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Pachacuti

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Pachacuti
Pachacuti, mid–18th century painting, anonymous.
Sapa Inca of the Inca Empire
Reign1438–1471 (Rowe)
PredecessorViracocha
SuccessorTúpac Inca Yupanqui
BornCusi Inca Yupanqui,
1418[1] (Bilingual Review)
Cusicancha Palace, Cusco, Inca Empire, modern-day Peru
Died1471 (Rowe)
Patallacta Palace, Cusco, Inca Empire, modern-day Peru
ConsortMama Anawarkhi or Quya Anawarkhi
IssueTupac Yupanqui, Amaru Topa Inca, Mama Ocllo Coya
Names
Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui
QuechuaPachakutiy Inka Yupanki
SpanishPachacútec/Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui
Lineage (panaka)Iñaca Panaka, later Hatun Ayllu
DynastyHanan Qusqu, moiety
FatherViracocha Inca
MotherMama Runtu
Depiction of Pachacuti worshipping Inti (god Sun) at Coricancha, in the 17th century second chronicles of Martín de Murúa.
Part of the ruins of Pachacuti's palace in Cusco.

Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui, also called Pachacútec (Quechua: Pachakutiy Inka Yupanki), was the ninth Sapa Inca of the Chiefdom of Cusco, which he transformed into the Inca Empire (Quechua: Tawantinsuyu). Most archaeologists now believe that the famous Inca site of Machu Picchu was built as an estate for Pachacuti.[2]

In Quechua, the cosmogonical concept of Pachakutiy means 'the turn of the world'[3] and Yupanki could mean 'honorable lord'.[4] During his reign, Cusco grew from a hamlet into an empire that could compete with, and eventually overtake, the Chimú empire on the northern coast. He began an era of conquest that, within three generations, expanded the Inca dominion from the valley of Cusco to a sizeable part of western South America. According to the Inca chronicler Garcilaso de la Vega, Pachacuti created the Inti Raymi to celebrate the new year in the Andes of the Southern Hemisphere.[5] Pachacuti is often linked to the origin and expansion of the Inti Sun Cult.[6][7]

Accessing power following the Inca-Chanka war, Pachacuti conquered territories around Lake Titicaca and Lake Poopó in the south, parts of the eastern slopes of the Andes Mountains near the Amazon rainforest in the east, lands up to the Quito basin in the north, and lands from Tumbes to possibly the coastal regions from Nazca and Camaná to Tarapacá.[8] These conquests were achieved with the help of many military commanders, and they initiated Inca imperial expansion in the Andes.

Pachacuti is considered by some anthropologists to be the first historical emperor of the Incas,[9] and by others to be a mythological and cosmological representation of the beginning of the era of Inca imperial expansion.[10]

Name

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The compound Pachacuti referred to an ancient Andean cosmological concept, representing cataclysmic change of era-worlds. The anthroponym appeared written as <Pachacuti> or <Pachacute> in the early colonial chronicles and documents of the 16th century. This written form can be reconstructed into Quechua as Pacha Kutiy. The form <Pachacútec> (contemporary quechua spelling: Pachakutiq) was introduced by the writer Inca Garcilaso de la Vega in his Comentarios Reales de los Incas published in 1609.[11] Before the coronation, Pachacuti was referred to as Inga Yupangui, with the Spanish navigator Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa additionally claiming Pachcuti's first name was Cusi.[12]

The compound is not influenced by other languages such as Aymara or Puquina, and is considered purely Quechua. It is composed of the noun pacha, which means 'land, region, time, world' and represents an Andean concept associating time with the physical world, and the verb kuti- 'to change, turn, return to a starting point'. The apparent absence of a nominalization mark is attributed to the Spanish colonial scribes' failure to recognize the presence of an -y action nominalizer. Consequently, kuti-y means 'change, turn, return'. The colonial chronicler Juan de Betanzos translated the anthroponym Pacha Kutiy as 'turn of time' and the Peruvian linguist Rodolfo Cerrón Palomino translated the compound as 'the turn of the world'.[3] The form Pachacutec used in Garcilaso de la Vega's writing likely was caused by the Incas' storing of the agent nominalizer -q instead of the action nominalizer -y. In Quechua, the presence of an uvular consonant such as /q/ causes the vowel /ɪ/ to be pronounced as an /e/ in Spanish. However, Garcilaso's restitution contradicted early colonial documentation and was grammatically implausible, since the verb kuti- is an intransitive verb, and the chronicler's intended meaning for the word of 'he who goes around the world' required an additional morpheme altering the verbal valence. The form <Pachacutec> (*pacha kuti-q) reconstructed by Garcilaso was ungrammatical in Quechua, and the meaning of 'he who goes around the world' would have instead required an expression similar to *pacha kuti-chi-q.[11]

