CHAPTER VI: The Civilisation of Old
Peru
Old Peru
IF the civilisation of ancient Peru did not achieve the
standard of general culture reached by the Mexicans and Maya, it did not fall far short of
the attainment of these peoples. But the degrading despotism under which the peasantry
groaned in Inca times, and the brutal and sanguinary tyranny of the Apu-Ccapac Incas, make
the rulers of Mexico at their worst appear as enlightened when compared with the Peruvian
governing classes. The Quichua-Aymara race which inhabited Peru was inferior to the Mexican
in general mental culture, if not in mental capacity, is is proved by its inability to
invent any method of written communication or any adequate time-reckoning. In imitative art,
too, the Peruvians were weak, save in pottery and rude modelling, and their religion
savoured much more of the materialistic, and was altogether of a lower cultus.
The
Country
The country in which the interesting civilisation of the Inca race was
evolved presents physical features which profoundly affected the history of the race. In
fact, it is probable that in no country in the world has the configuration of the land so
modified the events in the life of the people dwelling within its borders. The chain of the
Andes divides into two branches near the boundary between Bolivia and Chile, and, with the
Cordillera de la Costa,
encloses at a height of over 3000
feet the Desaguadero, a vast tableland with an area equal to France.
To the north of this is Cuzco, the ancient capital of the Incas, to the south Potosi, the
most elevated town in the world, whilst between them lies Lake Titicaca, the largest body of
fresh water in South America. The whole country is dreary and desolate in the extreme.
Cereals cannot ripen, and animals arc rare. Yet it was in these desolate regions that the
powerful and highly organised empire of Peru arose-an empire extending over an area
3000 miles long
by 400 broad.
The Andeans
The prehistoric natives of the Andean region had
evolved a civilisation long before the days of the Inca dynasties, and the cyclopean ruins
of their edifices are to be found at intervals scattered over a wide field on the slopes of
the range under the shadow of which they dwelt. Their most extraordinary achievement was
probably the city of Tiahuanaco, on the southern shore of Lake Titicaca, built at a level
13,000 feet
above the sea, occupying nearly half an acre in extent, and constructed of enormous
megalithic blocks of trachytic rock. The great doorway, carved out of a single block of
rock, is 7 feet in
height by 131 feet
wide, and 1Ѕ feet thick. The upper portion of this massive portal is carved with symbolic
figures. In the centre is a figure in high relief, the head surrounded by solar rays, and in
each hand a sceptre, the end of which terminates in the head of a condor. This figure is
flanked on either side by three tiers of kneeling suppliants, each of whom is winged and
bears a sceptre similar in design to the central ones. Elsewhere are mighty blocks of stone,
some 36 feet long,
remains of enormous walls, standing monoliths, and in earlier times colossal statues were
seen on the site. When the Spanish conquerors arrived no tradition remained regarding the
founders of these structures, and their origin still remains a mystery; but that they
represent the remains of the capital of some mighty prehistoric kingdom is practically
admitted.
A Strange Site
The greatest mystery of all regarding the ruins at
Tiahuanaco is the selection of the site. For what reason did the prehistoric rulers of Peru
build here? The surroundings are totally unsuitable for the raising of such edifices, and
the tableland upon which they are placed is at once desolate and difficult of access. The
snow-line is contiguous, and breathing at such a height is no easy matter. There is no
reason to suppose that climatic conditions in the day of these colossal builders were
different from those which obtain at the present time. In face of these facts the position
of Tiahuanaco remains an insoluble riddle.
Sacsahuaman and Ollantay
Other
remains of these prehistoric people are found in various parts of Peru. At Sacsahuaman,
perched on a hill above the city of Cuzco, is an immense fortified work six hundred yards
long, built in three lines of wall consisting of enormous stones, some of which are twen
tyseven feet in length. Pissac is also the site of wonderful ruined masonry and an ancient
observatory. At Ollantay-tampu, forty-five miles to the north of Cuzco, is another of these
gigantic fortresses, built to defend the valley of the Yucay. This stronghold is constructed
for the most part of red porphyry, and its walls average twenty-five feet in height. The
great cliff on which Ollantay is perched is covered from end to end with stupendous walls
which zigzag from point to point of it like the salient angles of some modern fortalice. At
intervals are placed round towers of stone provided with loopholes, from which doubtless
arrows were discharged at the enemy. This outwork embraces a series of terraces,
world-famous because of their gigantic outline and the problem of the use to which they were
put. It is now practically agreed that these terraces were employed for the production of
maize, in order that during a prolonged investment the beleaguered troops and country-folk
might not want for a sufficiency of provender. The stone of which this fortress was built
was quarried at a distance of seven miles, in a spot upwards of three thousand feet above
the valley, and was dragged up the steep declivity of Ollantay by sheer human strength. The
nicety with which the stones were fitted is marvellous.
The Dramatic Legend of
Ollantay
Among the dramatic works with which the ancient Incas were credited is that
of Apu-Ollanta, which may recount the veritable story of a chieftain after whom the
great stronghold was named. It was probably divided into scenes and supplied with stage
directions at a later period, but the dialogue and son-as are truly aboriginal. The period
is that of the reign of the Inca Yupanqui Pachacutic., one of the most celebrated of the
Peruvian monarchs. The central figure of the drama is a chieftain named Ollanta, who
conceived a violent passion for a daughter of the Inca named Curi-Coyllur (Joyful Star).
This passion was deemed unlawful, as no mere subject who was not of the blood-royal might
aspire to the hand of a daughter of the Inca. As the play opens we overhear a dialogue
between Ollanta and his man-servant Piqui-Chaqui (Flea-footed), who supplies what modern
stage-managers would designate the "comic relief" They are talking of Ollanta's
love for the princess, when they are confronted by the high-priest of the Sun, who tries to
dissuade the rash chieftain from the dangerous course he is taking by means of a miracle. In
the next scene Curi-Coyllur is seen in company with her mother, sorrowing over the absence
of her lover. A harvest song is here followed by a love ditty of undoubtedly ancient origin.
The third scene represents Ollanta's interview with the Inca in which he pleads his suit and
is slighted by the scornful monarch. Ollanta defies the king in a resounding speech, with
which the first act concludes. In the first scene of the second act we are informed that the
disappointed chieftain has raised the standard of rebellion, and the second scene is taken
up with the military preparations consequent upon the announcement of a general rising. In
the third scene Rumihaui as general of the royal forces admits defeat by the rebels.
The Love Story of Curi-Coyllur
Curi-Coyllur gives birth to a daughter, and is
imprisoned in the darksome Convent of Virgins. Her child, Yma Sumac (How Beautiful), is
brought up in the same building, but is ignorant of the near presence of her mother. The
little girl tells her guardian of groans and lamentations which she has heard in the convent
garden, and of the tumultuous emotions with which these sad sounds fill her heart. The Inca
Pachacutic's death is announced., and the accession of his son, Yupanqui. Rebellion breaks
out once more, and the suppression of the malcontents is again entrusted to Rumi-fiaui. That
leader, having tasted defeat already, resorts to cunning. He conceals his men in a valley
close by, and presents himself covered with blood before Ollanta, who is at the head of the
rebels. He states that he has been barbarously used by the royal troops, and that he desires
to join the rebels. He takes part with Ollanta and his men in a drunken frolic, in which he
incites them to drink heavily, and when they arc overcome with liquor he brings up his
troops and makes them prisoners.
Mother and Child
Yma Sumac, the beautiful
little daughter of CuriCoyllur, requests her guardian, Pitu Salla, so pitifully to be
allowed to visit her mother in her dungeon that the woman consents, and mother and child are
united. Ollanta is brought as a prisoner before the new Inca, who pardons him. At that
juncture Yma Sumac enters hurriedly, and begs the monarch to free her mother, Curi-Coyllur.
