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Huayna Capac

Huayna Capac (before 1493 – 1527) was the third Sapa Inca of Tawantinsuyu, the Inca Empire. He was the son of and successor to Túpac Inca Yupanqui.,[1]: 108  the sixth Sapa Inca of the Hanan dynasty, and eleventh of the Inca civilization. He was born in Tumipampa[2][3] and tutored to become Sapa Inca from a young age.

Huayna Capac
Huayna Capac drawn by Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala. The title, in Poma de Ayala's nonstandard spelling, reads: El onceno inga Guainacapac, "The Eleventh Inca, Guayna Capac".
Sapa Inca of the Inca Empire
Reign1493 – 1527
PredecessorTopa Inca Yupanqui
SuccessorHuáscar and Atahualpa
Ninan Cuyochi (titular)
Bornbefore 1487
Died1527
Tumipampa, Inca Empire, modern-day Ecuador
ConsortKuya Kusi Rimay, Kuya Rawa Ukllu
IssueNinan Cuyochi, Huáscar, Atahualpa, Túpac Huallpa, Manco Inca Yupanqui, Atoc, Paullu Inca, Quispe Sisa, Coya Asarpay, Konono, and others
IncaRuna Simi, Qhapaq Simi
HouseTumipampa Ayllu
DynastyHanan Qusqu
FatherTúpac Inca Yupanqui
MotherKuya Mama Ukllu

Tawantinsuyu reached its greatest extent under Huayna Capac, as he expanded the empire's borders south along the Chilean coast, and north through what is now Ecuador and southern Colombia. According to the priest Juan de Velasco he absorbed the Quito Confederation into his empire by marrying Queen Paccha Duchicela, halting a long protracted war.[4] Huayna Capac founded the city Atuntaqui and developed the city Cochabamba as an agriculture and administrative center. The Sapa Inca greatly expanded the Inca road system and had many Qullqa (storehouses) built.[5]

Huayna Capac died in 1527, likely from a European disease introduced to the Americas by the Spaniards. The death of him and his eldest son Ninan Cuyochi sparked the Inca Civil War, in which his sons Huáscar and Atahualpa fought over succession as the next Sapa Inca. Tawantinsuyu fell to Spanish conquests shortly after Atahualpa's victory.[6][7][8]

Names edit

Huayna Capac's original name was Titu Kusi Wallpa before ascending to Sapa Inca.[9][10] Huayna Capac has many alternative transliterations, including Guayna Cápac, Guayna Capac, Huain Capac,[11] Guain Capac, Guayana Capac[12] (in Hispanicized spellings), Wayna Kapa, Wayn Capac,[13] Wayana Qhapaq, Wayna Kapak,[14] Wayna Capac, and Wayna Qhapaq. The name comes from Quechua wayna boy, young, young man; qhapaq "the mighty one",[15][16] "the young mighty one", "powerful young one"[17] or "powerful youth"[9]

Subjects commonly approached Sapa Incas adding epithets and titles when addressing them, such as Wayna Qhapaq Inka Sapa'lla Tukuy Llaqt'a Uya "Unique Sovereign Wayna Qhapaq Listener to All Peoples".[18]

Background and family edit

The exact place and date of Huayna Capac's birth are unknown. Though he was raised in Cusco, he may have been born in 1468 in Tumebamba (modern Cuenca) and have spent part of his childhood there.[19][20][21][22] He was the son of Túpac Inca Yupanqui (ruled 1471–1493) who had extended Inca rule north into present-day Ecuador, a process continued by Huayna Capac.[23]: 253 [10]

Huayna Capac's first wife was his full sister, Koya "Queen"[24] Coya Cusirimay.[23]: 109  The couple produced no male heirs, but Huayna Capac sired more than 50 legitimate sons, and about 200 illegitimate children[23]: 113  with other women. Huayna Capac took another sister, Araua Ocllo, as his royal wife. They had a son they named Thupaq Kusi Wallpa,[9] later known as Huáscar.

Other sons included Ninan Cuyochi (the Crown Prince), Atahualpa, Túpac Huallpa, Manco Inca, Paullu Inca, Atoc, Konono, Wanka Auqui, Kizu Yupanqui, Tito Atauchi, Waman Wallpa, Kusi Wallpa, Tilka Yupanqu.[23]: 109–112  Some of them later held the title of Sapa Inca, although some later Sapa Inca were installed by the Spaniards.