According to the oral tradition of Pachacuti's imperial lineage, the name was acquired following the war against the Chankas, according to the chronicler Juan de Betanzos' version together with the names or epithets Cápac and Indichuri.[13]

Historicity

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Pachacuti is often considered the first historical Incan emperor,[9] despite various mythological elements.[10] Various historians associated Pachacuti with the rewriting of the previous Inca rulers' reigns, in order to justify Incan imperial expansion.[14] The nature of Pachacuti's tale, the cosmological concepts and meanings decipherable from it, and the lack of physical representations as well archeological evidence occasionally refuting the history of his reign as presented by colonial sources contradicted his historical image and made some scholars come to the conclusion that Pachacuti was an Incan ideological and cosmological concept.[15][10]

The linguists, anthropologists, archeologists, ethnologists and historians Martti Pärssinen,[8] Catherine Julien, Rodolfo Cerrón Palomino,[9] Alfred Métraux,[16] Brian S. Bauer,[9] John Howland Rowe, Franck Salomon,[9] Waldemar Espinoza Soriano, José Antonio del Busto Duthurburu, Gary Urton,[15] and María Rostworowski[17] consider Pachacuti to be historical, while others, such as Pierre Duviols,[10] Juan Ossio Acuña,[18] Reiner Tom Zuidema, Franck Garcia,[10] and Carmen Bernand consider Pachacuti to be mythological or mytho-historical. According to the archeologist Franck Garcia, the story of Pachacuti's reign was mainly symbolical and served to set philosophical principles, Inca history having the structural elements of a myth.[10] John Howland Rowe analyzed and compared various colonial sources and came to the conclusion that there existed a state-sanctioned "standard history", believing Pachacuti's victory over the Chanka people to be the cause of imperial expansion.[19] In 1953, María Rostworowski published her biography of Pachacuti, the first modern biography of an exclusively pre-Columbian figure, and supported Rowe's conclusion of late imperial expansion under Pachacuti. The Dutch structuralist anthropologist Reiner Tom Zuidema criticized Rowe and Rostworowski for methodological practices, and studied the symbolical cosmological territorial organization of the administration and of Cusco and it's surroundings.[20] Examining the dualist philosophy of the Andes (yanantin), Zuidema and Pierre Duviols came to the conclusion that the Inca Empire was a diarchy, Pachacuti having co-reigned according to them with the warrior chieftain Mayta Capac (the fourth ruler of Cusco in the traditional list), while Martti Pärssinen, examining Andean tripartite traditions, came to the conclusion that the internal organization of the capital, Cusco, had three rulers, the co-rulers of Pachacuti being Capac Yupanqui and Mayta Capac, while the state-wide imperial administration had only one.[8] In 1945, Rowe devised an imperial chronology, stating Pachacuti reigned from 1438 to 1471, while archeological data suggests the early 15th century to be the beginning of Pachacuti's reign.[19] The former minister of culture Juan Ossio Acuña supported the position of Zuidema, who postulated that the Inca rulers before Topa Inca Yupanqui, including Pachacuti, weren't historical rulers but rather social groups or factions.[18]

Early life and parentage

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Pachacuti's given name was Cusi Yupanqui, and he originated from the female lineage of Iñaca Panaka, in the moiety of Hanan Cusco ("high Cusco"), in complementary opposition to the moiety of Hurin Cusco ("low Cusco"). According to the accounts of the Spanish chroniclers, he was the son of the eighth ruler of Cusco, Inca Viracocha, whose lineage (panaka), however, was Sucsu Panaka. Analyzing the colonial writings, the historian and anthropologist María Rostworowski concluded that, based on Andean traditions of succession, which allowed for the "most capable" to take power, Pachacuti was not the son of Inca Viracocha, rendering him illegitimate in the eyes of the Spaniards, who believed in European concepts of primogeniture.[citation needed]