The Inca proceeds to the prison, restores the princess to her lover, and the drama concludes
with the Inca bestowing his blessing upon the pair.
The play was first put into
written form in the seventeenth century, has often been printed, and is now recognised as a
genuine aboriginal production.
The Races of Peru
Many races went to make up
the Peruvian people as they existed when first discovered by the conquering Spaniards. From
the south came a civilising race which probably found a number of allied tribes, each
existing separately in its own little valley, speaking a different dialect, or even
language, from its neighbours, and in many instances employing different customs. Although
tradition alleged that these invaders came from the north by sea within historical times,
the more probable theory of their origin is one which states that they had followed the
course of the affluents of the Amazon to the valleys where they dwelt when the more
enlightened folk from the south came upon them. The remains of this aboriginal people-for,
though they spoke diverse languages, the probability is that they were of one or not more
than two stocks-are still found scattered over the coastal valleys in pyramidal mounds and
adobe-built dwellings.
The Coming of the Incas
The arrival of the dominant
race rudely broke in upon the peaceful existence of the aboriginal folk. This race, the
Quichua-Aymara, probably had its place of origin in the Altaplanicie highlands of Bolivia,
the eastern cordillera of the Andes. This they designated Tucuman (World's End), just as the
Kiche of Guatemala were wont to describe the land of their origin as Ki Pixab (Corner of the
Earth). The present republic of Argentina was at a remote period covered by a vast,
partially land-locked sea, and beside the shores of this the ancestors of the Quichua-Aymara
race may have settled as fishers and fowlers. They found a more permanent settlement on the
shores of Lake Titicaca, where their traditions state that they made considerable advances
in the arts of civilisation. It was, indeed, from Titicaca that the sun emerged from the
sacred rock where he had erstwhile hidden himself. Here, too, the llama and paco were
domesticated and agricultural life initiated, or perfected. The arts of irrigation and
terrace-building-so marked as features of Peruvian civilisation-were also invented in this
region, and the basis of a composite advancement laid.
The Quichua-Aymara
This people consisted of two groups, the Quichua and Aymara, so called from the two
kindred tongues spoken by each respectively. These possess a common grammatical structure,
and a great number of words are common to both. They are in reality varying forms of one
speech. From the valley of Titicaca the Aymara spread from the source of the Amazon river to
the higher parts of the Andes range, so that in course of time they exhibited those
qualities which stamp the mountaineer in every age and clime. The Quichua, on the other
hand, occupied the warm valleys beyond the river Apurimac, to the north-west of the
Aymara-speaking people-a tract equal to the central portion of the modern republic of Peru.
The name "Quichua " implies a warm valley or sphere, in contradistinction to the
"Yunca," or tropical districts of the coast and low lands.
The Four
Peoples
The metropolitan folk or Cuzco considered Peru to be divided into four
sections-that of the Colla-suyu, with the valley of Titicaca as its centre, and stretching
from the Bolivian highlands to Cuzco; the Conti-suyu, between the Colla-suyu and the ocean;
the Quichua Chinchay-suyu, of the north-west; and the Anti-suyu, of the montaña
region. The Inca people, coming suddenly into these lands, annexed them with surprising
rapidity, and, making the aboriginal tribes dependent upon their rule, spread themselves
over the face of the country. Thus the ancient chroniclers. But it is obvious that such
rapid conquest was a practical impossibility, and it is now understood that the Inca power
was consolidated only some hundred years before the coming of Pizarro.
The Coming of
Manco Ccapac
Peruvian myth has its Quetzalcoatl in Manco Ccapac, a veritable son of
the sun. The Life-aiver. observing the deplorable condition of mankind, who seemed to exist
for war and feasting alone, despatched his son, Manco Ccapac, and his sister-wife, Mama
Oullo Huaca, to earth for the purpose of instructing the degraded peoples in the arts of
civilised life. The heavenly pair came to earth in the neighbourhood of Lake Titicaca, and
were provided with a golden wedge which they were assured would sink into the earth at the
precise spot on which they should commence their missionary labours. This phenomenon
occurred at Cuzco, where the wedge disappeared. The derivation of the name Cuzco, which
means "Navel" or, in more modern terms, "Hub of the Universe," proves
that it was regarded as a great culture-centre. On this spot the civilising a ents pitched
their camp, gathering the uncultured folk ofthe country around them. Whilst Manco taught the
men the arts of agriculture, Mama Oullo instructed the women in those of weaving and
spinning. Great numbers gathered in the vicinity of Cuzco, and the foundations of a city
were laid. Under the mild rule of the heavenly pair the land of Peru abounded in every
desirable thing, like the Eden of Genesis. The legend of Manco Ccapac as we have it from an
old Spanish source is worth giving. It is as follows: "There [in Tiahuanaco] the
creator began to raise up the people and nations that are in that region, making one of each
nation in clay, and painting the dresses that each one was to wear; those that were to wear
their hair, with hair, and those that were to be shorn, with hair cut. And to each nation
was given the language that was to be spoken, and the songs to be sung, and the seeds and
food that they were to sow. When the creator had finished painting and making the said
nations and figures of clay, he gave life and soul to each one, as well man as woman, and
ordered that they should pass under the earth. Thence each nation came up in the places to
which he ordered them to go. Thus they say that some came out of caves, others issued from
hills, others from fountains, others from the trunks of trees. From this cause and others,
and owing to having come forth and multiplied from those places, and to having had the
beginning of their lineage in them, they made huacas [sacred things] and places of worship
of them, in memory of the origin of their lineage. Thus each nation uses the dress with
which they invest their huana; and they say that the first that was born in that place was
there turned into stone. Others say that they were turned into falcons, condors, and other
animals and birds. Hence the huacas they use are in different shapes."
The
Peruvian Creation-Story
The Incan Peruvians believed that all things emanated from
Pachacamac, the all-pervading spirit, who provided the plants and animals (which they
believed to be pro. duced from the earth) with "souls." The earth itself they
designated Pachacamama (Earth-Mother). Here we observe that Pachacamac was more the maker
and moulder than the originator of matter, a view common to many American mythologies.
Pachacamac it was who breathed the breath of life into man, but the Peruvian conception of
him was only evolved in later Inca times, and by no means existed in the early days of Inca
rule, although he was probably worshipped before this under another and less exalted shape.
The mere exercise of will or thought was sufficient, according to the Peruvians, to
accomplish the creative act. In the prayers to the creator, and in other portions of Inca
rite, we read such expressions as "Let a man be," "Let a woman be," and
"The creative word," which go to prove that the Peruvian consciousness had fully
grasped the idea of a creator capable of evolving matter out of nothingness. Occasionally we
find the sun acting as a kind of demiurge or sub-creator. He it is who in later legend
founds the city of Cuzco, and sends thither three eggs composed of gold, silver, and copper,
from which spring the three classes of Peruvians, kings, priests, and slaves. The inevitable
deluge occurs, after which we find the prehistoric town of Tiahuanaco regarded as the
theatre of a new creation of man. Here the creator made man, and separated him into nations,
making one of each nation out of the clay of the earth, painting the dresses that each was
to wear, and endowing them with national songs, languages, seeds to sow suitable to the
environment of each, and food such as they would require. Then he gave the peoples life and
soul, and commanded them to enter the bowels of the earth, whence they came upward in the
places where be ordered them to go. Perhaps this is one of the most complete
("wholesale" would be a better word) creation myths in existence, and we can glean
from its very completeness that it is by no means of simple origin, but of great complexity.
