts of potatoes
Warehouses were usually small/regular size, often built closely by hundreds, sometimes thousands.
The large buildings you are referring are the Inca Great Halls "Kallaka", pic related, one used as a barrack.
This type of building common of inca architecture had different purposes depending on the location and time but the most common were:
-Palaces for the Inca sovereigns or lodgings for important individuals
-Headquarters or barracks for Inca soldiers
-Roofed "for their parties and dances" when the external climatic conditions did not allow them to meet in the open air
-Workshops and/or accommodations for tributaries of the Mita system
-Temporary collective accommodation for pedestrians, for example, pilgrims going to sanctuaries
-Places of public meeting or assembly
-Temples (Muñoz
But they weren't used as warehouses, at least not comonnly
the round buildings seen at the beginning are Inca warehouses, round warehouses were usually used to store potatoes (usually dried) and rectangular for the more prestigious maize but Incas stored a lot more things, weapons, tools, ceramics, clothes, dried meat (the word Jerky comes from Quechua), fruits, wood, etc
A Kallanka used as a temple, still conserves some of its adobe walls, round warehouses can also be seen
rectangular warehouses could be paved and have a ventilation system beneath its "barrels" to preserve better its goods stored inside
Incan history sounds fucking hardcore. Jesus.
Would have been interesting to see how the incans would have evolved without wh*tes ruining everything. They had markets despite not having a currency and they way they paid taxes was serving the state and getting food, housing, etc in return.
ruins of rectangular warehouses
if you see closely you can still see its ventilation system
Hmmm... really makes me think
an Inca pool, Inca nobles liked to bath in pools like this one, in this one the snow-peaked mountain Chicon reflected on the surface, Chicon was seen as a mountain god "Apu", like many other mountains in the Andes
The nearby ruins of an Inca estate, this estate became a city so this southeast entry is pretty much the only thing that survived
Tower entries and gatehouses were a common feature of monumental Inca plazas.
do the Pachacuti!
youtube.com
types of pools
an Inca pool know as the "subterranean temple" in Ecuador, though it was probably just a fancy pool, believed to have been constructed by eighter Wayna Capac or Atawalpa, the large hole was done at some time in the colony surely believing some Inca noble burial located beneath
Inca ruins of Sacsaywaman
reconstruction
an Inca shrine nearby, built around a Wak'a or sacred rock
a few of the ruins of Inca bridges nearby
the city of Urubamba, partially seen in pic was built on top of this Inca estate
an Inca road
an Inca reservoir in the center-left
rope bridges are the most well know but they also built log bridges and canoe bridges and sometimes full stone bridges like ones built in the city of Cusco, now beneath it as they paved its rivers
inca terraces
They used knots as databases
wigs
Eating guinea pigs and sacrificing baby lamas.
>they hadn't cut down on the swamp so to speak and it became a major logistical undertaking for the royalty to do anything
I heard the Mayan (or maybe I'm confusing with Aztecs) had a problem with exponentially growing nobility that all expected the same high treatment that was snowballing into a burden that was unsustainable. Unlike in Europe they weren't dying off in wars in significant numbers and more distant relatives weren't living a lesser lifestyle.