Among the daughters of Huayna Capac were Coya Asarpay (the First Princess of the Empire), Quispe Sisa, Cura Ocllo, Marca Chimbo, Pachacuti Yamqui, Miro, Kusi Warkay, Francisca Coya[25][26] and others.[23]: 112 [1]: 112, 118 

In addition to Kusi Rimay and Rawa Okllo, Huayna Capac had more than 50 wives including Osika, Lari, Anawarque, Kontarwachu and Añas Qolque.[14]:143[23]: 109–112 

Administration edit

 
Tawantinsuyu or Inca empire at its peak under Huayna Capac.

As a "boy chief" or "boy sovereign", Huayna Capac had a tutor, Wallpaya,[9]:218 a nephew of Túpac Inca Yupanqui. This tutor's plot to assume the Incaship was discovered by his uncle, the Governor Waman Achachi, who had Wallpaya killed.[1]: 109 

In the south, Huayna Capac continued the expansion of Tawantinsuyu into what is now Chile and Argentina, and tried to annex territories towards the north in what is now Ecuador and southern Colombia.

 
Ruins of the Inca city of Pumpu. Huayna Capac used to spend time relaxing in the nearby Chinchay Cocha lake connected to the city by a river.

According to the Ecuadorian priest Juan de Velasco Huayna Capac absorbed the kingdom of Quito into the Inca Empire. He supposedly married Paccha Duchicela, the queen of Quito.[6][4]

Huayna Capac became fond of Ecuador and spent most of his time there, founding cities like Atuntaqui. Huayna Capac rebuilt Quito to make it the "second capital" of the empire, besides Cusco.[27]

As Sapa Inca, he built astronomical observatories in Ecuador such as Ingapirca. Huayna Capac hoped to establish a northern stronghold in the city of Tumebamba, inhabited by the Cañari people. In the Sacred Valley, the sparse remains of one of Huayna Capac's estates and his country palace called Kispiwanka[28] can still be found in the present-day town of Urubamba, Peru.

In what is now Bolivia, Huayna Capac was responsible for developing Cochabamba as an important agriculture and administrative center, with more than two thousand silos (qullqas) for corn storage built in the area.[citation needed] Further north in Ecuador, Huayna Capac's forces attempted to expand into the lowlands of the Amazon basin, reaching the Chinchipe River, but they were pushed back by the Shuar.[29]

Huayna Capac acquired a special fondness for the central Peruvian Andes and its local highlights; he is recorded as having spent time relaxing in the Chinchaycocha lake on the Bombon plateau. Many Inca rafts were brought to the lake directly from Ecuador for his amusement.[30] On its way to Cusco, after Huayna Capac's death in Quito, the procession carrying his body stopped in the vicinity of Shawsha, a city in the central Peruvian Andes, acknowledging the fondness that he had felt for the region, and because the local inhabitants had been some of the most loyal to its causes.

Tawantinsuyu, or the Inca Empire, reached the height of its size and power under his rule, stretching over much of what is now Bolivia, Peru, Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, and southwestern Colombia. It included varying terrain from high frozen Andes to the densest swamps. His subjects spanned more than two hundred distinct ethnic groups, each with their own customs and languages. The empire spanned 3,500 kilometres (2,200 mi) north to south, comprising the desert coast of Pacific Ocean on the west, the high Andes in the southeast and the forests of the Amazon Basin on the east.[31] A dedicated ruler, Huayna Capac did much to improve the lives of his people. In addition to building temples and other works, Huayna Capac greatly expanded the road network.[32]: 144  He had qollqa built along it for food so that aid could be quickly rushed to any who were in danger of starvation.

Huayna Capac knew of the Spanish arrival off the coast of his empire[1]: 131  as early as 1515.