It is obviously an attempt to harmonise several conflicting creation-stories, notably those
in which the people are spoken of as emanating from caves, and the later one of the creation
of men at Tiahuanaco, probably suggested to the Incas by the immense ruins at that place,
for which they could not otherwise account.
Local Creation-Myths
In some of
the more isolated valleys of Peru we discover local creation-myths. For example, in the
coastal valley of Irma Pachacamac was not considered to be the creator of the sun, but to be
himself a descendant of it. The first human beings created by him were speedily separated,
as the man died of hunger, but the woman supported herself by living on roots. The sun took
compassion upon her and gave her a son whom Pachacamac slew and buried. But from his teeth
there grew maize, from his ribs the long white roots of the manioc plant, and from his flesh
various esculent plants.
The Character of Inca Civilisation
Apart from the
treatment which they meted out to the subject races under their sway, the rule of the Inca
monarchs was enlightened and contained the elements of high civilisation. It is scarcely
clear whether the Inca race arrived in the country at such a date as would have permitted
them to profit by adopting the arts and sciences of the Andean people who preceded them. But
it may be affirmed that their arrival considerably post-dated the fall of the megalithic
empire of the Andeans, so that in reality their civilisation was of their own manufacture.
As architects they were by no means the inferiors of the prehistoric race, if the examples
of their art did not bulk so massively, and the engineering skill with which they pushed
long, straight tunnels through vast mountains and bridged seemingly impassable gorges still
excites the wonder of modern expcrts. They also made long, straight roads after the most
improved macadamised model. Their temples and palaces were adorned with gold and silver
images and ornaments; sumptuous baths supplied witb hot and cold water by means of pipes
laid in the earth were to be found in the mansions of the nobility, and much luxury and real
comfort prevailed.
An Absolute Theocracy
The empire of Peru was the most
absolute theocracy the world has ever seen. The Inca was the direct representative of the
sun upon earth, the head of a socio-religious edifice intricate and highly organised. This
colossal bureaucracy had ramifications into the very homes of the people. The Inca was
represented in the provinces by governors of the blood-royal. Officials were placea above
ten thousand families, a thousand families, and even ten families, upon the principle that
the rays of the sun enter everywhere, and that therefore the light of the Inca must
penetrate to every corner of the empire. There was no such thing as personal freedom. Every
man, woman, and child was numbered, branded, and under surveillance as much as were the
llamas in the royal herds. Individual effort or enterprise was unheard of. Some writers have
stated that a system of state socialism obtained in Peru. If so, then state surveillance in
Central Russia might also be branded as socialism. A man's life was planned for him by the
authorities from the age of five years, and even the woman whom he was to marry was selected
for him by the Government officials. The age at which the people should marry was fixed at
not earlier than twenty-four years for a man and eighteen for a woman. Coloured ribbons worn
round the head indicated the place of a person's birth or the province to which he
belonged.
A Golden Temple
One of the most remarkable monuments of the
Peruvian civilisation was the Coricancha (Town of Gold) at Cuzco, the principal fane of the
sun-god. Its inner and outer walls were covered with plates of pure gold. Situated upon an
eminence eighty feet high, the temple looked down upon gardens filled, according to the
conquering Spaniards, with treasures of gold and silver. The animals., insects, the very
trees, say the chroniclers, were of the precious metals, as were the spades, hoes, and other
implements employed for keeping the ground in cultivation. Through the pleasances rippled
the river Huatenay. Such was the glittering Intipampa (Field of the Sun). That the story is
true, at least in part, is proved by the traveller Squier, who speaks of having seen in
several houses in Cuzco sheets of gold preserved as relics which came from the Temple of the
Sun. These, he says, were scarcely as thick as paper, and were stripped off the walls of the
Coricancha by the exultant Spanish soldiery.
The Great Altar
But this house
of gold had but a roof of thatch! The Peruvians were ignorant of the principle of the arch,
or else considered the feature unsuitable, for some reason best known to their architects.
The doorways were formed of huge monoliths, and the entire aspect of the building was
cyclopean. The interior displayed an ornate richness which impressed even the Spaniards, who
had seen the wealth of many lands and Oriental kingdoms, and the gold-lust must have swelled
within their hearts at sight of the great altar, behind which was a huge plate of the
shining metal engraved with the features of the sun-god. The surface of this plate was
enriched by a thousand gems, the scintillation of which was, according to eye-witnesses,
almost insupportable. Around this dazzling sphere were seated the mummified corpses of the
Inca kings, each on his throne, with sceptre in hand.
Planetary Temples
Surrounding the Coricancha several lesser temples clustered, all of them dedicated to one
or other of the planetary bodies-to the moon, to Cuycha, the rainbow, to Chasca, the planet
Venus. In the temple of the moon, the mythic mother of the Inca dynasty, a great plate of
silver, like the golden one which represented the face of the sun-god, depicted the features
of the moon-goddess, and around this the mummies of the Inca queens sat in a semicircle,
like their spouses in the greater neighbouring fane. In the rainbow temple of Cuycha the
seven-hued arch of heaven was depicted by a great arc of gold skilfully tempered or painted
in suitable colours. All the utensils in these temples were of gold or silver. In the
principal building twelve large jars of silver held the sacred grain, and even the pipes
which conducted the water-supply through the earth to the sanctuary were of silver. Pedro
Pizarro himself, besides other credible eye-witnesses, vouched for these facts. The colossal
representation of the sun became the property of a certain Mancio Serra de Leguicano, a
reckless cavalier and noted gambler, who lost it on a single throw of the dice! Such was the
spirit of the adventurers who conquered this golden realm for the crown of Spain. The walls
of the Coricancha arc still standing, and this marvellous shrine of the chief luminary of
heaven, the great god of the Peruvians, is now a Christian church.
The Mummies of
Peru
The fact that the ancient Peruvians had a method of mummification has tempted
many "antiquarians " to infer therefrom that they had some connection with ancient
Egypt. These theories are so numerous as to give the unsophisticated reader the idea that a
regular system of immigration was carried on between Egypt and America. As a matter of fact
the method of mummification in vogue in Peru was entirely different from that employed by
the ancient Egyptians.
Peruvian mummies arc met with at apparently all stages of the
history of the native races. Megalithic tombs and monuments contain them in the doubled-up
posture so common among early peoples all over the world. These megalithic tombs, or
chulpas, as they are termed, are composed of a mass of rough stones and clay, faced with
huge blocks of trachyte or basalt, so put together as to form a cist, in which the mummy was
placed. The door invariably faces the east, so that it may catch the gleams of the rising
sun-a proof of the prevalence of sun-worship. Squier alludes to one more than
24 feet high. An
opening 18 inches
square gave access to the sepulchral chamber, which was 11 feet square by 13 feet high. But the tomb had been entered before,
and after getting in with much difficulty the explorer was forced to retreat
empty-handed.
Many of these chulpas are circular, and painted in gay primary colours.
They. are very numerous in Bolivia, an old Peruvian province, and in the basin of Lake
Titicaca they abound. The dead were wrapped in llama-skins, on which the outlines of the
eyes and mouth were carefully marked. The corpse was then arrayed in other garments, and the
door of the tomb walled up. In some parts of Peru the dead were mummified and placed in the
dwelling-houses beside the living. In the rarefied air of the plateaus the bodies rapidly
became innocuous, and the custom was not the insanitary one we might imagine it to be.
