CHAPTER
IX
THE
LAST FOUR INCAS
READERS of Prescott’s
charming
classic, “The Conquest of Peru,” will
remember that Pizarro, after killing Atahualpa, the Inca who had tried
in vain
to avoid his fate by filling a room with vessels of gold, decided to
establish
a native prince on the throne of the Incas to rule in accordance with
the
dictates of Spain. The young prince, Manco, a son of the great Inca
Huayna
Capac, named for the first Inca, Manco Ccapac, the founder of the
dynasty, was
selected as the most acceptable figurehead. He was a young man of
ability and
spirit. His induction into office in 1534 with appropriate ceremonies,
the
barbaric splendor of which only made the farce the more pitiful, did
little to
gratify his natural ambition. As might have been foreseen, he chafed
under
restraint, escaped as soon as possible from his attentive guardians,
and raised
an army of faithful Quichuas. There followed the siege of Cuzco,
briefly
characterized by Don Alonzo Enriques de Guzman, who took part in it, as
“the
most fearful and cruel war in the world.” When in 1536 Cuzco was
relieved by
Pizarro’s comrade, Almagro, and Manco’s last chance of regaining the
ancient
capital of his ancestors failed, the Inca retreated to Ollantaytambo.
Here, on
the banks of the river Urubamba, Manco made a determined stand, but
Ollantaytambo was too easily reached by Pizarro’s mounted cavaliers.
The Inca’s
followers, although aroused to their utmost endeavors by the presence
of the
magnificent stone edifices, fortresses, granaries, palaces, and hanging
gardens
of their ancestors, found it necessary to retreat. They fled in a
northerly
direction and made good their escape over snowy passes to Uiticos in
the
fastnesses of Uilcapampa, a veritable American Switzerland.
GLACIERS BETWEEN CUZCO AND UITICOS
The Spaniards who
attempted to follow Manco found his
position
practically impregnable. The citadel of Uilcapampa, a gigantic natural
fortress
defended by Nature in one of her profoundest moods, was only to be
reached by
fording dangerous torrents, or crossing the mountains by narrow defiles
which
themselves are higher than the most lofty peaks of Europe. It was
hazardous for
Hannabal and Napoleon to bring their armies through the comparatively
low
passes of the Alps. Pizarro
found it
impossible to follow the Inca Manco over the Pass of
Panticalla, itself a snowy wilderness higher than
the summit of
Mont Blanc. In no part of the Peruvian Andes are there so many
beautiful snowy
peaks. Near by is the sharp, icy pinnacle of Mt. Veronica (elevation
19,342
ft.). Not faraway is another magnificent snow-capped peak, Mt.
Salcantay,
20,565 feet above the sea. Near Salcantay is the sharp needle of Mt.
Soray
(19,435 ft.), while to the west of it are Panta (18,590
ft.) and Soiroccocha (18,197 ft.). On the
shoulders of these mountains are unnamed glaciers and little valleys
that have
scarcely ever been seen except by some hardy, prospector or inquisitive
explorer. These valleys are to be reached only through passes where the
traveler is likely to be waylaid by violent storms of hail and snow.
During the
rainy season a large part of Uilcapampa is absolutely impenetrable.
Even in the
dry season the difficulties of transportation are very great. The most
sure-footed mule is sometimes unable to use the trails without
assistance from
man. It was an ideal place for the Inca Manco.
The conquistador,
Cieza de Leon, who wrote in 1550 a graphic account of
the wars of Peru,
says that Manco took with him a “great quantity of treasure, collected
from
various parts ... and many loads of rich clothing of wool, delicate in
texture
and very beautiful and showy.” The Spaniards were absolutely unable to
conceive
of the ruler of a country traveling without rich “treasure.” It is
extremely
doubtful whether Manco burdened himself with much gold or silver.
Except for
ornament there was little use to which he could have put the precious
metals
and they would have served only to arouse the cupidity of his enemies.