Death and legacy edit

 
Statue of Huayna Capac in Guayaquil

Huayna Capac died in 1527.[33]: 82–83, 85  When Huayna Capac returned to Quito he had already contracted a fever while campaigning in present-day Colombia (though some historians dispute this),[34] likely resulting from the introduction of European disease like measles or smallpox.[1]: 117 [35]: 115  The Spaniards had carried a wide variety of deadly diseases to North, Central and South America; and the Indigenous peoples had no acquired immunity against them. Millions of Central- and South Americans died in that epidemic including Huayna's brother, Auqui Tupac Inca, and Huayna's would-be successor and eldest son, Ninan Cuyochi. According to some sources, his sons Atahualpa and Huáscar were granted two separate realms of Tawantinsuyu: his favorite Atahualpa, the northern portion centered on Quito; and Huáscar, the southern portion centered on Cusco.[32]: 146  According to other sources, Atuahualpa was acting as provincial governor on behalf of his brother. The two sons reigned peacefully for four to five years before Huáscar (or possibly Atahualpa) decided to grab power.[33]: 89 

Huáscar quickly secured power in Cusco and had his brother arrested. However, Atahualpa escaped from his imprisonment with the help of his wife. Atahualpa began securing support from Huayna Capac's best generals, Chalcuchímac and Quizquiz, who happened to be near Quito, the nearest major city. Atahualpa rebelled against his brother and won the ensuing civil war, imprisoning Huáscar at the end of the war.[33]: 89–94  Huayna Capac's city of Tumebamba was destroyed during the war. The Spanish Francisco Pizarro and his men ascended into the Andes just as Atahualpa was returning to Cusco after the successful conclusion of his northern campaigns. After launching a surprise attack in Cajamarca and massacring upward of 6,000 Incan soldiers, Pizarro took Atahualpa prisoner. Pizarro's ransom of Atahualpa and his subsequent execution marked the immediate turning point of the Spanish conquest of Tawantinsuyu.

Lost mummy edit

All the Inca emperors had their bodies mummified after death. Huayna Capac's mummy was housed in his palace in Cusco and was seen by the Spanish conquistadors. Later, it was taken from Cusco to his royal estate of Kispiwanka where it was hidden from the Spanish by Huayna Capac's relatives and servants. At some point it was taken back to Cusco, where it was discovered in 1559 by the Spanish. Along with mummies of 10 other Inca emperors and their wives, the mummy was taken to Lima where it was displayed in the San Andres Hospital. The mummies deteriorated in the damp climate of Lima and eventually they were either buried or destroyed by the Spanish.[34][36]

