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Lost Empire
Part 3
(back to Part 2)
Machu Picchu
What remains of the Inca legacy is limited, as the
conquistadors plundered what they could of Inca treasures and
in so doing, dismantled the many structures painstakingly
built by Inca craftsmen to house the precious metals.
Remarkably, a last bastion of the Inca empire remained unknown
to the Spanish conquerors and was not found until explorer
Hiram Bingham discovered it in 1911. He had found Machu
Picchu, a citadel atop a mountainous jungle along the Urubamba
River in Peru. Grand steps and terraces with fountains,
lodgings, and shrines flank the jungle-clad pinnacle peaks
surrounding the site. It was a place of worship to the sun
god, the greatest deity in the Inca pantheon.
A High Altitude Culture
Perhaps most unique about Inca civilization was its thriving
existence at altitude. The Incas ruled the Andean Cordillera,
second in height and harshness to the Himalayas. Daily life
was spent at altitudes up to 15,000 feet and ritual life
extended up to 22,057 feet to Llullaillaco in Chile, the
highest Inca sacrificial site known today. Mountain roads and
sacrificial platforms were built, which means a great amount
of time was spent hauling loads of soil, rocks, and grass up
to these inhospitable heights. Even with our advanced
mountaineering clothing and equipment of today, it is hard for
us to acclimatize and cope with the cold and dehydration
experienced at the high altitudes frequented by the Inca. This
ability of the sandal-clad Inca to thrive at extremely high
elevations continues to perplex scientists today.
The Conquest
How did Pizarro and his small army of mercenaries, totaling
less than 400, conquer what was becoming the world's largest
civilization? Much of the "conquest" was accomplished without
battles or warfare as the initial contact Europeans made in
the New World resulted in rampant disease. Old World
infectious disease left its devastating mark on New World
Indian cultures. In particular, smallpox spread quickly
through Panama, eradicating entire populations. Once the
disease crossed into the Andes its southward spread caused the
single most devastating loss of life in the Americas. Lacking
immunity, the New World peoples, including the Inca, were
reduced by two-thirds.
With the aid of disease and the success of his initial deceit
of Atahualpa, Pizarro acquired vast amounts of Inca gold which
brought him great fortune in Spain. Reinforcements for his
troops came quickly and his conquest of a people soon moved
into consolidation of an empire and its wealth. Spanish
culture, religion, and language rapidly replaced Inca life and
only a few traces of Inca ways remain in the native culture as
it exists today.
The Lost Empire |
The Sacrificial Ceremony
|
High Altitude Archaeology
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Burial Artefacts
Photos: (2) courtesy Michael Barnes.
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