IV.
Spanish Conquest
The Inca civilization was at its height
around 1493, as Spaniards began arriving in the Americas.
In that year, the great ruler Topa Inca was succeeded by
Huayna Capac, who continued to expand the empire.
In about 1525 the Inca Empire survived an attack by a band
of Chiriguano, Native American people from nearby Paraguay.
The attackers were accompanied by Portuguese explorer Aleixo
García, the first white man the Incas had ever seen.
Then
stories reached the Incas of other white men exploring the
Pacific coast. About 1525 both Huayna Capac and his appointed
heir died within a few days of each other, probably from
one of the European diseases that accompanied the arrival
of the Spaniards. Their deaths set off a struggle for power
between two of Huayna Capac's remaining sons, Huáscar and
Atahualpa. Civil war weakened the empire until Atahualpa
captured Huáscar and ordered his execution in 1532.
That
same year, Spanish explorer Francisco Pizarro and 180 Spanish
soldiers landed on the coast of Peru.
The Incas at first believed Pizarro to be their creator
god Viracocha, just as the Aztecs
of Mexico had associated the Spanish
explorer Hernán Cortés with their god Quetzalcoatl.

Pizarro, however, launched a surprise attack on Atahualpa's
followers and seized the emperor. Atahualpa
tried to buy his life by giving Pizarro enough gold to fill
a room. His efforts were not successful; in 1533 the Spaniards
executed Atahualpa by strangulation, and then they chopped
off his head.
The
Spaniards extended their control over Inca territory in
the following years. Pizarro tried at first to maintain
the appearances of a continued Inca state by placing Manco
Capac II, a son of Huayna Capac, on the throne at Cusco.
Disagreements
soon broke out among the Spanish over how to divide the
wealth taken from the Incas. Manco Capac II took advantage
of this situation. He escaped from Cusco in 1536 and launched
a revolt against Spanish rule.
The
Spanish quickly defeated an attack by four Inca armies at
Lima, Peru, which Pizarro had made his capital. After an
unsuccessful three-month siege of Cusco by another Inca
army, Manco Capac II and thousands of his followers took
refuge in the mountainous region of Vilcabamba to the northwest
of Cusco. There he created a new Inca state, from which
he led his warriors in attacks on the Spanish.
The Inca kingdom at Vilcabamba survived for another 36 years,
protected by the difficult terrain of the region. In 1572
the Spanish made a determined attempt to destroy the Inca
stronghold. They overwhelmed the Inca forces and captured
the last emperor of the Incas, Túpac Amaru.
The
Spanish beheaded Túpac Amaru in 1572, ending the Inca dynasty.
The conquerors then introduced the encomienda system, which
put Native Americans to work at forced labor on great agricultural
estates.
Thousands
died of European diseases, and many others fled the land
of their ancestors, causing the population to drop rapidly.
Today
about 8 million descendants of the Incas inhabit the lands
of the former empire, speaking the Quechuan language and
following many of the ancient Inca beliefs and customs.
see
also Peru, History, Spanish Rule
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