An attempt to find the mummies of the Inca emperors beneath the San Andres hospital in 2001 was unsuccessful. The archaeologists found a crypt, but it was empty. The mummies may have been removed when the building was repaired after an earthquake.[36]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Sarmiento de Gamboa, Pedro, 2015, Originally published in Spanish in 1572, History of the Incas, Lexington, ISBN 9781463688653
  2. ^ "Biography of Huayna Capac o Huaina Capac. Emperador inca". TheBiography.com. Retrieved March 29, 2019.
  3. ^ "Huayna Capac". mayaincaaztec.com. Retrieved March 29, 2019.
  4. ^ a b de Velasco, Juan. Historia del Reino de Quito en la América Meridional.
  5. ^ Sarmiento de Gamboa, Pedro. Historia de los Incas.
  6. ^ a b Rostworowski, María. History of the Inca Realm. Translated by Iceland, Harry B. Cambridge University Press.
  7. ^ de Betanzos, Juan. Suma y narración de los Incas.
  8. ^ de León, Cieza. El Señorio de los Incas.
  9. ^ a b c d D'Altroy, Terence N. (2014-05-27). The Incas. John Wiley & Sons. p. 6. ISBN 9781444331158.
  10. ^ a b Sarmiento de Gamboa, Pedro (2007) [Originally published in Spanish in 1572]. Bauer, Brian S.; Smith, Vania (eds.). The History of the Incas. Austin: University of Texas Press. pp. 171, 173.
  11. ^ Echard, Lawrence (1815). Diccionario geografico universal: O-S (in Spanish). por Francisco Martínez Dávila.
  12. ^ Portnoy, Nestor F. (1997). Estudio en tradición oral: "Sobre la vida del Inca Guayana Capac" (in Spanish).
  13. ^ Silverman-Proust, Gail (1987). "The Woven Shadow of Time: Four Inti Mofits from Q'ero" (PDF). Diálogo Andino (6): 117. ISSN 0716-2278. "Wayn Capac kay pachala riki puntata chinkaypushan". (In this world, Wayna Capac sets into a mountain peak. (Taped 1985).
  14. ^ a b Ellefsen, Bernardo (1989-01-01). Matrimonio y sexo en el incario (in Spanish). Editorial Los Amigos del Libro. p. 143. ISBN 9788483701560. Dos casos notables se refieren a las concubinas de Wayna Kapak: Kontarwacho y Añas Kolke, ambas de la etnia huaylla.
  15. ^ Teofilo Laime Ajacopa, Diccionario Bilingüe Iskay simipi yuyayk'ancha, La Paz, 2007 (Quechua-Spanish dictionary): wayna. - adj. s. m. Joven. Hombre que está en la juventud. qhapaq. - adj. Principal. Primero en importancia. || Noble, ilustre. Qhapaq. / Rico, -ca. Noble, adinerado. / adj. y s. Poderoso, -sa. Acaudalado, adinerado. || El que tiene extensas tierras.
  16. ^ Diccionario Quechua - Español - Quechua, Academía Mayor de la Lengua Quechua, Gobierno Regional Cusco, Cusco 2005: qhapaq - s. Hist. Término utilizado en el inkanato para denominar al poderosos, ilustre, eminente, regio, próspero, glorioso, de sangre real, etc. ...
  17. ^ Graziano, Frank (1999). The Millennial New World. Oxford University Press. p. 202. ISBN 9780195124323.
  18. ^ Conocimiento indígena y globalización (in Spanish). Editorial Abya Yala. 2005. p. 41. ISBN 9789978223864.
  19. ^ Rostworowski, Maria. Enciclopedia Temática del Perú (in Spanish). Vol. 1. p. 67.
  20. ^ Cabello Valboa, Miguel (1945). Miscelánea Antártica (in Spanish). pp. 142, 143, 146.
  21. ^ de Santa Cruz Pachacuti Yamqui, Juan (1879) [c. 1620]. Jiménez de la Espada, Marcos (ed.). Relación de las antigüedades deste Reyno del Pirú (in Spanish). pp. 249, 255.
  22. ^ Cobo, Bernabé (1964) [1890]. Historia del Nuevo Mundo (in Spanish). Vol. 2. p. 90.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Niles, Susan A. (1999). The Shape of Inca History: Narrative and Architecture in an Andean Empire. University of Iowa Press. ISBN 9781587292941.
  24. ^ Cadena, María Soledad De la (1996). Race, ethnicity, and the struggle for indigenous self-representation: de-indianization in Cuzco, Peru, 1919-1992. University of Wisconsin--Madison. p. 292. The sacred animals, royal servants, the Virgins of the Sun, the priests, the high dignitaries of the Court, the Koya (Queen) and the Inca paraded through the scene, these last occupying their respective seats of honor.
  25. ^ Costales, Piedad Peñaherrera de; Costales Samaniego, Alfredo; Jurado Noboa, Fernando (1982). "Los señores naturales de la tierra : Las Coyas y Pallas del Tahuantinsuyo". Cultura y Patrimonio (in Spanish).
  26. ^ Zapata-Jaramillo, Juan G. Descendientes del Emperador Inca Pachacútec. Academia.edu (Report).
  27. ^ González Ochoa, José María (2018). "Huayna Capac". Diccionario Biográfico Español (in Spanish). Real Academia de la Historia.
  28. ^ Saintenoy, Thibault. "Choqek'iraw et la vallée de l'Apurimac : paysages et sociétés préhispaniques tardives". HTTP WWW Theses Fr.
  29. ^ Ernesto Salazar (1977). An Indian federation in lowland Ecuador (PDF). International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs. p. 13. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
  30. ^ Raimondi, Antonio (1876). El Perú - Historia de la geografía del Perú, Libro Primero, Tomo II (in Spanish). Lima: Imprenta del Estado.
  31. ^ "Maya, Aztecs, Inca, Inuit: before Columbus." 2011-03-20 at the Wayback Machine Worldwide Story for Civilization. (retrieved 3 July 2011)
  32. ^ a b Prescott, W.H., 2011, The History of the Conquest of Peru, Digireads.com Publishing, ISBN 9781420941142
  33. ^ a b c de la Vega, G., "El Inca", 2006, Royal Commentaries of the Incas and General History of Peru, Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Co., Inc., ISBN 9780872208438
  34. ^ a b McCaa, Robert; Nimlos, Aleta; Hampe Martinez, Teodoro (6 March 2011). "Why Blame Smallpox? The Death of the Inca Huayna Capac and the Demographic Destruction of Tawantinsuyu (Ancient Peru)" (PDF).
  35. ^ Leon, P., 1998, The Discovery and Conquest of Peru, Chronicles of the New World Encounter, edited and translated by Cook and Cook, Durham: Duke University Press, ISBN 9780822321460
  36. ^ a b Pringle, Harriet (April 2011). . National Geographic. Archived from the original on 20 March 2011.

