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The Incas

The Incas. Presentation created by Robert L. Martinez Primary Content Source: Prentice Hall World History Images as cited. xtimeline.com. ucalgary.ca.

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The Incas

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  1. The Incas Presentation created by Robert L. Martinez Primary Content Source: Prentice Hall World History Images as cited xtimeline.com ucalgary.ca

  2. Western South America includes a wide variety of climates and terrains. The narrow coastal plain is a dry, lifeless desert crossed by occasional river valleys. hard-core-dx.com

  3. Further inland, the snow-capped Andes Mountains rise steeply, leveling off into high plateaus that bake by day and freeze at night. East of the Andes lie dense jungles that stretch from Peru into Brazil. destination360.com

  4. Native American peoples developed many different styles of life across South America. Hunters and gatherers thrived in some regions, while farmers grew root crops in the Amazon rain forests. mrgrayhistory.wikispaces.com

  5. Thousands of years ago, people settled in fishing villages along the desert coast of Peru. Gradually they expanded inland, farming the river valleys that run up into the highland plateaus. Using careful irrigation, they grew corn, cotton, squash, and beans. unexplained-mysteries.com

  6. On mountain slopes, they cultivated potatoes. In high plateaus, they domesticated the llama and the alpaca. Like the Mayas, they built large ceremonial centers and developed skills in pottery and weaving. fineartamerica.com

  7. The earliest Peruvian culture discovered was the Chavin, 850 B.C.E., who built a huge temple complex located at Chavin de Huantar in the Andes. Stone carvings and pottery show that the Chavin people worshipped a ferocious-looking god, part jaguar and part human with grinning catlike features. The arts and religion of the Chavin culture influenced later peoples of Peru. tulkor.deviantart.com xtimeline.com

  8. Between 100 and 700 C.E., the Mochica people forged an empire along the arid north coast of Peru. The Mochicas were skilled farmers, developing methods of terracing, irrigation, and fertilization of the soil. Their leaders built roads and organized networks of relay runners to carry messages, ideas that the Incas would later adopt. precolumbiancivilizations.pbworks.com

  9. Remains of Mochica cities and temples dot the land. To build one temple, workers had to produce 130 million sun-dried adobe bricks. The people perfected skills in textile production, gold work, and woodcarving. pacarama.com

  10. The Mochicas produced remarkable pots decorated with realistic scenes of daily life. On these painted vases, helmeted warriors go into battle, musicians play pipes and drums, and women weave textiles on small portable looms. veniceclayartists.com

  11. Many other cultures left tantalizing clues to their lives and beliefs. In southern Peru, the Nazca people etched glyphs in the desert. A glyph is a pictograph or other symbol carved into a surface. crystalinks.com

  12. Nazca glyphs include straight lines that run for miles, as well as giant figures of birds, whales, and other creatures. These figures may have been family symbols or part of an ancient calendar. lorenzoexpeditions.com

  13. For more than 2,000 years, diverse civilizations rose and fell in Peru. Then, in the mid 1400s, the Incas emerged from high in the Andes. Incan armies rapidly conquered an empire that stretched 2,500 miles down the Andes and along the Pacific coast. bmssancientcivilizations.wikispaces.com

  14. Like the Romans, who also ruled a diverse empire. In Incas drew heavily on the ideas and skills of the peoples they conquered. clio.missouristate.edu

  15. Pachacuti, a skilled warrior and leader, was the founder of the Incan empire. In 1438, he proclaimed himself Sapa Inca, or emperor, and set out on a policy of conquest. From a small kingdom in the high mountain valley of Cuzco, he came to dominate an immense empire. numenware.com

  16. Once he had subdued neighboring peoples, he enlisted them in his armies for future campaigns. In this way, he and his son extended Incan rule from Ecuador in the north to Chile in the south. lordprice.co.uk