Cusi Yupanqui was born in Cusco, at the palace of Cusicancha, bordering the Inticancha temple. His tutor, Micuymana, taught him history, laws and language, as well as the handling of quipus. From a young age, he was admired by Inca nobles because he had the courage, intelligence and maturity his brother, Inca Urco, the appointed co-ruler and heir to the throne, lacked. Similarly, he showed aptitudes for government and conquest that his brother likewise lacked. The generals of Viracocha started fomenting conspiracies to overthrow and replace Inca Urco.[21][22]

Rise to power

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Scene from the Inca-Chanka war on the Great Historical Mural of Cusco

In the early 15th century, the Cusco confederation, stretching 40 kilometers around the city of Cusco, faced an invasion by the Chankas, the Incas' traditional tribal archenemies. Multiple versions of the encounter exist, the most accepted one being supported by the majority of reliable Spanish sources.[19][23]

The ruler, Inca Viracocha, and his co-ruler Urco, fled the scene, while Cusi Yupanqui rallied the army, accompanied by four of Viracocha's generals, and prepared the defense of the city. During the subsequent assault on Cusco, the Chankas were repelled, so severely that legend tells even the stones rose up to fight on Yupanqui's side. At the battle of Yahuar Pampa, the Inka army won a decisive victory over the Chankas and asserted it's dominance. Cusi Yupanqui captured many Chanka leaders, who he presented to his father Viracocha for him to wipe his feet on their bodies, a traditional victory ritual. Viracocha told Yupanqui that the honor of the ritual belonged to the designated heir, Urco. Yupanqui protested and said that he had not won the victory for his brothers to step on the Chanka captives. A heated argument ensued, and Viracocha tried to have the general assassinated. Pachacuti was tipped off to the plot, however, and the assassination failed. Viracocha went into exile while Inca Yupanqui returned in triumph to Cusco, and, following a short civil war during which the co-ruler, Urco, died, was crowned Sapa Inca of Cusco, and renamed himself "Pachacuti" (meaning "Earth Shaker").[24][25]

Reign

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As ruler, Pachacuti married Mama Anawarkhi, of the ayllus of Choqo and Cachona, most likely to reward a chief belonging to one of these ayllus who had defended Cusco during the Chanka invasion, and left his original family-clan (panaka) to form the imperial lineage of Hatun Ayllu, failing in his attempt to fuse the two factions. To record the history of the previous Inca rulers of Cusco, Pachacuti ordered the creation of painted wooden panels, which, in relation to oral texts, often in the form of mnemonic songs sung at important celebrations, and quipus, which contained simple and stereotyped information according to colour, order and number, decipherable by Quipucamayocs, represented official and state-sanctioned pre-imperial history.[14]

Pachacuti's palace at Vitcos.

Despite Pachacuti's prestige following the victory over the Chankas, he had "little effective power and a meager work force to undertake the development of Cusco". Instituting the system of reciprocity (a socio-economic principle regulating relations, based on obligatory and institutional mutual, "give and take", assistance) to assert his authority, Pachacuti summoned the surrounding kurakas (chiefs) to Cusco, and prepared "lavish feasts and ceremonies", tactically displaying much generosity and sharing gifts, including the booty of the war against the Chankas, before articulating gradually growing demands such as the construction of warehouses, the stocking of produce, the creation of an army, and the improvement of infrastructure.[26] Using the means of reciprocity, Pachacuti rebuilt much of Cusco, designing it to serve the needs of an imperial city and as a representation of the empire.[26] Each suyu had a sector of the city, centering on the road leading to that province; nobles and immigrants lived in the sector corresponding to their origin. Each sector was further divided into areas for the hanan (upper) and hurin (lower) moieties. Many of the most renowned monuments around Cusco, such as the great sun temple Qurikancha (previously Intikancha), were rebuilt during Pachacuti's reign.[27]