Further reading edit

  • Sarmiento de Gamboa, Pedro. The History of the Incas. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2007. Originally published in Spanish in 1572. ISBN 978-0-292-71485-4.
  • Helen Pugh, Intrepid Dudettes of the Inca Empire (2020) ISBN 9781005592318
Regnal titles
Preceded by Sapa Inca
1493 – 1527
Succeeded by

huayna, capac, before, 1493, 1527, third, sapa, inca, tawantinsuyu, inca, empire, successor, túpac, inca, yupanqui, sixth, sapa, inca, hanan, dynasty, eleventh, inca, civilization, born, tumipampa, tutored, become, sapa, inca, from, young, drawn, felipe, guama. Huayna Capac before 1493 1527 was the third Sapa Inca of Tawantinsuyu the Inca Empire He was the son of and successor to Tupac Inca Yupanqui 1 108 the sixth Sapa Inca of the Hanan dynasty and eleventh of the Inca civilization He was born in Tumipampa 2 3 and tutored to become Sapa Inca from a young age Huayna CapacHuayna Capac drawn by Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala The title in Poma de Ayala s nonstandard spelling reads El onceno inga Guainacapac The Eleventh Inca Guayna Capac Sapa Inca of the Inca EmpireReign1493 1527PredecessorTopa Inca YupanquiSuccessorHuascar and Atahualpa Ninan Cuyochi titular Bornbefore 1487Died1527Tumipampa Inca Empire modern day EcuadorConsortKuya Kusi Rimay Kuya Rawa UklluIssueNinan Cuyochi Huascar Atahualpa Tupac Huallpa Manco Inca Yupanqui Atoc Paullu Inca Quispe Sisa Coya Asarpay Konono and othersIncaRuna Simi Qhapaq SimiHouseTumipampa AylluDynastyHanan QusquFatherTupac Inca YupanquiMotherKuya Mama UklluTawantinsuyu reached its greatest extent under Huayna Capac as he expanded the empire s borders south along the Chilean coast and north through what is now Ecuador and southern Colombia According to the priest Juan de Velasco he absorbed the Quito Confederation into his empire by marrying Queen Paccha Duchicela halting a long protracted war 4 Huayna Capac founded the city Atuntaqui and developed the city Cochabamba as an agriculture and administrative center The Sapa Inca greatly expanded the Inca road system and had many Qullqa storehouses built 5 Huayna Capac died in 1527 likely from a European disease introduced to the Americas by the Spaniards The death of him and his eldest son Ninan Cuyochi sparked the Inca Civil War in which his sons Huascar and Atahualpa fought over succession as the next Sapa Inca Tawantinsuyu fell to Spanish conquests shortly after Atahualpa s victory 6 7 8 Contents 1 Names 2 Background and family 3 Administration 4 Death and legacy 5 Lost mummy 6 References 7 Further readingNames editHuayna Capac s original name was Titu Kusi Wallpa before ascending to Sapa Inca 9 10 Huayna Capac has many alternative transliterations including Guayna Capac Guayna Capac Huain Capac 11 Guain Capac Guayana Capac 12 in Hispanicized spellings Wayna Kapa Wayn Capac 13 Wayana Qhapaq Wayna Kapak 14 Wayna Capac and Wayna Qhapaq The name comes from Quechua wayna boy young young man qhapaq the mighty one 15 16 the young mighty one powerful young one 17 or powerful youth 9 Subjects commonly approached Sapa Incas adding epithets and titles when addressing them such as Wayna Qhapaq Inka Sapa lla Tukuy Llaqt a Uya Unique Sovereign Wayna Qhapaq Listener to All Peoples 18 Background and family editNames are in Quechua which does not have a written form so the same name may appear with many different spellings The exact place and date of Huayna Capac s birth are unknown Though he was raised in Cusco he may have been born in 1468 in Tumebamba modern Cuenca and have spent part of his childhood there 19 20 21 22 He was the son of Tupac Inca Yupanqui ruled 1471 1493 who had extended Inca rule north into present day Ecuador a process continued by Huayna Capac 23 253 10 Huayna Capac s first wife was his full sister Koya Queen 24 Coya Cusirimay 23 109 The couple produced no male heirs but Huayna Capac sired more than 50 legitimate sons and about 200 illegitimate children 23 113 with other women Huayna Capac took another sister Araua Ocllo as his royal wife They had a son they named Thupaq Kusi Wallpa 9 later known as Huascar