His
people had never been paid in gold or silver. Their labor was his due,
and only
such part of it as was needed to raise their own crops and make their
own
clothing was allotted to them; in fact, their lives were in his hands
and the
custom and usage of centuries made them faithful followers of their
great
chief. That Manco, however, actually did carry off with him beautiful
textiles,
and anything else which was useful, may be taken for granted. In
Uiticos, safe
from the armed forces of his enemies, the Inca was also able to enjoy
the
benefits of a delightful climate, and was in a well-watered region
where corn,
potatoes, both white and sweet, and the fruits of the temperate and
sub-tropical regions easily grow. Using this as a base, he was
accustomed to sally
forth against the Spaniards frequently
and in unexpected directions. His raids were usually successful. It was relatively easy for
him, with a handful
of followers, to dash out of the mountain fastnesses cross the
Apurirnac River
either by swimming or on primitive rafts, and reach the great road
between
Cuzco and Lima, the principal highway of Peru. Officials and merchants
whose
business led them over this route found it extremely precarious. Manco
cheered
his followers by making them realize that in these raids they were
taking sweet
revenge on the Spaniards for what they had done to Peru. It is
interesting to
note that Cieza de Leon justifies Manco in his attitude, for the
Spaniards had
indeed “seized his inheritance, forcing him to leave his native land,
and to
live in banishment.”
Manco’s success in
securing
such a place of refuge,
and in using it as a base from which he could frequently annoy his
enemies, led
many of the Orejones of Cuzco to follow him. The
Inca chiefs were called
Orejones, “big ears,” by the
Spaniards because the lobes of their ears had been enlarged
artificially to
receive the great gold earrings which they were fond of wearing. Three
years
after Manco’s retirement to the wilds of Uilcapampa there was born in
Cuzco in
the year 1539, Garcilasso Inca de la Vega, the son of an Inca princess
and one
of the conquistadores.
As a small child
Garcilasso
heard of the activities
of his royal relative. He left Peru as a boy and spent the rest of his
life in
Spain. After forty years in Europe he wrote, partly from memory, his
“Royal
Commentaries,” an account of the country of his Indian ancestors. Of
the Inca
Manco, of whom he must frequently have heard uncomplimentary reports as
a
child, he speaks apologetically. He says: “In the time of Manco Inca,
several
robberies were committed on the road by his subjects; but still they
had that
respect for the Spanish Merchants that they let them go free and never
pillaged
them of their wares and merchandise, which were in no manner useful to
them;
howsoever they robbed the Indians of their cattle [llamas and alpacas],
bred in
the countrey.... The Inca lived in the Mountains, which afforded no
tame
Cattel; and only produced Tigers and Lions and Serpents of twenty-five
and
thirty feet long, with other venomous insects.” (I am quoting from Sir
Paul
Rycaut’s translation, published in London in 1688.) Garcilasso says
Manco’s
soldiers took only “such food as they found in the hands of the
Indians; which
the Inca did usually call his own,” saying, “That he who was Master of
that
whole Empire might lawfully challenge such a proportion thereof as was
convenient to supply his necessary and natural support” — a reasonable
apology;
and yet personally I doubt whether Manco spared the Spanish merchants
and
failed to pillage them of their “wares and merchandise.” As will be
seen later,
we found in Manco’s palace some metal articles of European origin which
might
very well have been taken by Manco’s raiders. Furthermore, it should be
remembered that Garcilasso, although often quoted by Prescott, left
Peru when he
was sixteen years old and that his ideas were largely colored by his
long life
in Spain and his natural desire to extol the virtues of his mother’s
people, a
brown race despised by the white Europeans for whom he wrote.
The methods of
warfare and the
weapons used by Manco
and his followers at this time are thus described by Guzman. He says the Indians had no
defensive arms
such as helmets, shields, and armor, but used “lances, arrows, clubs,
axes,
halberds, darts, and slings, and another weapon which they call ayllas
(the bolas), consisting of three round stones sewn up in leather, and
each
fastened to a cord a cubit long. They throw these at the horses, and
thus bind
their legs together; and sometimes they will fasten a man’s arms to his
sides
in the same way. These Indians are so expert in the use of this weapon
that
they will bring down a deer with it in the chase. Their principal
weapon,
however, is the sling.... With it, they will hurl a huge stone with
such force
that it will kill a horse; in truth, the effect is little less great
than that
of an arquebus; and I have seen a stone, thus hurled from a sling,
break a
sword in two pieces which was held in a man’s hand at a distance of
thirty
paces.”
Manco’s raids finally
became so
annoying that
Pizarro sent a small force from Cuzco under Captain Villadiego to
attack the
Inca. Captain Villadiego found it impossible to use horses, although he
realized that cavalry was the “important arm against these Indians.”