At the beginning of Pachacuti's reign, the cult of the Andean creator deity Viracocha, whose priests had supported the previous ruler Viracocha Inca, was possibly replaced by the Inti Sun cult.[6][7] The first months of his reign were spent putting down revolts by surrounding chiefs in the Cusco valley and consolidating the territorial base of the polity, confronting the Ayarmacas, the Ollantaytambo, the Huacara, and the Toguaro.[28] Pachacuti conquered lands along the Urubamba valley, where he founded the famous site of Machu Picchu.[2]

Expansion of the realm

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Portrait of Pachacuti, circa 1615

Local kurakas (lords) were integrated using the principle of reciprocity and the "attachment system", where the Inca emperor held personal relations with allied local socio-political structures, and "gifts", in the form of feasts, women, or materials, were exchanged in return for submission, reduced sovereignty, alliance and the construction of hatuncancha (administrative centers).[8][26] Pachacuti occasionally elevated individuals from the class of yanakunas, who left the system of kinship groups (ayllus and panakas) and weren't obligated or entitled to the obligations and rights of reciprocal exchange, to rulers of local chiefdoms who had rebelled or refused Inca domination.[26]

His first military campaign, led by the emperor and his general Apo Mayta, was set against the Chankas' allies and confederates, and the chiefdoms surrounding Cusco. Pachacuti conquered the Soras and Rucanas, the Vilcas, the Lucanas, the Chalcas, and the Cotabambas.[29][30] The conquest of the chiefdom of Chincha, and the neighboring valley of Pisco, on the south-central coast, also happened during the reign of Pachacuti. The general, and possibly "co-king" or huauque (lit. "brother" in quechua), Capac Yupanqui led an army to Chincha, gaining the recognition and submission of the local kings with the help of "reciprocal gifts", in exchange for which the Chincha allowed the construction of administrative centers, the usage of land cultivated by Aclla (women working for the state) and yanakuna servants, and recognized Pachacuti's superiority.[31][32] However, in 1945, the historian John Howland Rowe attributed the conquest to later rulers, claiming that the initial campaign was a raid.[19][31]

Pachacuti started the practice of forced migrations, sending mitimaes (colonists) of loyal areas to unstable provinces, or alternatively placing loyal peoples to strategic positions in the Empire. As part of his vision of a statesman and warrior chieftain he conquered many ethnic groups and states, highlighting his conquest of the Collao that enhanced the prestige of the Inca Pachacuti. Due to the remarkable expansion of their domains he was considered an exceptional leader, enlivening glorious epic stories and hymns in tribute to his achievements. Numerous kurakas do not hesitate to recognise his skills and identify him as the "Son of the Sun".[citation needed] According to various historians and anthropologists, Pachacuti initiated the "Pax Incaica" or "Inca peace", notably by imposing peace to the regional chiefdoms that comprised the alliance of structures united around the figure of the Inca emperor called Tawantinsuyu, or Inca Empire.

Conquest of Qullasuyu

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Aymara and puquina kingdoms, separated along an imaginary line into two moieties of Urcosuyu and Umasuyu, left and right.

The Colla chiefdom and the Lupaca chiefdom of lake Titicaca, in the Altiplano (called "Collao"), were one of the first of Pachacuti's targets.[33] Following the construction of the Qurikancha, the "temple of gold" dedicated to the sun, Pachacuti sent an army near the border with the Colla chiefdom, before joining his forces not long after. The Colla king or Colla Capac, informed of this, gathered his forces and awaited the Inca at the town of Ayaviri. During the ensuing battle, the Incas forced the Colla army to retreat, capturing the king, Colla Capac. Following the victory, Pachacuti occupied the principal city, Hatunqulla, and from there he received the submission of the Lupacas, the Pacasas and the Azangaros (previously a tributary chiefdom of the Collas).[34] John Howland Rowe estimated the Inca Empire under Pachacuti to have reached the Desaguadero River near lake Titicaca, which marked the border between the conquered Lupaca chiefdom and the Pacasa chiefdom. However, in 1992, the Finnish ethno-historian Martti Pärssinen, pointing to local sources of the area of the Aymara kingdoms, supported the narrative of territorial expansion by Pachacuti's generals until the nation of Charcas, near lake Poopó.[35][2] Various chroniclers place the birth of Topa Inca Yupanqui, son of the queen Mama Anarwakhi, during these conquests.[34][36]