Other sons included Ninan Cuyochi the Crown Prince Atahualpa Tupac Huallpa Manco Inca Paullu Inca Atoc Konono Wanka Auqui Kizu Yupanqui Tito Atauchi Waman Wallpa Kusi Wallpa Tilka Yupanqu 23 109 112 Some of them later held the title of Sapa Inca although some later Sapa Inca were installed by the Spaniards Among the daughters of Huayna Capac were Coya Asarpay the First Princess of the Empire Quispe Sisa Cura Ocllo Marca Chimbo Pachacuti Yamqui Miro Kusi Warkay Francisca Coya 25 26 and others 23 112 1 112 118 In addition to Kusi Rimay and Rawa Okllo Huayna Capac had more than 50 wives including Osika Lari Anawarque Kontarwachu and Anas Qolque 14 143 23 109 112 Administration edit nbsp Tawantinsuyu or Inca empire at its peak under Huayna Capac As a boy chief or boy sovereign Huayna Capac had a tutor Wallpaya 9 218 a nephew of Tupac Inca Yupanqui This tutor s plot to assume the Incaship was discovered by his uncle the Governor Waman Achachi who had Wallpaya killed 1 109 In the south Huayna Capac continued the expansion of Tawantinsuyu into what is now Chile and Argentina and tried to annex territories towards the north in what is now Ecuador and southern Colombia nbsp Ruins of the Inca city of Pumpu Huayna Capac used to spend time relaxing in the nearby Chinchay Cocha lake connected to the city by a river According to the Ecuadorian priest Juan de Velasco Huayna Capac absorbed the kingdom of Quito into the Inca Empire He supposedly married Paccha Duchicela the queen of Quito 6 4 Huayna Capac became fond of Ecuador and spent most of his time there founding cities like Atuntaqui Huayna Capac rebuilt Quito to make it the second capital of the empire besides Cusco 27 As Sapa Inca he built astronomical observatories in Ecuador such as Ingapirca Huayna Capac hoped to establish a northern stronghold in the city of Tumebamba inhabited by the Canari people In the Sacred Valley the sparse remains of one of Huayna Capac s estates and his country palace called Kispiwanka 28 can still be found in the present day town of Urubamba Peru In what is now Bolivia Huayna Capac was responsible for developing Cochabamba as an important agriculture and administrative center with more than two thousand silos qullqas for corn storage built in the area citation needed Further north in Ecuador Huayna Capac s forces attempted to expand into the lowlands of the Amazon basin reaching the Chinchipe River but they were pushed back by the Shuar 29 Huayna Capac acquired a special fondness for the central Peruvian Andes and its local highlights he is recorded as having spent time relaxing in the Chinchaycocha lake on the Bombon plateau Many Inca rafts were brought to the lake directly from Ecuador for his amusement 30 On its way to Cusco after Huayna Capac s death in Quito the procession carrying his body stopped in the vicinity of Shawsha a city in the central Peruvian Andes acknowledging the fondness that he had felt for the region and because the local inhabitants had been some of the most loyal to its causes Tawantinsuyu or the Inca Empire reached the height of its size and power under his rule stretching over much of what is now Bolivia Peru Argentina Chile Ecuador and southwestern Colombia It included varying terrain from high frozen Andes to the densest swamps His subjects spanned more than two hundred distinct ethnic groups each with their own customs and languages The empire spanned 3 500 kilometres 2 200 mi north to south comprising the desert coast of Pacific Ocean on the west the high Andes in the southeast and the forests of the Amazon Basin on the east 31 A dedicated ruler Huayna Capac did much to improve the lives of his people In addition to building temples and other works Huayna Capac greatly expanded the road network 32 144 He had qollqa built along it for food so that aid could be quickly rushed to any who were in danger of starvation Huayna Capac knew of the Spanish arrival off the coast of his empire 1 131 as early as 1515 Death and legacy edit nbsp Statue of Huayna Capac in GuayaquilHuayna Capac died in 1527 33 82 83 85 When Huayna Capac returned to Quito he had already