  17. The Sapa Inca exercised absolute power over the empire. Claiming that he was divine, the son of the sun itself, he was also the chief religious leader. Like the pharaohs of ancient Egypt, the Incan god-king owned all the land, herds, mines, and people. forum.nationstates.net

  18. Gold, the “sweat of the sun,” was his symbol. He lived in splendor, eating from golden plates and dressing in richly embroidered clothes. In fact, the Sapa Inca never wore the same royal garments twice. His queen, the Coya, carried out important religious duties and sometimes governed when the Sapa Inca was absent. amautacunadehistoria.com

  19. From Cuzco, the Incas ran an efficient government with a chain of command reaching into every village. Nobles ruled the provinces along with local chieftains whom the Incas had conquered. Below them, officials carried out the day-to-day business of collecting taxes and enforcing laws. studyspanishsacredvalley.com

  20. Specially trained officials kept records on a quipus, a collection of knotted, colored strings. Modern scholars think that quipas noted dates and events as well as statistics on population and crops. portalinca.com

  21. To unite their empire, the Incas imposed their own language, Quechua, and religion on the people. They also created one of the great road systems of history. It wound more than 12,000 miles through mountains and deserts. rutahsa.com

  22. Hundreds of bridges spanned rivers and deep gorges. Steps were cut into steep slopes and tunnels dug through hillsides. Even more impressive than the roads that united the Roman empire, the Incan road system was unmatched until modern times. top10marvels.com

  23. The roads allowed armies and news to move rapidly throughout the empire. At regular stations, runners waited to carry messages. Relays of runners could carry news of a revolt swiftly from a distant province to the capital. delange.org

  24. The Incas kept soldiers at outposts throughout the empire. Within days of an uprising, they would be on the move to crush the rebels. Ordinary people were restricted from using the roads at all. flickr.com

  25. All roads led through Cuzco. The population was made up of representatives of all the peoples of the empire, each living in a particular part of the city. In the heart of the city stood the great Temple of the Sun, its interior walls lined with gold. allposters.com

  26. Like Incan palaces and forts, the temple was made of enormous stone blocks, each polished and carved to fit exactly in place. The engineering was so precise that, although no mortar was used to hold the stones together. Incan buildings have survived severe earthquakes. flickr.com

  27. The Incas strictly regulated the lives of millions of people within their empire. People lived in close-knit communities, called ayllus. Leaders of each ayllu carried out government orders, assigning jobs to each family and organizing the community to work the land. profesalashistoria.blogspot.com

  28. Farmers expanded the step terraces built by earlier peoples. On steep hillsides, they carved out strips of land to be held in place by stone walls. These terraces kept rains from washing away the soil and made farming possible in places where flat land was scarce. waterhistory.org

  29. Farmers had to spend part of each year working land for the emperor and the temples as well as for their own communities. The government took possession of each harvest, dividing it among the people and storing part of it in case of famine. sbs.utexas.edu

  30. The Incas were the best metal workers in the Americas. They learned to work and alloy, or blend, copper, tin, bronze, silver, and gold. While they employed copper and bronze for useful objects, they used precious metals for statues of gods and goddesses, eating utensils for the aristocracy, and decorations. oyster-sauce.blogspot.com

  31. The Incas developed some important medical practices, including surgery on the human skull. In such operations, they first cleaned the operating area and then made the patient unconscious with a drug, procedures much closer to the use of modern antiseptics and anesthesia than anything practiced in Europe at that time. incaencyclopediag.pbworks.com frontiers-of-anthropology.blogspot.com

  32. Like other early peoples, the Incas were polytheistic, worshiping many gods linked to the forces of nature. People offered food, clothing, and drink to the guardian spirits of the home and the village. Religion was tied to the routines of life. Festivals were celebrated with ceremonies, sports, and games. A powerful class of priests served the gods. andesadventures.com

  33. Chief among the gods was Inti, the sun god. unique-southamerica-travel-experience.com

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