Pachacuti also potentially conquered parts of Kuntisuyu, where many Aymara enclaves were attached to the highland kingdoms, including the regions of Arequipa, Camana and Tarapacá.[34] The conquest of these regions is also attributed to Amaru Topa Inca, during the subsequent revolt of the chiefdoms around lake Titicaca.[37]

Revolt

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During military expeditions in the eastern lowlands ("montaña") and the Amazonian rainforest, the Colla, Lupaca and Azangaro revolted, led by one of the sons of the previous Colla ruler.[38] According to Sarmiento de Gamboa, an army of around 200.000 men was assembled, commanded by Amaru Topa Inca, Tupac Ayar Manco and Apu Paucar Usnu, to put it down.[39] After having put down the revolt, the Inca army continued passed Inca territory and conquered the nations of Sora, Caranga, Caracaras Quillaqua, Charca, Chui and Chicha, near and around lake Poopó, possibly united in an inter-provincial wider confederation of large polities (which were themselves composed of confederated "small chiefdoms", in turn composed of various ayllus) or Hatun apocazgo.[40][35][23]

Expeditions to Chinchaysuyu

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Inca expansion according to John Howland Rowe.

Pachacuti personally conquered the nations surrounding the kingdom of Cusco, retiring to concentrate on administrative reform and the embellishment of Cusco, and left the military command of subsequent campaigns to his generals.[41][29]

The military commander Capac Yupanqui was sent, together with the captains Huayna Yupanqui and Yamqui Yupanqui, to the northern regions of Chinchaysuyu, accompanied by the Chanka contingent led by the military chief or sinchi Anco Huallu. The Inca armies occupied the fortress of Urcocollac, advanced through various territories of the central Andes, including those of the Huanca, the Yauyos and the Atavillos.[41] At Huaylas, Capac Yupanqui established the military center of Maraycalle, from where the Inca forces conquered the confederated chiefdoms of Huaylas, Piscopampas, Pincos, Huaris and Conchucos.[42] The Inca armies, in chasing the escaped Chanka forces, eventually arrived at the Cajamarca chiefdom,[41] whose capital and supreme sub-chiefdom was Guzmango, in the Hanansaya ("high half/moiety") moiety.[43] Capac Yupanqui, by invading the Cajamarca chiefdom, began tensions with the coastal ally of the Cajamarca chiefdom, the Chimú Empire,[41] which spread from Tumbes in the north to Carabayllo in the south. According to John H. Rowe, the territories' annexed to the Empire reached until Chinchaycocha, near the centre of Bombón [es], the rest of the campaign merely raiding the territories up to the Cajamarca chiefdom.[19][29] Other historians state the Cajamarca polity, whose later incaic capital was the Inca administrative center of Cajamarca, was conquered as were the territories around Cusco, leaving a great gap between the rest of Inca territory and Cajamarca[44] and disadvantaging supply lines.

Pachacuti gave military command to his son and heir Topa Inca Yupanqui, who led military campaign in the northern reaches of the Empire, and consolidated the conquests made during the campaign of Capac Yupanqui. Establishing Cajamarca as a military base, he led an expedition against the Chimú Empire, from the mountains neighboring the costal lowlands (yungas), forcing the Chimú ruler, Minchançaman, to surrender by cutting the irrigation canals of the Moche River leading to the Chimú capital of Chan Chan. Other campaigns were led against the Chachapoya, the Quitu, the Cañari, and various chiefdoms in modern-day Ecuador.[45][46][47] Martti Pärssinen noted that the territories north of Tomebamba and Cañar were potentially conquered after Pachacuti's reign, who according to the Mercedarian friar and missionary Martin de Murúa abdicated in favor of his successor, Topa Inca, whose conquests in the northern Quito bassin would have happened before Pachacuti's death.[48]

Following these campaigns, Topa Inca's conquests were celebrated on his return to Cusco.[45]

Central and south Andean chiefdoms.