contracted a fever while campaigning in present day Colombia though some historians dispute this 34 likely resulting from the introduction of European disease like measles or smallpox 1 117 35 115 The Spaniards had carried a wide variety of deadly diseases to North Central and South America and the Indigenous peoples had no acquired immunity against them Millions of Central and South Americans died in that epidemic including Huayna s brother Auqui Tupac Inca and Huayna s would be successor and eldest son Ninan Cuyochi According to some sources his sons Atahualpa and Huascar were granted two separate realms of Tawantinsuyu his favorite Atahualpa the northern portion centered on Quito and Huascar the southern portion centered on Cusco 32 146 According to other sources Atuahualpa was acting as provincial governor on behalf of his brother The two sons reigned peacefully for four to five years before Huascar or possibly Atahualpa decided to grab power 33 89 Huascar quickly secured power in Cusco and had his brother arrested However Atahualpa escaped from his imprisonment with the help of his wife Atahualpa began securing support from Huayna Capac s best generals Chalcuchimac and Quizquiz who happened to be near Quito the nearest major city Atahualpa rebelled against his brother and won the ensuing civil war imprisoning Huascar at the end of the war 33 89 94 Huayna Capac s city of Tumebamba was destroyed during the war The Spanish Francisco Pizarro and his men ascended into the Andes just as Atahualpa was returning to Cusco after the successful conclusion of his northern campaigns After launching a surprise attack in Cajamarca and massacring upward of 6 000 Incan soldiers Pizarro took Atahualpa prisoner Pizarro s ransom of Atahualpa and his subsequent execution marked the immediate turning point of the Spanish conquest of Tawantinsuyu Lost mummy editFurther information Religion in the Inca Empire Mummification All the Inca emperors had their bodies mummified after death Huayna Capac s mummy was housed in his palace in Cusco and was seen by the Spanish conquistadors Later it was taken from Cusco to his royal estate of Kispiwanka where it was hidden from the Spanish by Huayna Capac s relatives and servants At some point it was taken back to Cusco where it was discovered in 1559 by the Spanish Along with mummies of 10 other Inca emperors and their wives the mummy was taken to Lima where it was displayed in the San Andres Hospital The mummies deteriorated in the damp climate of Lima and eventually they were either buried or destroyed by the Spanish 34 36 An attempt to find the mummies of the Inca emperors beneath the San Andres hospital in 2001 was unsuccessful The archaeologists found a crypt but it was empty The mummies may have been removed when the building was repaired after an earthquake 36 References edit a b c d e Sarmiento de Gamboa Pedro 2015 Originally published in Spanish in 1572 History of the Incas Lexington ISBN 9781463688653 Biography of Huayna Capac o Huaina Capac Emperador inca TheBiography com Retrieved March 29 2019 Huayna Capac mayaincaaztec com Retrieved March 29 2019 a b de Velasco Juan Historia del Reino de Quito en la America Meridional Sarmiento de Gamboa Pedro Historia de los Incas a b Rostworowski Maria History of the Inca Realm Translated by Iceland Harry B Cambridge University Press de Betanzos Juan Suma y narracion de los Incas de Leon Cieza El Senorio de los Incas a b c d D Altroy Terence N 2014 05 27 The Incas John Wiley amp Sons p 6 ISBN 9781444331158 a b Sarmiento de Gamboa Pedro 2007 Originally published in Spanish in 1572 Bauer Brian S Smith Vania eds The History of the Incas Austin University of Texas Press pp 171 173 Echard Lawrence 1815 Diccionario geografico universal O S in Spanish por Francisco Martinez Davila Portnoy Nestor F 1997 Estudio en tradicion oral Sobre la vida del Inca Guayana Capac in Spanish Silverman Proust Gail 1987 The Woven Shadow of Time Four Inti Mofits from Q ero PDF Dialogo Andino 6 117 ISSN 0716 2278 Wayn Capac kay pachala riki puntata chinkaypushan In this world Wayna Capac sets into a mountain peak