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History
of Peru: The Incas
The Incas of
Cusco (Cuzco) originally represented one of these small
and relatively minor ethnic groups, the Quechuas. Gradually,
as early as the thirteenth century, they began to expand
and incorporate their neighbors. Inca expansion was
slow until about the middle of the fifteenth century,
when the pace of conquest began to accelerate, particularly
under the rule of the great emperor Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui
(1438-71). Historian John Hemming describes Pachacuti
as "one of those protean figures, like Alexander
or Napoleon, who combine a mania for conquest with the
ability to impose his will on every facet of government."
Under his rule and that of his son, Topa Inca Yupanqui
(1471-93), the Incas came to control upwards of a third
of South America, with a population of 9 to 16 million
inhabitants under their rule. Pachacuti also promulgated
a comprehensive code of laws to govern his far-flung
empire, called Tawantinsuyu, while consolidating his
absolute temporal and spiritual authority as the God
of the Sun who ruled from a magnificently rebuilt Cusco.
Although displaying distinctly hierarchical
and despotic features, Incan rule also exhibited an
unusual measure of flexibility and paternalism. The
basic local unit of society was the ayllu, which formed
an endogamous nucleus of kinship groups who possessed
collectively a specific, although often disconnected,
territory. In the ayllu, grazing land was held in common
(private property did not exist), whereas arable land
was parceled out to families in proportion to their
size. Since self-sufficiency was the ideal of Andean
society, family units claimed parcels of land in different
ecological niches in the rugged Andean terrain. In this
way, they achieved what anthropologists have called
"vertical complementarity," that is, the ability
to produce a wide variety of crops--such as maize, potatoes,
and quinoa (a protein-rich grain)--at different altitudes
for household consumption.
The principle of complementarity also
applied to Andean social relations, as each family head
had the right to ask relations, allies, or neighbors
for help in cultivating his plot. In return, he was
obligated to offer them food and chicha (a fermented
corn alcoholic beverage), and to help them on their
own plots when asked. Mutual aid formed the ideological
and material bedrock of all Andean social and productive
relations. This system of reciprocal exchange existed
at every level of Andean social organization: members
of the ayllus, curacas (local lords) with their subordinate
ayllus, and the Inca himself with all his subjects.
Ayllus often formed parts of larger
dual organizations with upper and lower divisions called
moieties, and then still larger units, until they comprised
the entire ethnic group. As it expanded, the Inca state
became, historian Nathan Wachtel writes, "the pinnacle
of this immense structure of interlocking units. It
imposed a political and military apparatus on all of
these ethnic groups, while continuing to rely on the
hierarchy of curacas, who declared their loyalty to
the Inca and ruled in his name." In this sense,
the Incas established a system of indirect rule that
enabled the incorporated ethnic groups to maintain their
distinctiveness and self-awareness within a larger imperial
system.
All Inca people collectively worked
the lands of the Inca, who served as representative
of the God of the Sun--the central god and religion
of the empire. In return, they received food, as well
as chicha and coca leaves (which were chewed and used
for religious rites and for medicinal purposes); or
they made cloth and clothing for tribute, using the
Inca flocks; or they regularly performed mita, or service
for public works, such as roads and buildings, or for
military purposes that enabled the development of the
state. The Inca people also maintained the royal family
and bureaucracy, centered in Cusco. In return for these
services, the Inca allocated land and redistributed
part of the tribute received--such as food, cloth, and
clothes--to the communities, often in the form of welfare.
Tribute was stored in centrally located warehouses to
be dispensed during periods of shortages caused by famine,
war, or natural disaster. In the absence of a market
economy, Inca redistribution of tribute served as the
primary means of exchange. The principles of reciprocity
and redistribution, then, formed the organizing ideas
that governed all relations in the Inca empire from
community to state.
One of the more remarkable elements
of the Inca empire was the mitmaq system. Before the
Incas, these were colonies of settlers sent out from
the ayllus to climatically different Andean terrains
to cultivate crops that would vary and enrich the community
diet. Anthropologist John V. Murra dubbed these unique
Andean island colonies "vertical archipelagos,"
which the Incas adapted and applied on a large scale
to carve out vast new areas of cultivation. The Incas
also expanded the original Andean concept of mitmaq
as a vehicle for developing complementary sources of
food to craft specialization and military expansion.
In the latter instance, Inca mitmaq were used to establish
permanent garrisons to maintain control and order on
the expanding Inca frontier. What "began as a means
of complementing productive access to a variety of ecological
tiers had become," in the words of Murra, "an
onerous means of political control" under the Incas.
By the late fifteenth century and early
sixteenth century, the Inca Empire had reached its maximum
size. Such powerful states as the coastal Chimú
Kingdom were defeated and incorporated into the empire,
although the Chimús spoke a language, Yunga,
that was entirely distinct from the Incas' Quechua.
But as the limits of the central Andean culture area
were reached in present-day Chile and Argentina, as
well as in the Amazon forests, the Incas encountered
serious resistance, and those territories were never
thoroughly subjugated.
At the outset, the Incas shared with
most of their ethnic neighbors the same basic technology:
weaving, pottery, metallurgy, architecture, construction
engineering, and irrigation agriculture. During their
period of dominance, little was added to this inventory
of skills, other than the size of the population they
ruled and the degree and efficiency of control they
attained. The latter, however, constituted a rather
remarkable accomplishment, particularly because it was
achieved without benefit of either the wheel or a formal
system of writing. Instead of writing, the Incas used
the intricate and highly accurate khipu (knot-tying)
system of recordkeeping . Imperial achievements were
the more extraordinary considering the relative brevity
of the period during which the empire was built (perhaps
four generations) and the formidable geographic obstacles
of the Andean landscape.
Viewed from the present-day perspective
of Peruvian underdevelopment, one cannot help but admire
a system that managed to bring under cultivation four
times the amount of arable land as today. Achievements
such as these caused some twentieth-century Peruvian
scholars of the indigenous peoples, known as indigenistas
(Indigenists), such as Hildebrando Castro Pozo and Luis
Eduardo Valcárcel, to idealize the Inca past
and to overlook the hierarchical nature and totalitarian
mechanisms of social and political control erected during
their Incan heyday. To other intellectuals, however,
from José Carlos Mariátegui to Luis Guillermo
Lumbreras, the path to development has continued to
call for some sort of return to the country's pre-Columbian
past of communal values, autochthonous technology, and
genius for production and organization.
By the time that the Spaniards arrived
in 1532, the empire extended some 1,860 kilometers along
the Andean spine--north to southern Colombia and south
to northern Chile, between the Pacific Ocean in the
west and the Amazonian rain forest in the east. Some
five years before the Spanish invasion, this vast empire
was rocked by a civil war that, combined with diseases
imported by the Spaniards, would ultimately weaken its
ability to confront the European invaders. The premature
death by measles of the reigning Sapa Inca, Huayna Cápac
(1493-1524), opened the way for a dynastic struggle
between the emperor's two sons, Huáscar (from
Cusco) and the illegitimate Atahualpa (from Quito),
who each had inherited half the empire. After a five-year
civil war (1528-32), Atahualpa (1532-33) emerged victorious
and is said to have tortured and put to death more than
300 members of Huáscar's family. This divisive
and debilitating internecine conflict left the Incas
particularly vulnerable just as Francisco Pizarro and
his small force of adventurers came marching up into
the Sierra.
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about Peru: Peruvian History
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