Reforms

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In Andean cosmology and mythology, Pachacuti, along with the creator deity Viracocha and the mythical Inca Manco Cápac, was associated with the Andean quest for continuous differentiation of complementary opposing forms, known as yanantin, seen more as factors of complementarity than rivalry, of peace, productivity, and by extension of progress and order. As such, Pachacuti's role was that of an archetype of the perfect Inca ruler according to the philosophical principles of the Inca ruling caste, and of spreading the incaic cultural model and associated pantheon to the various ethnic groups of the Andes.

Pachacuti built irrigation networks, cultivated terraces, roads and hospices. The "Road of the Inca" (Qhapaq Ñan) stretched from Quito to Chile.[47] Pachacuti is also credited with having displaced hundreds of thousands in massive programs of relocation and resettling them to colonize the most remote edges of his empire. These forced colonists, called mitimaes, represented the lowest place in the Incan social hierarchy.[49]

Death and succession

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Despite his political and military talents, Pachacuti did not improve the system of succession. His son became the next Inca without any recorded dispute after Pachacuti died in 1471 due to a terminal illness, even though some colonial sources hint at Pachacuti's abdication prior to his death.[48] But in future generations, the next Inca had to gain control of the empire by winning enough support from the apos, priesthood, and military to win a civil war or intimidate anyone else from trying to wrest control of the empire. Pachacuti was a poet and the author of the Sacred Hymns of the Situa city purification ceremony. Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa attributed one song to Pachacuti on his deathbed:[50] "I was born as a lily in the garden, and like the lily I grew, as my age advanced / I became old and had to die, and so I withered and died."[51]

Pachacuti initially nominated his son Amaru Topa Inca to be co-ruler and heir to the throne. However, due to the lack of military talent found in the joint prince, Pachacuti changed his decision and instead decided to name another of his sons, Tupac Inca Yupanqui, who in turn had a reputation as a talented general, as his co-ruler and successor.[52][17] In his last years, the Inca government might have been de facto in the hands of his "helper" (quechua: yanapac), "compagnon" (quechua: yananti), or "brother" (quechua: huauque) in the semi-diarchy of the Inca, by the name of Yamqui Yupanqui. At the death of Pachacuti, instead of confirming his own power, Yamqui Yupanqui rather confirmed Tupac Inca Yupanqui as successor to his father.[17] Some historians, however, doubt the internal organization of Cusco, separated into Hanan Cusco and Hurin Cusco moities, each of which potentially had two rulers, was identical to the state-wide organization of the Empire into Hanan saya ("high half") and Hurin saya ("low half"), of which they doubt it had more than one king.[8]

Pachacuti's mummy was transported on his own wishes to the palace of Patallacta, but was later found at Tococache.[17]

Lineage

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Pachacuti, considered the son of Inca Viracocha and Mama Runtu, was, according to most traditional lists of Inca rulers, the fourth ruler of a lineage from the Hanan moiety of Cusco, whose rulers are collectively called the Hanan dynasty. He had several sons, among which are Tupac Ayar Manco, Apu Paucar, Amaru Topa or Amaru Yupanqui, Yamqui Yupanqui, Auqui Yupanqui, Tilca Yupanqui, and Tupac Inca Yupanqui.[53]

Pachacuti had two of his brothers, Capac Yupanqui and Huayna Yupanqui, killed after the military campaign against the region of Chinchay-Suyu. He also killed his sons Tilca Yupanqui and Auqui Yupanqui.[54] Some ethno-historians however think that Capac Yupanqui was the co-ruler or Huauque (lit. "brother") of Pachacuti.[17]

Amaru Topa was originally chosen to be the co-regent and eventual successor. Pachacuti later chose Tupac Inca because Amaru was not competent in military affairs. He was the first Inca ruler to abdicate.[55]

His lineage or panaqa of birth was Iñaka Panka, whose common ancestor was Mama Wako, the wife of Manco Capac, which he left to found his own lineage called Hatun Ayllu. He married Mama Anawarkhi or Anarwakhi (Coya Anahuarque), of the ayllus of Choqo and Cachona, most likely to reward a chief belonging to one of these ayllus who had defended Cusco during the Chanka invasion.[56]