Taped 1985 a b Ellefsen Bernardo 1989 01 01 Matrimonio y sexo en el incario in Spanish Editorial Los Amigos del Libro p 143 ISBN 9788483701560 Dos casos notables se refieren a las concubinas de Wayna Kapak Kontarwacho y Anas Kolke ambas de la etnia huaylla Teofilo Laime Ajacopa Diccionario Bilingue Iskay simipi yuyayk ancha La Paz 2007 Quechua Spanish dictionary wayna adj s m Joven Hombre que esta en la juventud qhapaq adj Principal Primero en importancia Noble ilustre Qhapaq Rico ca Noble adinerado adj y s Poderoso sa Acaudalado adinerado El que tiene extensas tierras Diccionario Quechua Espanol Quechua Academia Mayor de la Lengua Quechua Gobierno Regional Cusco Cusco 2005 qhapaq s Hist Termino utilizado en el inkanato para denominar al poderosos ilustre eminente regio prospero glorioso de sangre real etc Graziano Frank 1999 The Millennial New World Oxford University Press p 202 ISBN 9780195124323 Conocimiento indigena y globalizacion in Spanish Editorial Abya Yala 2005 p 41 ISBN 9789978223864 Rostworowski Maria Enciclopedia Tematica del Peru in Spanish Vol 1 p 67 Cabello Valboa Miguel 1945 Miscelanea Antartica in Spanish pp 142 143 146 de Santa Cruz Pachacuti Yamqui Juan 1879 c 1620 Jimenez de la Espada Marcos ed Relacion de las antiguedades deste Reyno del Piru in Spanish pp 249 255 Cobo Bernabe 1964 1890 Historia del Nuevo Mundo in Spanish Vol 2 p 90 a b c d e f Niles Susan A 1999 The Shape of Inca History Narrative and Architecture in an Andean Empire University of Iowa Press ISBN 9781587292941 Cadena Maria Soledad De la 1996 Race ethnicity and the struggle for indigenous self representation de indianization in Cuzco Peru 1919 1992 University of Wisconsin Madison p 292 The sacred animals royal servants the Virgins of the Sun the priests the high dignitaries of the Court the Koya Queen and the Inca paraded through the scene these last occupying their respective seats of honor Costales Piedad Penaherrera de Costales Samaniego Alfredo Jurado Noboa Fernando 1982 Los senores naturales de la tierra Las Coyas y Pallas del Tahuantinsuyo Cultura y Patrimonio in Spanish Zapata Jaramillo Juan G Descendientes del Emperador Inca Pachacutec Academia edu Report Gonzalez Ochoa Jose Maria 2018 Huayna Capac Diccionario Biografico Espanol in Spanish Real Academia de la Historia Saintenoy Thibault Choqek iraw et la vallee de l Apurimac paysages et societes prehispaniques tardives HTTP WWW Theses Fr Ernesto Salazar 1977 An Indian federation in lowland Ecuador PDF International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs p 13 Retrieved 16 February 2013 Raimondi Antonio 1876 El Peru Historia de la geografia del Peru Libro Primero Tomo II in Spanish Lima Imprenta del Estado Maya Aztecs Inca Inuit before Columbus Archived 2011 03 20 at the Wayback Machine Worldwide Story for Civilization retrieved 3 July 2011 a b Prescott W H 2011 The History of the Conquest of Peru Digireads com Publishing ISBN 9781420941142 a b c de la Vega G El Inca 2006 Royal Commentaries of the Incas and General History of Peru Indianapolis Hackett Publishing Co Inc ISBN 9780872208438 a b McCaa Robert Nimlos Aleta Hampe Martinez Teodoro 6 March 2011 Why Blame Smallpox The Death of the Inca Huayna Capac and the Demographic Destruction of Tawantinsuyu Ancient Peru PDF Leon P 1998 The Discovery and Conquest of Peru Chronicles of the New World Encounter edited and translated by Cook and Cook Durham Duke University Press ISBN 9780822321460 a b Pringle Harriet April 2011 Inca Empire National Geographic Archived from the original on 20 March 2011 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Huayna Capac Sarmiento de Gamboa Pedro The History of the Incas Austin University of Texas Press 2007 Originally published in Spanish in 1572 ISBN 978 0 292 71485 4 Helen Pugh Intrepid Dudettes of the Inca Empire 2020 ISBN 9781005592318Regnal titlesPreceded byThupaq Inka Yupanki Sapa Inca1493 1527 Succeeded byHuascar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Huayna Capac amp oldid 1197243886, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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