On the Pacific coast the method of mummification was somewhat different. The body was
reduced to a complete state of desiccation, and was deposited in a tomb constructed of stone
or adobe. Vases intended to hold maize or chicha liquor were placed beside the corpse, and
copper hatchets, mirrors of polished stone, earrings, and bracelets have been discovered in
these burial-places. Some of the remains are wrapped in rich cloth, and vases of gold and
silver were placed beside them. Golden plaques are often discovered in the mouths, probably
symbolic of the sun. The bodies exhibit no traces of embalming, and are usually in a sitting
posture. Some of them have evidently been dried before inhumation, whilst others are covered
with a resinous substance. They are generally accompanied by the various articles used
during life; the men have their weapons and ornaments, women their household implements, and
children their toys. The dryness of the climate, as in Egypt, keeps these relics in a
wonderful state of preservation. In the grave of a woman were found not only vases of every
shape, but also some cloth she had commenced to weave, which her death had perhaps prevented
her from completing. Herlight brown hair was carefully combed and plaited, and the legs from
the ankle to the knee were painted red, after the fashion in vogue among Peruvian beauties,
while little bladders of toilet-powder and gums were thoughtfully placed beside her for her
use in the life to come.
Laws and Customs
The legal code of the Incas was
severe in the extreme. Murderers and adulterers were punished by death, and the unpardonable
sin appears to have been blasphemy against the sun, or his earthly representative, the Inca.
The Virgin of the Sun (or nun) who broke her vow was buried alive, and the village from
whence she came was razed to the ground. Flogging was administered for minor offences. A
peculiar and very trying punishment must have been that of carrying a heavy stone for a
certain time.
On marriage a home was aportioned to each couple, and land assigned to
them sufficient for their support. When a child was born a separate allowance was given
it-one fanega for a boy, and half that amount for a girl, the fanega being
equal to the area which could be sown with a hundred pounds of maize. There is something
repulsive in the Inca code, with its grandmotherly legislation; and if this tyranny was
beneficent, it was devised merely to serve its own ends and hound on the unhappy people
under its control like dumb, driven cattle. The outlook of the average native was limited in
the extreme. The Inca class of priests and warriors retained every vestige of authority; and
that they employed their power unmercifully to grind down the millions beneath them was a
sufficient excuse for the Spanish Conquistadores in dispossessing them of the empire they
had so harshly administered.
The public ground was divided afresh every year
according to the number of the members of each family, and agrarian laws were strictly
fixed. Private property did not exist among the people of the lower classes, who merely
farmed the lot which each year was placed at their disposal. Besides this, the people had
perforce to cultivate the lands sacred to the Inca, and only the aged and the sick could
evade this duty.
The Peruvian Calendar
The standard chronology known to the
Peru of the Incas was a simple lunar reckoning. But the four principal points in the sun's
course were denoted by means of the intihuatana, a device consisting of a large rock
surmounted by a small cone, the shadow of which, falling on certain notches on the stone
below, marked the date of the great sun-festivals. The Peruvians, however, had no definite
calendar. At Cuzco, the capital, the solstices were gauged by pillars called pachacta
unanchac, or indicators-of time, which were placed in four groups (two pillars to a
group) on promontories, two in the direction of sunrise and two in that of sunset, to mark
the extreme points of the sun's rising and setting. By this means they were enabled to
distinguish the arrival and departure of the solstices, during which the sun never went
beyond the middle pair of pillars. The Inca astronomer's approximation to the year was 360
days, which were divided into twelve moons of thirty days each. These moons were not
calendar months in the correct sense, but simply a succession of lunations, which commenced
with the winter solstice. This method, which must ultimately have proved confusing, does not
seem to have been altered to co-ordinate with the reckoning of the succession of years. The
names of the twelve moons, which had some reference to the daily life of the Peruvian, were
as follows:
Huchuy Pucuy Quilla (Small Growing Moon), approximately January.
Hatun Pucuy Quilla (Great Growing Moon), approximately February.
Pancar Pucuy
Quilla (Flower-growing Moon), approximately March.
Ayrihua Quilla (Twin Ears Moon),
approximately April.
Aymuray Quilla (Harvest Moon), approximately May.
Auray
Cusqui Quilla (Breaking Soil), approximately June.
Chahua Huarqui Quilia (Irrigation
Moon), approximately July.
Tarpuy Quilla (Sowing Moon), approximately August.
Ccoya Raymi Quilla (Moon of the Moon Feast), approximately September.
Uma Raymi
Quilla (Moon of the Feast of the Province of Uma), approximately October.
Ayamarca
Raymi Quilla (Moon of the Feast of the Province of Ayamarca), approximately November.
Ccapac Raymi Quilla (Moon of the Great Feast of the Sun), approximately December.
The Festivals
That the Peruvian standard of time, as with all American people,
was taken from the natural course of the moon is known chiefly from the fact that the
principal religious festivals began on the new moon following a solstice or equinox. The
ceremonies conncctcd with the greatest festival, the Ccapac Raymi, were made to date near
the lunar phases, the two stages commencing with the ninth day of the December moon and
twenty-first day, or last quarter. But while these lunar phases indicated certain festivals,
it very often happened that the civil authorities followed a reckoning of their own, in
preference to accepting ecclesiastical rule. Considerable significance was attached to each
month by the Peruvians regarding the nature of their festivals. The solstices and cquinoxes
were the occasions of established ceremonies. The arrival of the winter solstice, which in
Peru occurs in June, was celebrated by the Intip Raymi (Great Feast of the Sun). The
principal Peruvian feast, which took place at the summer solstice, when the new year was
supposed to begin, was the national feast of the great god Pachacamac, and was called capac
Raymi. Molina, Fernandez, and Garcilasso, however, date the new year from the winter
solstice. The third festival of the Inca year, the Ccapac Situa, or Ccoya Raymi (Moon
Feast), which is signalled by the beginning of the rainy season, occurred in September. In
general character these festivals appear to have been simple, and even childlike. The
sacrifice of animals taken from sacred herds of llamas was doubtless a principal feature of
the ceremony, accompanied by the offering up of maguey, or maize spirit, and followed by the
performance of symbolic dances.
The Llama
The llama was the chief domestic
animal of Peru. All llamas were the property of the Inca. Like the camel, its distant
relative, this creature can subsist for long periods upon little nourishment, and it is
suitable for the carriage of moderate loads. Each year a certain amount of llama wool was
given to the Peruvian family, according to the number of women it contained, and these wove
it into garments, whatever was over being stored away in the public cloth-magazines for the
general use. The large flocks of llamas and alpacas also afforded a supply of meat for the
people such as the Mexicans never possessed. Naturally much attention was given to the
breeding of these animals, and the alpaca was as carefully regarded by the Peruvian as the
sheep by the farmer of to-day. The guanacos and vicuñas, wild animals of the llama or
auchenia family, were also sources of food- and wool-supply.
Architecture of the
Incas
The art in which the Incan Peruvians displayed the greatest advance was that
of architecture. The earlier style of Inca building shows that it was closely modelled, as
has already been pointed out, on that of the megalithic masons of the Tiahuanaco district,
but the later style shows stones laid in regular courses, varying in length. No cement or
mortar of any kind was employed, the structure depending for stability upon the accuracy
with which the stones were fitted to each other. An enormous amount of labour must have been
expended upon this part of the work, for in the monuments of Peruvian architecture which
still exist it is impossible to insert even a needle between the stones of which they are
composed. The palaces and temples were built around a courtyard, and most of the principal
buildings had a hall of considerable dimensions attached to them, which, like the baronial
halls of the England of the Middle Ages, served for feasting or ceremony. In this style is
built the front of the palace on the Colcampata, overlooking the city of Cuzco, under the
fortress which is supposed to have been the dwelling of Manco Ccapac, the first Inca.
Palaces at Yucay and Chinchero are also of this type.