Confident
in his strength and in the efficacy of his firearms, and anxious to
enjoy the
spoils of a successful raid against a chief reported to be traveling
surrounded
by his family “and with rich treasure,” he
pressed eagerly on, up through a lofty valley toward a defile in the
mountains,
probably the Pass of Panticalla. Here, fatigued and exhausted by their
difficult march and suffering from the effects of the altitude (16,000
ft.),
his men found themselves ambushed by the Inca, who with a small party,
“little
more than eighty Indians,” “attacked the Christians, who numbered
twenty-eight
or thirty, and killed Captain Villadiego and all his men except two or
three.”
To any one who has clambered over the passes of the Cordillera
Uilcapampa it is
not surprising that this military expedition was a failure or that the
Inca,
warned by keen-sighted Indians posted on appropriate vantage points,
could have
succeeded in defeating a small force of weary soldiers armed with the
heavy
blunderbuss of the seventeenth century. In a rocky pass, protected by
huge
boulders, and surrounded by quantities of natural ammunition for their
slings,
it must have been relatively simple for eighty Quichuas, who could
“hurl a huge
stone with such force that it would kill a horse,” to have literally
stoned to
death Captain Villadiego’s little company before they could have
prepared their
clumsy weapons for firing.
THE URUBAMBA CANYON
A reason for the safety of the Incas in Uilcapampa
The fugitives
returned to Cuzco
and reported their
misfortune. The importance of the reverse will be better appreciated if
one
remembers that the size of the force with which Pizarro conquered Peru
was less
than two hundred, only a few times larger than Captain Villadiego’s
company
which had been wiped out by Manco. Its significance is further
increased by the
fact that the contemporary Spanish writers, with all their tendency to
exaggerate, placed Manco’s force at only “a little more than eighty
Indians.”
Probably there were not even that many. The wonder is that the Inca’s
army was
not reported as being several thousand.
Francisco Pizzaro
himself now
hastily set out with a
body of soldiers determined to punish this young Inca who had inflicted
such a
blow on the prestige of Spanish arms, “but this attempt also failed,”
for the
Inca had withdrawn across the rivers and mountains of Uilcapampa to
Uiticos,
where, according to Cieza de Leon, he
cheered his
followers with the
sight of the heads of his enemies. Unfortunately for accuracy, the
custom of
displaying on the ends of pikes the heads of one’s enemies was European
and not
Peruvian. To be sure, the savage Indians of some of the Amazonian
jungles do
sometimes decapitate their enemies, remove the bones of the skull, dry
the
shrunken scalp and face, and wear the trophy as a mark of prowess just
as the
North American Indians did the scalps of their enemies. Such customs
had no place
among the
peace-loving Inca
agriculturists of central Peru. There were no Spaniards living with
Manco at
that time to report any such outrage on the bodies of Captain
Villadiego’s
unfortunate men. Probably the conquistadores
supposed that Manco did what the Spaniards would have
done under similar
circumstances.
Following the failure
of
Francisco Pizarro to
penetrate to Uiticos, his brother, Gonzalo, “undertook the pursuit of
the Inca
and occupied some of his passes and bridges,” but was unsuccessful in
penetrating the mountain labyrinth. Being less fool-hardy than Captain
Villadiego, he did not come into actual conflict with Manco. Unable to
subdue
the young Inca or prevent his raids on travelers from Cuzco to Lima,
Francisco
Pizarro, “with the assent of the royal officers who were with him,”
established
the city of Ayacucho at a convenient point on the road, so as to make
it secure
for travelers. Nevertheless, according to Montesinos, Manco caused the
good
people of Ayacucho quite a little trouble. Finally, Francisco Pizarro,
“having
taken one of Manco’s wives prisoner with other Indians, stripped and
flogged
her, and then shot her to death with arrows.”
Accounts of what
happened in
Uiticos under the rule
of Manco are not very satisfactory. Father Calancha, who published in
1639 his
“Coronica Moralizada,” or
“pious account of the missionary activities of the Augustinians” in
Peru, says
that the Inca Manco was obeyed by all the Indians who lived in a region
extending “for two hundred leagues and more toward the east and toward
the
south, where there were innumerable Indians in various provinces.” With
customary monastic zeal and proper religious fervor, Father Calancha
accuses
the Inca of compelling the baptized Indians who fled to him from the
Spaniards to
abandon their new faith, torturing those who would no longer worship
the old
Inca “idols.” This story need not be taken too literally, although
undoubtedly
the escaped Indians acted as though they had never been baptized.
