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It was the Western Hemisphere’s
largest empire ever,
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with a population
of nearly 10 million subjects.
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Over an area of more
than 900,000 square kilometers,
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its people built massive
administrative centers,
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temples, and extensive road
and canal systems.
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They did so in an inhospitable,
extreme terrain,
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all without the use of wheels,
horses, iron, or even written language.
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Yet within 100 years of its rise
in the fifteenth century,
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the Inca Empire would be no more.
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According to legend,
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the ancestors of the Inca rulers
were created by the sun god Inti,
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and they emerged
from a cave called Tambo Toco.
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Leading four brothers
and four sisters was Ayar Manco,
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who carried a golden staff
with instructions
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to find the place where
it would sink into the ground,
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showing fertile soil.
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After many adventures
and extensive searching,
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Ayar Manco and his siblings
reached the Cuzco Valley,
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where the staff pierced the ground.
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After fighting off the fierce
local native population,
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they founded their capital,
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and Ayar Manco became Manco Capac,
the first Sapa Inca, or king of the Incas.
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Archaeological evidence suggests
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that the Incas first settled
in this valley around 1200 CE.
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They remained a small kingdom until 1438,
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when they were nearly overrun
by the neighboring Chanka tribe.
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The Inca king at this time, Viracocha,
and his designated heir fled in fear,
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but one of his other sons remained
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and successfully rallied
the city’s defenses.
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For his military skill, he became
the ninth Inca ruler,
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assuming the name of Pachacuti,
or "Cataclysm."
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Pachacuti expanded Inca rule
throughout the Andes mountains,
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transforming the kingdom into
an empire through extensive reforms.
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The empire’s territory was reorganized
as Tahuantinsuyu, or "four quarters,"
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with four divisions ruled
by governors reporting to the king.
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Although the Inca had no writing,
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they used a complex system
of knotted strings called quipu
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to record numbers
and perhaps other information.
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A decimal-based bureaucracy
enabled systematic
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and efficient taxation
of the empire’s subjects.
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In return, the empire provided security,
infrastructure, and sustenance,
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with great storehouses containing
necessities to be used when needed.
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Great terraces and irrigation works
were built
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and various crops were grown in
at different altitudes
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to be transported all over the empire.
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And it was during Pachacuti’s reign
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that the famous estate
of Machu Picchu was constructed.
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Pachacuti’s son Topa Inca continued
the empire’s military expansion,
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and he eventually became ruler
in 1471 CE.
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By the end of his reign, the empire
covered much of western South America.
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Topa’s son Huayna Capac
succeeded him in 1493.
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But the new ruler’s distant military
campaigns strained the social fabric.
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And in 1524, Huayna Capac
was stricken by fever.
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Spanish conquistadors had arrived
in the Caribbean some time before,
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bringing diseases to which
the native peoples had no resistance.
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Millions died in the outbreak,
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including Huayna Capac
and his designated heir.
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The vacant throne ignited a civil war
between two of the surviving brothers,
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Atahualpa and Huascar,
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greatly weakening the empire.
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In 1532, after finally winning
the Inca civil war,
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Atahualpa and his army
encountered the European invaders.
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Although greatly outnumbered,
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Francisco Pizarro
and his small group of conquistadors
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stunned the king’s much larger force
with guns and horses,
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neither of which they had seen before.
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Atahualpa was taken captive
and killed about a year later.
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The Spanish conquerors
were awed by the capital of Cuzco.
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Pizarro described it as so beautiful that
“it would be remarkable even in Spain.”
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Though the capital had fallen
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and the native population had been
destroyed by civil war and disease,
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some Incas fell back to
a new capital at Vilcabamba
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and resisted for the next 40 years.
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But by 1572, the Spaniards had destroyed
all remaining resistance
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along with much of the Incas’ physical
and cultural legacy.
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Thus, the great Inca empire fell
even faster than it had risen.