Unsurpassed Workmanship
In an illuminating passage upon Inca architecture Sir Clements Markham., the greatest
living authority upon matters Peruvian, says:
"In Cuzco the stone used is a dark
trachyte, and the coarse grain secured greater adhesion between the blocks. The workmanship
is unsurpassed, and the world has nothing to show in the way of stone-cutting and fitting to
equal the skill and accuracy displayed in the Ynca structures of Cuzco. No cement is used,
and the larger stones are in the lowest row, each ascending course being narrower, which
presents a most pleasing effect. The edifices were built round a court, upon which the rooms
opened, and some of the great halls were 200 paces long by 60 wide, the height being 35 to
40 feet, besides
the spring of the roof. The roofs were thatch; and we are able to form an idea of their
construction from one which is still preserved, after a lapse of three centuries. This is on
a circular building called the Sondor-huasi, at Azangaro, and it shows that even thatch in
the hands of tasteful builders will make a sightly roof for imposing edifices, and that the
interior ornament of such a roo may be exceedingly beautiful."
The Temple of
Viracocha
The temple of Viracocha, at Cacha, in the valley of the Vilcamayu, is
built on a plan different from that of any other sacred building in Peru. Its ruins consist
of a wall of adobe or clay 40
feet high and 330 long, built on stone foundations
8 feet in height.
The roof was supported on twenty-five columns, and the width of the structure was
87 feet. It was a
place of pilgrimage, and the caravanserais where the Faithful were wont to be housed still
stand around the ruined fane.
Titicaca
The most sacred of the Peruvian
shrines, however, was Titicaca, an island on the lake of that name. The island of Coati,
hard by, enjoyed an equal reverence. Terraced platforms on the ormer, reached by flights of
steps, support two buildings provided for the use of pilgrims about to proceed to Coati. On
Titicaca there are the ruins of an extensive palace which commands a splendid view of the
surrounding barren country. A great bath or tank is situated half-way down a long range of
terraces supported by cut stone masonry, and the Pool, 40 feet long by 10, and 5 feet deep, has similar walls on three
sides. Below this tank the water is made to irrigate terrace after terrace until it falls
into the lake.
Coati
The island of Coati is about six miles distant. The
principal building is on one of the loftiest of seven terraces, once radiant with flowers
and shrubs, and filled with rich loam transported from a more fertile region. It is placed
on three sides of a square, 183
feet long by 80, and is of stone laid in clay and coated with plaster.
"It has," says Markham, "thirty-five chambers, only one of which is faced
with hewn stones. The ornament on the faqade consists of elaborate niches, which agreeably
break the monotony of the wall, and above them runs a projecting cornice. The walls were
painted yellow, and the niches red; and there was a high-pitched roof, broken here and there
by gables. The two largest chambers are 20 long by 12, and loftier than the rest, each with
a great niche in the wall facing the entrance. These were probably the holy places or
shrines of the temple. The beautiful series of terraces falls ofF from the esplanade of the
temple to the shores of the lake."
Mysterious Chimu
The coast folk, of
a different race from the Incas, had their centre of civilisation near the city of Truxillo,
on the plain of Chimu. Here the ruins of a great city litter the plain for many acres.
Arising from the mass of ruin, at intervals stand huacas, or artificial hills. The city was
supplied with water by means of small canals, which also served to irrigate the gardens. The
mounds alluded to were used for sepulture, and the largest, at Moche, is
800 feet long by
470 feet in
breadth, and 200
feet in height. It is constructed of adobes. Besides serving the
purpose of a cemetery, this mound probably supported a large temple on its summit.
The Palace
A vast palace occupied a commanding position. Its great hall was ioo
feet long by 52 broad, and its walls were covered with a highly ornate series of arabesques
in relief done in stucco, like the fretwork on the walls of Palenque. Another hall close at
hand is ornamented in coloured stucco, and from it branch off many small rooms, which were
evidently dormitories. From the first hall a long corridor leads to secret storehouses,
where many vessels of gold and silver have been discovered hidden away, as if to secure them
either from rnarauding bands or the gaze of the vulgar. All of these structures are hollowed
out of a vast mound covering several acres, so that the entire building may be said to be
partially subterranean in character. "About a hundred yards to the westward of this
palace there was a sepulchral mound where many relics were discovered. The bodies were
wrapped in cloths, woven in ornamental figures and patterns of different colours. On some of
the cloths were sewn plates of silver, and they were edged with borders of feathers, the
silver being occasionally cut in the shape of fishes. Among the ruins of the city there are
great rectangular areas enclosed by massive walls, and containing courts, streets,
dwellings, and reservoirs for water. The largest is about a mile south of the mound-palace,
and is 550 yards
long by 400. The outer wall is about 30
feet high, io feet thick at the base, with sides inclining toward each
other. Some of the interior walls are highly ornamented in stuccoed patterns; and in one
part there is an edifice containing forty-five chambers or cells, in five rows of nine each,
which is supposed to have been a prison. The enclosure also contained a reservoir
450 feet long by
195 broad, and 60
feet deep."
The Civilisation of Chimu
The ruins
of Chimu are undoubtedly the outcome of a superior standard of civilisation. The buildings
are elaborate, as are their internal arrangements. The extent of the city is great, and the
art displayed in the manufacture of the utensils discovered within it and the taste evinced
in the numerous wall-patterns show that a people of advanced culture inhabited it. The
jeweller's work is in high relief, and the pottery and plaques found exhibit much artistic
excellence.
Pachacamac
The famous ruins of the temple and city of Pachacamac, near the valley of
Lurin, to the south of Lima, overlook the Pacific Ocean from
a height of 500
feet. Four vast terraces still bear mighty perpendicular walls, at one
time painted red. Here was found the only perfect Peruvian arch, built of large adobe
bricks-a proof that the Peruvian mind did not stand still in matters architectural at
least.
Irrigation Works
It was in works of irrigation, however., that the
race exhibited its greatest engineering genius. In the valley of Nasca the Incas cut deep
trenches to reinforce the irrigating power of a small river, and carried the system high up
into the mountains, in order that the rainfall coming therefrom might be conducted into the
needful channel. Lower down the valley the main watercourse is deflected into many branches,
which irrigate each estate by feeding the small surface streams. This system adequately
serves the fifteen estates of Nasca to-day! Another high-level canal for the irrigation of
pasture-lands was led for more than a hundred and fifty miles along the eastern slope of the
central cordillera.
A Singular Discovery
In Peru, as in Mexico, it is
probable that the cross was employed as a symbol of the four winds. An account of the
expedition of Fuentes to the valley of Chichas recounts the discovery of a wooden cross as
follows: [Skinner's State of Perm, p. 313 (1805).]
"When the settlers who
accompanied Fuentes in his glorious expedition approached the valley they found a wooden
cross, hidden, as if purposely, in the most intricate part of the mountains. As there is not
anything more flattering to the vanity of a credulous man than to be enabled to bring
forward his testimony in the relation of a prodigy, the devotion of these good conquerors
was kindled to such a degree by the discovery of this sacred memorial that they instantly
hailed it as miraculous and divine. They accordingly carried it in procession to the town,
and placed it in the church belonging to the convent of San Francisco ) where it is still worshipped. It appears
next to impossible that there should not, at that time, have been any individual among them
sufficiently enlightened to combat such a persuasion, since, in reality, there was nothing
miraculous in the finding of this cross, there having been other Christian settlers, before
the arrival of Fuentes, in the same valley. The opinion., notwithstanding, that the
discovery was altogether miraculous, instead of having been abandoned at the commencement,
was confirmed still more and more with the progress of time. The Jesuits Antonio Ruiz and
Pedro Lozano, in their respective histories of the missions of Paraguay, &c., undertook
to demonstrate that the Apostle St. Thomas had been in America. This thesis, which was so
novel, and so well calculated to draw the public attention, required, more than any other,
the aid of the most power of reasons, and of the most irrefragable documents, to be able to
maintain itself, even in an hypothetical sense; but nothing of all this was brought forward.