Besides Indians
fleeing from
harsh masters, there
came to Uilcapampa, in 1542, Gomez Perez Diego Mendez, and half a dozen
other
Spanish fugitives, adherents of Almagro, “rascals,” says Calancha,
“worthy of
Manco’s favor.” Obliged by the civil wars of the conquistadores
to flee
from the Pizarros, they were glad enough to find a welcome in Uiticos.
To while
away the time they played games and taught the Inca checkers and chess,
as well
as bowling-on-the-green and quoits. Montesinos says they also taught
him to
ride horseback and shoot an arquebus. They took their games very
seriously and
occasionally violent disputes arose, one of which, as we shall see, was
to have
fatal consequences. They were kept informed by Manco of what was going
on in
the viceroyalty. Although “encompassed within craggy and lofty
mountains,” the
Inca was thoroughly cognizant of all those “revolutions” which might be
of
benefit to him.
Perhaps the most
exciting news
that reached Uiticos
in 1544 was in regard to the arrival of the first Spanish viceroy. He
brought
the New Laws, a result of the efforts of the good Bishop Las Casas to
alleviate
the sufferings of the Indians. The New Laws provided, among other
things, that
all the officers of the crown were to renounce their repartimientos
or holdings of Indian serfs, and that compulsory
personal service was to be entirely abolished. Repartimientos
given to the conquerors were not to pass to their
heirs, but were to revert to the king. In other words, the New Laws
gave
evidence that the Spanish crown wished to be kind to the Indians and
did not
approve of the Pizarros. This was good news for Manco and highly
pleasing to
the refugees. They persuaded the Inca to write a letter to the new
viceroy,
asking permission to appear before him and offer his services to the
king. The
Spanish refugees told the Inca that by this means he might some day
recover his
empire, “or at least the best part of it.” Their object in persuading
the Inca
to send such a message to the viceroy becomes apparent when we learn
that they
“also wrote as from themselves desiring a pardon for what was past” and
permission to return to Spanish dominions.
Gomez Perez, who
seems to have
been the active
leader of the little group, was selected to be the bearer of the
letters from
the Inca and the refugees. Attended by a dozen Indians whom the Inca
instructed
to act as his servants and bodyguard, he left Uilcapampa, presented his
letters
to the viceroy, and gave him “a large relation of the State and
Condition of
the Inca, and of his true and real designs to doe him service.” “The
Vice-king
joyfully received the news, and granted a full and ample pardon of all
crimes,
as desired. And as to the Inca, he made many kind expressions of love
and
respect, truly considering that the Interest of the Inca might be
advantageous
to him, both in War and Peace. And with this satisfactory answer Gomez
Perez
returned both to the Inca and to his companions.” The refugees were
delighted
with the news and got ready to return to king and country. Their
departure from
Uiticos Was prevented by a tragic accident, thus described by
Garcilasso.
“The Inca, to humour the Spaniards and entertain
himself with them, had given directions for making a bowling green;
When
playing one day with Gomez Perez, he came to have some quarrel and
difference
with this Perez about the measure of a Cast, Which often happened
between them;
for this Perez, being a person of a hot and fiery brain, without any
judgment
or understanding, would take the least occasion in the world to contend
with
and provoke the Inca.... Being no longer able to endure his rudeness,
the Inca
punched him on the breast, and bid him to consider with whom he talked.
Perez,
not considering in his heat and passion either his own safety or the
safety of
his Companions, lifted up his hand, and with the bowl struck the Inca
so
violently on the head, that he knocked him down. [He died three days
later.]
The Indians hereupon, being enraged by the death of their Prince,
joined
together against Gomez and the Spaniards, who, fled into a house, and
with their
Swords in their hands defended the door; the Indians set fire to the
house,
which being too hot for them, they sallied out into the Marketplace,
where the
Indians assaulted them and shot them with their Arrows until they had
killed
every man of them; and then afterwards, out of mere rage and fury they
designed
either to eat them raw as their custome was, or to burn them and cast
their
ashes into the river, that no sign or appearance might remain of them;
but at
length, after some consultation, they agreed to cast their bodies into
the open
fields, to be devoured by vulters and birds of the air, which they
supposed to
be the highest indignity and dishonour that they could show to their
Corps.”