Legacy

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The Life of Pachacuti Inca Yupangui". Bilingual Review, Bilingual Review Press, 1 May 2001
  2. ^ a b c Rowe, John, 1990. "Machu Picchu a la luz de documentos de siglo XVI". Historia 16 (1): 139–154, Lima.
  3. ^ a b Cerrón-Palomino, Rodolfo (2008). Voces del Ande : ensayos sobre onomástica andina. Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. doi:10.18800/9789972428562. ISBN 978-9972-42-856-2.
  4. ^ Cerrón-Palomino, Rodolfo (2013), Las lenguas de los incas: el puquina, el aimara y el quechua, Peter Lang, doi:10.3726/978-3-653-02485-2/1, retrieved 1 April 2024
  5. ^ "Inti Raymi, The Celebration of the Sun". Discover Peru, www.discover-peru.org/inti-raymi/.
  6. ^ a b Steele & Allen 2004, p. 246.
  7. ^ a b D'Altroy 2003, p. 147.
  8. ^ a b c d e Pärssinen, Martti (1992). Tawantinsuyu: The Inca State and Its Political Organization. SHS. ISBN 978-951-8915-62-4.
  9. ^ a b c d e Shimadi, Izumi, ed. (2015). The Inka Empire: A multidisciplinary approach. University of Texas Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-292-76079-0.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Garcia, Franck (2019). Les incas (in French). Paris: Éditions Ellipses. pp. 145–152. ISBN 978-2-340-03941-4.
  11. ^ a b Cerrón-Palomino, Rodolfo (2013). Tras las huellas del Inca Garcilaso: el lenguaje como hermenéutica en la comprensión del pasado [After the footsteps of Inca Garcilaso: language as hermeneutics in the understanding of the past] (in Spanish). Lima: Latinoamericana Editores, CELACP, Revista de Crítica Literaria Latinoamericana. pp. 109–110. ISBN 978-0-9747750-4-3.
  12. ^ De Gamboa 2011.
  13. ^ Betanzos, Juan (2015) [1551]. Suma y Narración de los Incas (in Spanish). Lima: PUCP. p. 195.
  14. ^ a b Pärssinen, Martti (1992). Tawantinsuyu: The Inca State and Its Political Organization. SHS. pp. 26–51. ISBN 978-951-8915-62-4.
  15. ^ a b D'Altroy 2003.
  16. ^ Métraux, Alfred. Les incas (in French). Paris: Éditions du Seuil.
  17. ^ a b c d e Rostworowski 2001.
  18. ^ a b Escribano, Pedro. "Juan Ossio Acuña: "La historia de los incas feu traducida al estilo europeo". La República (Peru).
  19. ^ a b c d e H. Rowe, John (January 1945). "Absolute Chronology in the Andean Area". American Antiquity. 10 (3): 265–284. doi:10.2307/275130. JSTOR 275130.
  20. ^ Tom Zuidema, Reiner (1964). The Ceque System of Cusco - The Social Organization of the Capital of the Inca. Brill Archive.
  21. ^ Espinoza 1997, p. 77.
  22. ^ Rostworowski 2001, pp. 92–95.
  23. ^ a b Izumi, Shimadi, ed. (2015). The Inka Empire: A multidisciplinary approach. University of Texas Press. p. 272. ISBN 978-0-292-76079-0.
  24. ^ De Gamboa 2011, p. [page needed].
  25. ^ Mann 2006, pp. 76.
  26. ^ a b c d The Inca World: The Development of Pre-Columbian Peru, A.D 1000–1534 (2000). Laura, Laurencich Minelli (ed.). The Inca World: The Development of Pre-Columbian Peru, A.D 1000–1534. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 177–178. ISBN 9780806132211.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ De Gamboa 2011, p. 66–69, 75.
  28. ^ Rostworowski 2001, p. 133–135.
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  58. ^ citetion needed

Works cited

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Media related to Pachacútec at Wikimedia Commons

Regnal titles
Preceded by Sapa Inca
1438 – 1471/1472
Succeeded by