Certain miserable conjectures, prepossession, and personal interest, supplied the place of
truth and criticism. The form of a human foot, which they fancied they saw imprinted on the
rock, and the different fables of this description invented by ignorance at every step, were
the sole foundations on which all the relations on this subject were made to repose. The one
touching the peregrinations of St. Thomas from Brazil to Quito must be deemed apocryphal,
when it is considered that the above reverend fathers describe the Apostle with the staff in
the hand, the black cassock girt about the waist, and all the other trappings which
distinguish the missionaries of the society. The credit which these histories obtained at
the commencement was equal to that bestowed on the cross of Tarija, which remained in the
predicament of being the one St. Thomas had planted in person, in the continent of
America."
The Chibchas
A people called the Chibchas dwelt at a very
high point of the Andes range. They were brave and industrious, and possessed a culture of
their own. They defended themselves against much stronger native races, but after the
Spanish conquest their country was included in New Granada, and is now part or the United
States of Colombia. Less experienced than the Peruvians or Aztecs, they could, however,
weave and dye, carve and engrave, make roads, build temples, and work in stone, wood, and
metals. They also worked in pottery and jewellery, making silver pendants and collars of
shells and collars of precious stones. They were a wealthy folk, and their Spanish
conquerors obtained much spoil. Little is known concerning them or their language, and there
is not much of interest in the traditions relating to them.
Their mythology was
simple. They believed the moon was the wife of Bochica, who represented the sun, and as she
tried to destroy men Bochica only allowed her to give light during the night. When the
aborigines were in a condition of barbarism Bochica taught them and civilised them. The
legends about Bochica resemble in many points those about Quetzalcoad or Manco Ccapac, as
well as those relating to the founder of Buddhism and the first Inca of Peru. The Chibchas
offered human sacrifices to their gods at certain intervals, and kept the wretched victim
for some years in preparation for his doom. They venerated greatly the Lake of Quatavita,
and are supposed to have flung their treasures into it when they were conquered. Although
many attempts have been made to recover these, little of value has been found.
The
Chibchas appear to have given allegiance to two leaders, one the Zippa, who lived at Bogota,
the other the Zoque, who lived at Hunsa, now Tunja. These chiefs ruled supreme. Like the
Incas, they could only have one lawful wife, and their sons did not succeed them-their power
passed, as in some Central African tribes, to the eldest son of the sister.
When the
Zippa died, sweet-smelling resin took the place of his internal parts, and the body was put
in a wooden coffin, with sheets of gold for ornamentation. The coffin was hidden in an
unknown sepulchre, and these tombs have never been discovered-at least, so say the
Spaniards. Their weapons, garments, objects of daily use, even jars of chicha, were
buried with these chiefs. It is very likely that a cave where rows of mummies richly dressed
were found, and many jewels, was the secret burying-place of the Zippas and the Zoques. To
these folk death meant only a continuation of the life on earth.
A Severe Legal
Code
The laws of the Chibchas were severe-death was meted out to the murderer, and
bodily punishment for stealing. A coward was made to look like a woman and do her work while
to an unfaithful wife was administered a dose of red pepper, which, if swallowed, released
the culprit from the penalty of death and entitled her to an apology from her husband. The
Chibchas made no use of cattle, and lived on honey. Their houses were built of clay, and
were set in the midst of an enclosure guarded by watch-towers. The roofs were of a conical
shape, covered with reed mats, and skilfully interlaced rushes were used to close the
openings.
The Chibchas were skilful in working bronze, lead, copper, tin, gold, and
silver, but not iron. The Saint Germain Museum has many specimens of gold and silver
articles made by these people. M. Uricaechea, has still more uncommon specimens in his
collection, such as two golden masks of the human face larger than life, and a great number
of statuettes of men, and images of monkeys and frogs.
The Chibchas traded with what
they made, exporting the rock salt they found in their own country and receiving in exchange
cereals with which to cultivate their own poor soil. They also made curious little ornaments
which might have passed for money, but they are not supposed to have understood coinage.
They had few stone columns-only large granite rocks covered with huge figures of tigers and
crocodiles. Humboldt mentions these, and two very high columns, covered with sculpture, at
the junction of the Carare and Magdalena, greatly revered by the natives, were raised
probably by the Chibchas.
A Strange Mnemonic System
On the arrival of the
Spaniards the Peruvians were unacquainted with any system of writing or numeration. The only
means of recording events they possessed was that provided by quipos, knotted pieces
of string or hide of varying length and colour. According to the length or colour of these
cords the significance of the record varied; it was sometimes historical and sometimes
mathematical. Quipos relating to the history of the Incas were carefully preserved by
an officer called Quipo Camayol-literally, "The Guardian of the Quipos."
The greater number were destroyed as monuments of idolatry by the fanatical Spanish monks
who came over with the Conquistadores, but their loss is by no means important, as no study,
however profound, could possibly unriddle the system upon which they were based. The
Peruvians, however, long continued to use them in secret.
Practical Use of the
Quipos
The Marquis de Nadaillac has placed on record a use to which the
quipos were put in more modern times. He says: "A great revolt against the
Spaniards was organised in 1792. As was found out later, the revolt had been organised by
means of messengers carrying a piece of wood in which were enclosed threads the ends of
which were formed of red, black, blue, or white fringes. The black thread had four knots,
which signified that the messenger had started from Vladura, the residence of the chief of
the conspiracy, four days after full moon. The white thread had ten knots, which signified
that the revolt would break out ten days after the arrival of the messenger. The person to
whom the keeper was sent had in his turn to make a knot in the red thread if he agreed to
join the confederates; in the red and blue threads, on the contrary, if he refused." It
was by means of these quipos that the Incas transmitted their instructions. On all
the roads starting from the capital, at distances rarely exceeding five miles, rose
tambos, or stations for the chasquis or couriers, who went from one post to
another. The orders of the Inca thus became disseminated with great rapidity. Orders which
emanated directly from the sovereign were marked with a red thread of the royal
llantu (mantle), and nothing, as historians assure us, could equal the respect with
which these messages were received.
The Incas as Craftsmen
The Incan
Peruvians had made some progress in the metallurgic, ceramic, and textile arts. By washing
the sands of the rivers of Caravaya they obtained large quantities of gold, and they
extracted silver from the ore by means of blast-furnaces. Copper also was abundant, and was
employed to manufacture bronze, of which most of their implements were made. Although it is
difficult to know at what period their mining operations were carried on, it is evident that
they could only have learned the art through long experience. Many proofs are to be found of
their skill in jewellery, and amongst these are wonderful statuettes which they made from an
amalgam of gold and mercury, afterwards exposed to great heat. A number of curious little
ornaments made of various substances, with a little hole bored through them, were frequently
found under the huacas-probably talismans. The finest handiwork of the Incas was undoubtedly
in jewellery; but unfortunately most of the examples of their work in this craft were melted
down to assuage the insatiable avarice of the Spanish conquerors, and are therefore for ever
lost to us. The spade and chisel employed in olden times by the Peruvians are much the same
as the people use now, but some of their tools were clumsy. Their javelins, tomahawks, and
other military arms were very futile weapons. Some found near the mines of Pasco were made
of stone.