Garcilasso concludes: “I informed myself very perfectly from those
chiefs and
nobles who were present and eye-witnesses of the unparalleled piece of
madness
of that rash and hair-brained fool; and heard them tell this story to
my mother
and parents with tears in their eyes.” There are many versions of the
tragedy.1
They all agree that a Spaniard murdered the Inca.
Thus, in 1545, the
reign of an
attractive and vigorous personality was brought to an abrupt close.
Manco left
three young sons, Sayri Tupac, Titu Cusi, and Tupac Amaru.
Sayri Tupac, although he
had not yet reached
his majority, became Inca in his father’s stead, and with the aid of
regents
reigned for ten years without disturbing his Spanish neighbors or being
annoyed
by them, unless the reference in Montesinos to a
proposed burning of bridges near Abancay, under date
of 1555, is
correct. By a curious lapse Montesinos ascribes this attempt to the
Inca Manco,
who had been dead for ten years. In 1555 there carne to Lima a new
viceroy, who
decided that it would be safer if young Sayri Tupac were within reach
instead
of living in the inaccessible wilds of Uilcapampa. The viceroy wisely
undertook
to accomplish this difficult matter through the Princess Beatrix Coya,
an aunt
of the Inca, who was living in Cuzco. She took kindly to the suggestion
and
dispatched to Uiticos a messenger, of the blood royal, attended by
Indian
servants. The journey was a dangerous one; bridges were down and the treacherous trails were
well-nigh
impassable. Sayri Tupac’s regents permitted the messenger to enter
Uilcapampa
and deliver the viceroy’s invitation, but were not inclined to believe
that it
was quite so attractive as appeared on the surface, even though brought
to them
by a kinsman. Accordingly, they kept the visitor as a hostage and sent
a
messenger of their own to Cuzco to see if any foul play could be
discovered,
and also to request that one John Sierra, a more trusted cousin, be
sent to
treat in this matter. All this took time.
In 1558 the viceroy,
becoming
impatient, dispatched
from Lima Friar Melchior and one John Betanzos, who had married the
daughter of
the unfortunate Inca Atahualpa and pretended to be very learned in his
wife’s
language. Montesinos says he was a “great linguist.” They started off
quite
confidently for Uiticos, taking with them several pieces of velvet and
damask,
and two cups of gilded silver as presents. Anxious to secure the honor
of being
the first to reach the Inca, they traveled as fast as they could to the
Chuquichaca bridge, “the key to the valley of Uiticos.” Here they were
detained
by the soldiers of the regents. A day or so later John Sierra, the
Inca’s
cousin from Cuzco, arrived at the bridge and was allowed to proceed,
while the
friar and Betanzos were still detained. John Sierra was welcomed by the
Inca
and his nobles, and did his best to encourage Sayri Tupac to accept the
viceroy’s offer. Finally John Betanzos and the friar were also sent for
and
admitted to the presence of the Inca, with the presents which the
viceroy had
sent. Sayri Tupac’s first idea was to remain free and independent as he
had
hitherto done, so he requested the ambassadors to depart immediately
with their
silver gilt cups. They were sent back by one of the western routes
across the
Apurimac. A few days later, however, after John Sierra had told him
some
interesting stories of life in Cuzco, the Inca decided to reconsider
the
matter. His regents had a long debate, observed the flying of birds and
the
nature of the weather, but according to Garcilasso “made no inquiries
of the
devil.” The omens were favorable and the regents finally decided to
allow the
Inca to accept the invitation of the viceroy.
Sayri Tupac, anxious
to see
something of the world,
went directly to Lima, traveling in a litter made of rich materials,
carried by
relays chosen from the three hundred Indians who attended him. He was
kindly
received by the viceroy, and then went to Cuzco, where he lodged in his
aunt’s
house. Here his relatives went to welcome him. “I, myself,” says
Garcilasso,
“went in the name of my Father. I found him then playing a certain game
used
amongst the Indians.... I kissed his hands, and delivered my Message;
he
commanded me to sit down, and presently they brought two gilded cups of
that
Liquor, made of Mayz [chicha] which
scarce contained four ounces of Drink; he took them both, and with his
own Hand
he gave one of them to me; he drank, and I pledged him, which as we
have said,
in the custom of Civility amongst them. This ceremony being past, he
asked me,
Why I did not meet him at Uilcapampa. I answered him, ‘Inca, as I am
but a
Young man, the Governours make no account of me, to place me in such
Ceremonies
as these! ‘How,’ replied the Inca, ‘I would rather have seen you than
all the
Friars and Fathers in Town.’ As I was going away I made him a
submissive bow
and reverence, after the manner of the Indians, who are of his Alliance
and
Kindred, at which he was so much pleased, that he embraced me heartily,
and
with much affection, as appeared by his Countenance.”