The spinning, weaving, and dyeing of the Peruvians were unequalled in
aboriginal America, their cloths and tapestries being both graceful in design and strong in
texture.
Stamps of bark or earthenware were employed to fix designs upon their
woollen stuffs, and feathers were added to the garments made from these, the combination
producing a gay effect much admired by the Spaniards. The British Museum possesses some good
specimens of these manufactures.
Pottery
The Peruvians excelled in the
potter's art. The pottery was baked in a kiln, and was varied in colour, red, black, and
grey being the favourite shades. It was varnished outside, and the vases were moulded in two
pieces and joined before heating. Much of the work is of great grace and elegance, and the
shapes of animals were very skilfully imitated. Many drinking cups of elegant design have
been discovered, and some vases are of considerable size, measuring over three feet in
height. A simple geometric pattern is usually employed for decoration, but sometimes rows of
birds and insects figure in the ceramics. The pottery of the coast veople is more rich and
varied than that of the Inca race proper, and among its types we find vases moulded in the
form of human faces, many of them exhibiting so much character that we are forced to
conclude that they arc veritable portraits. Fine stone dishes are often found as well as
platters of wood, and these frequently bear as ornament tasteful carvings representing
serpents. On several cups and vases are painted representations of battles between the Inca
forces and the savages of the eastern forests using bows and arrows; below wander the
animals of the forest region, a brightly painted group.
The Archæological
Museum of Madrid gives a representation of very varied kinds of Peruvian pottery, including
some specimens modelled upon a series of plants, interesting to botanists. The Louvre
collections have one or two interesting examples ot earthenware, as well as the
Ethnographical Museum of St. Petersburg, and in all these collections there are types which
are believed to be peculiar to the Old World.
The Trocadero Museum has a very curious
specimen with two necks called the "Salvador." A drawing on the vase represents a
man with a tomahawk. The Peruvians, like the Mexicans, also made musical instruments out of
earthenware, and heavy ornaments, principally for the ear.
Historical Sketch of the
Incan Peruvians
The Inca dominion, as the Spaniards found it, was instituted only
about a century before the coming ot the white man. Before that time Inca sway held good
over scattered portions of the country, but had not extended over the entire territory which
in later times was connected with the Inca name. That it was founded on the wreck of a more
ancient power which once existed in the district of Chinchay-suyu there can be little doubt.
This power was wielded over a space bounded by the lake of Chinchay-cocha on the north and
Abancay on the south, and extended to the Pacific at the valley of Chincha. It was
constituted by an alliance of tribes under the leadership of the chief of Pucara, in the
Huanca country. A branch of this confederacy, the Chanca, pushing southward in a general
movement, encountered the Inca people or Colla-suyu, who, under their leader, Pachacutic, a
young but determined chieftain, defeated the invaders in a decisive battle near Cuzco. In
consequence of this defeat the Chanca deserted their former allies and made common cause
with their victors. Together the armies made a determined attack on the Huanca alliance,
which they broke up, and conquered the northern districts of the Chinchay-suyu. Thus Central
Peru fell to the Inca arms.
The Inca Monarchs
Inca history, or rather
tradition, as we must call it in the light of an unparalleled lack of original documentary
evidence, spoke of a series of eleven monarchs from Manco Ccapac to Huaina Ccapac, who died
shortly before the Spanish conquest. These had reigned for a collective period of nearly 350
years. The evidence that these chiefs had reigned was of the best, for their mummified
bodies were preserved in the great Temple of the Sun at Cuzco, already described. There they
received the same daily service as when in the flesh. Their private herds of llamas and
slaves were still understood to belong to them, and food and drink were placed before them
at stated intervals. Clothes were made for them, and they were carried about in palanquins
as if for daily exercise. The descendants of each at periodical intervals feasted on the
produce of their ancestor's private estate, and his mummy was set in the ccntre of the
diners and treated as the principal guest.
The First Incas
After Manco
Ccapac and his immediate successor, Sinchi Roca (Wise Chief), Lloque Yupanqui comes third in
the series. He died while his son was still a child. Concerning Mayta Ccapac, who commenced
his reign while yet a minor, but little is known. He was followed by Ccapac Yupanqui, who
defeated the Conti-suyu, who had grown alarmed at the great power recently attained by
Cuzco. The Inca and his men were attacked whilst about to offer sacrifice. A second attempt
to sack Cuzco and divide its spoil and the women attached to the great Temple of the Sun
likewise ended in the total discomfiture of the jealous invaders. With Inca Roca, the next
Inca, a new dynasty commences, but it is well-nigh impossible to trace the connection
between it and the preceding one. Of the origin of Inca Roca nothing is related save that he
claimed descent from Manco Ccapac. Roca, instead of waiting to be attacked in his own
dominions, boldly confronted the Conti-suyu in their own territory, defeated them decisively
at Pumatampu, and compelled them to yield him tribute. His successor, Yahuarhuaccac,
initiated a similar campaign against the Colla. suyu people, against whom he had the
assistance of the conquered Conti-suyu. But at a feast which he held in Cuzco before setting
out he was attacked by his allies, and fled to the Coricancha, or Golden Temple of the Sun,
for refuge, along with his wives. Resistance was unavailing, and the Inca and many of his
favourites were slaughtered. The allied tribes which had overrun Central Peru now threatened
Cuzco, and had they advanced with promptitude the Inca dynasty would have been wiped out and
the city reduced to ruins. A strong man was at hand, however, who was capable of dealing
with the extremely dangerous situation which had arisen. This was Viracocha, a chieftain
chosen by the vote of the assembled warriors of Cuzco. By a prudent conciliation of the
Conti-suyu and Collasuyu he established a confederation which not only put an end to all
threats of invasion, but so menaced the invaders that they were glad to return to their own
territory and place it in a suitable state of defence.
Viracocha the Great
With Viracocha the Great, or "Godlike," the period of true Inca ascendancy
commences. He was the real founder of the enlarged Inca dominion. He was elected Inca on his
personal merits, and during a vigorous reign succeeded in making the influence or Cuzco felt
in the contiguous southern regions. In his old age he retired to his country seats at Yucay
and Xaquixahuana, and left the conduct of the realm to his son and successor, Urco-Inca, a
weak-minded voluptuary, who neglected his royal duties, and was superseded by his younger
brother, Pachacutic, a famous character in Inca history.
The Plain of Blood
The commencement of Pachacutic's reign witnessed one of the most sanguinary battles in
the history of Peru. Hastu-huaraca., chief of the Antahuayllas, in the Chanca country,
invaded the Inca territory, and encamped on the hills of Carmenca, which overlooks Cuzco.
Pachacutic held a parley with him, but all to no purpose, for the powerful invader was
deter. mined to humble the Inca dynasty to the dust. Battle was speedily joined. The first
day's figbt was indecisive, but on the succeeding day Pachacutic won a great victory, the
larger part of the invading force being left dead on the field of battle, and Hastuhuaraca
retreating with five hundred followers only. The battle of Yahuar-pampa (Plain of Blood) was
the turning-point in Peruvian history. The young Inca, formerly known as Yupanqui, was now
called Pachacutic (He who changes the World). The warriors of the south made full submission
to him, and came in crowds to offer him their services and seek his alliance and friendship,
and he shortly found himself supreme in the territories over which his predecessors had
exercised merely a nominal control.
The Conquest of Middle Peru
Hastu-huaraca, who had been commissioned by the allied tribesmen of Chinchay-suyu to
reduce the Incas, now threw in his lot with them, and together conqueror and conquered
proceeded to the liberation of the district of Chinchay-suyu from the tyranny of the Huanca
alliance. The reduction of the southern portion of that territory was speedily accomplished.
In the valley of Xauxa the invaders came upon the army of the Huanca, on which they
inflicted a final defeat. The Inca spared and liberated the prisoners of war, who were
numerous. Once more, at Tarma, were the Huanca beaten, after which all resistance appears to
have been overcome. The city-state of Cuzco was now the dominant power throughout the whole
of Central Peru, a territory 300
miles in length, whilst it exercised a kind of suzerainty over a
district of equal extent toward the south-east, which it shortly converted into actual
dominion.
Fusion of Races
This conquest of Central Peru led to the fusing of
the Quichua-speaking tribes on the left bank of the Apurimac with the Aymara-speaking folk
on the right bank, with the result that the more numerous Quichua speedily gained linguistic
ascendancy over their brethren the Aymara. Subsequently to this the peoples of Southern and
Central Peru, led by Inca headmen, swept in a great wave of migration over Cerro de Pasco,
where they met with little or no resistance, and Pachacutic lived to be lord over a dominion
extending for a thousand miles to the northward, and founder of a great Inca colony south of
the equator almost identical in outline with the republic of Ecuador.
Two Branches
of the Incas
These conquests, or rather race-movements, split up the Inca people
into two separate portions, the respective centres of which were well-nigh a thousand miles
apart. The centre of the northern district was at Turnipampa, Riopampa, and Quito at
different periods. The political separation of these areas was only a question of time.
Geographical conditions almost totally divided the two portions of the empire, a sparsely
populated stretch of country 400
miles in extent lying between them (see map, P. 333.)
The Laws
of Pachacutic
Pachacutic united to his fame as a warrior the reputation of a wise
and liberal ruler. He built the great Temple of the Sun at
Cuzco, probably on the site
of a still older building, and established in its walls the convent in which five hundred
maidens were set apart for the service of the god. He also, it is said ' instituted the
great rite of the Ccapac-cocha, at which maize, cloth, llamas, and children were sacrificed
in honour of the sun-god. He devised a kind of census, by which governors were compelled
periodically to render an account of the population under their rule. This statement was
made by means of quipos. Agriculture was his peculiar care, and he was stringent in
the enforcement of laws regarding the tilling of the soil, the foundation and upkeep of
stores and granaries, and the regulation of labour in general. As an architect he took upon
himself the task of personally designing the principal buildings of the city of Cuzco, which were rebuilt under his
instructions and in accordance with models moulded from clay by his own hands. He appears to
have had a passion for order, and to him we may be justified in tracing the rigorous and
almost grandmotherly system under which the Peruvians were living at the time of the arrival
of their Spanish conquerors. To Pachacutic, too, is assigned the raising of the immense
fortress of Sacsahuaman, already described. He further instituted the order of knighthood
known as Auqui, or "Warrior,"' entrance to which was granted to suitable
applicants at the great feast of Ccapac Raymi, or Festival of the Sun. He also named the
succession of moons, and erected the pillars on the hill of Carmenca by which the season of
solstice was found. In short, all law and order which had a place in the Peruvian social
economy were attributed to him, and we may designate him the Alfred of his race.
Tupac-Yupanqui
Pachacutic's son, Tupac-Yupanqui, for some time before his
father's death acted as his lieutenant. His name signifies " Bright " or
"Shining." His activity extended to every portion of the Inca dominion, the
borders of which he enlarged, suppressing revolts, sub. jugating tribes not wholly brought
within the pale of Inca influence, and generally completing the work so ably begun bv his
father.
"The Gibbet"
A spirit of cruelty, and excess such as was
unknown to Pachacutic marked the military exploits of Tupac. In the valley of Huarco, near
the Pacific coast, for example, he was repulsed by the natives, who were well supplied with
food and stores of all sorts, and whose town was well fortified and very strongly situated.
Tupac constructed an immense camp, or rather town, the outlines of which recalled those of
his capital of Cuzco, on a hill opposite the city, and here he calmly sat down to watch the
gradual starvation of the enemy. This siege continued for three years, until the wretched
defenders, driven to despair through want of food, capitulated, relying on the assurance of
their conqueror that they should become a part of the Inca nation and that their daughters
should become the wives of Inca youths. The submission of their chiefs having been made,
Tupac ordered a general massacre of the warriors and principal civilians. At the conquest
the Spaniardr could still see the immense heaps of bones which littered the spot where this
heartless holocaust took place, and the name Huarco (The Gibbet) became indissolubly
associated with the district.
Huaina Ccapac
Tupac died in 1493, and was
succeeded by his son Huaina Ccapac (The Young Chief). Huaina was about twenty-two years of
age at the time of his father's death, and although the late Inca had named Ccapac-Huari,
his son by another wife, as his successor, the claims of Huaina were recognised. His reign
was peaceful, and was marked by wise administrative improvements and engineering effort. At
the same time he was busily employed in holding the savage peoples who surrounded his empire
in check. He favoured the northern colony, and rebuilt Tumipampa, but resided at Quito. Here he dwelt for some years
with a favourite son by a wife of the lower class, named Tupac-atau-huallpa (The Sun makes
Good Fortune). Huaina was the victim of an epidemic raging in Peru at the time. He was
greatly feared by his subjects, and was the last Inca who held undisputed sway over the
entire dominion. Like Nezahualcoyotl in Mexico, he attempted to set up the worship of one god in
Peru, to
the detriment of all other huacas, or sacred beings.
The Inca Civil War
On
the death of Huaina his two sons, Huascar and Atauhuallpa, [This is the name by which he is
generally alluded to in Peruvian history.] strove for the crown. Before his demise Huaina
had divided his dominion between his two sons, but it was said that he had wrested Quito
from a certain chieftain whose daughter he had married, and by whom he had Atauhuallpa, who
was therefore rightful heir to that province. The other son, Huascar, or Tupac-cusi-huallpa
(The Sun makes Joy), was born to his principal sister-wife-for, according to Inca custom,
the monarchs of Peru, like those of certain Egyptian dynasties, filled with pride of race,
and unwilling to mingle their blood with that of plebeians, took spouses from among their
sisters. This is the story as given by many Spanish chroniclers, but it has no foundation in
fact. Atauhuallpa was in reality the son of a woman of the people, and Huascar was not the
son of Huaina's sister-wife, but of a wife of less intimate relationship. Therefore both
sons were on an equality as regards descent. Huascar, however, was nearer the throne by
virtue of his mother's status, which was that of a royal princess, whereas the mother of
Atauhuallpa was not officially recognised. Huascar by his excesses and his outrages on
religion and public decency aroused the people to revolt against his power, and Atauhuallpa,
discerning his opportunity in this émeute, made a determined attack on the
royal forces, and succeeded in driving them slowly back, until at last Turnipampa was razed
to the ground, and shortly afterwards the important southerly fortress of Caxamarca fell
into the hands of the rebels.
A Dramatic Situation
Atauhuallpa. remained at
Caxamarca, and despatched the bulk of his forces into the enemy's country. These drove the
warriors of Huascar back until the upper courses of the Apurimac were reached. Huascar fled
from Cuzco, but was captured, and carried a prisoner with his mother, wife, and children to
Atauhuallpa. Not many days afterwards news of the landing of the Spaniards was received by
the rebel Inca. The downfall of the Peruvian Empire was at hand.
A Worthless
Despotism
If the blessings of a well-regulated government were dispensed by the
Incas, these benefits were assuredly counterbalanced by the degrading despotism which
accompanied them. The political organisation of the Peruvian Empire was in every sense more
complete than that of Mexico. But in a state where individual effort and liberty are
entirely crushed even such an effective organisation as the Peruvian can avail the people
little, and is merely a device for the support of a calculated tyranny.