Sayri Tupac now
received the
sacred Red Fringe of
Inca sovereignty, was married to a princess of the blood royal, joined
her in
baptism, and took up his abode in the beautiful valley of Yucay, a
day’s
journey northeast of Cuzco, and never returned to Uiticos. His only
daughter
finally married a certain Captain Garcia, of whom more anon. Sayri
Tupac died
in 1560, leaving two brothers; the older, Titu Cusi Yupanqui,
illegitimate, and
the younger, Tupac Amaru, his rightful successor, an inexperienced
youth.
YUCAY, LAST HOME OF SAYRI TUPAC
The throne of Uiticos
was
seized by Titu Cusi. The
new Inca seems to have been suspicious of the untimely death of Sayri
Tupac,
and to have felt that the Spaniards were capable of more foul play. So
with his
half-brother he stayed quietly in Uilcapampa. Their first visitor, so
far as we
know, was Diego Rodriguez de Figueroa, who wrote an interesting account
of
Uiticos and says he gave the Inca a pair of scissors. He was
unsuccessful in
his efforts to get Titu Cusi to go to Cuzco. In time there came an
Augustinian
missionary, Friar Marcos Garcia, who, six years after the death of
Sayri Tupac,
entered the rough country of Uilcapampa, “a land of moderate wealth,
large
rivers, and the usual rains,” whose “forested mountains,” says Father
Calancha,
“are magnificent.” Friar Marcos had a hard journey. The bridges were
down, the
roads had been destroyed, and the passes blocked up. The few Indians
who did
occasionally appear in Cuzco from Uilcapampa said the friar could not
get there
“unless he should be able to change himself into a bird.” However, with
that
courage and pertinacity which have marked so many missionary
enterprises, Friar
Marcos finally overcame all difficulties and reached Uiticos.
The missionary
chronicler says
that Titu Cusi was
far from glad to see him and received him angrily. It worried him to
find that
a Spaniard had succeeded in penetrating his retreat. Besides, the Inca
was
annoyed to have any one preach against his “idolatries.” Titu Cusi’s
own story,
as written down by Friar Marcos, does not agree with Calancha’. Anyhow,
Friar
Marcos built a little church in a place called Puquiura, where many of
the
Inca’s people were then living. “He planted crosses in the fields and
on the
mountains, these being the best thing to frighten off devils.” He
“suffered
many insults at the hands of the chiefs and principal followers of the
Inca. Some
of them did it to please the Devil, others to flatter the Inca, and
many
because they disliked his sermons, in which he scolded them for their
vices and
abominated among his converts the possession of four or six wives. So
they
punished him in the matter of food, and forced him to send to Cuzco for
victuals. The Convent sent him hard-tack, which was for him a most
delicious
banquet.”
Within a year or
so another Augustinian missionary, Friar Diego Ortiz, left Cuzco alone
for
Uilcapampa. He suffered much on the road, but finally reached the
retreat of
the Inca and entered his presence in company with Friar Marcos.
“Although the
Inca was not too happy to see a new preacher, he was willing to grant
him an
entrance because the Inca... thought Friar Diego would not vex him nor
take the
trouble to reprove him. So the Inca gave him a license. They selected
the town
of Huarancalla, which was populous and well located in the midst of a
number of
other little towns and villages. There was a distance of two or three
days
journey from one Convent to the other. Leaving Friar Marcos in
Puquiura, Friar
Diego went to his new establishment and in a short time built a church,
a house
for himself, and a hospital, — all poor buildings made in a short
time.” He
also started a school for children, and became very popular as he went
about
healing and teaching. He had an easier time than Friar Marcos, who,
with less
tact and no skill as a physician, was located nearer the center of the
Inca
cult.
The principal shrine
of the
Inca is described by
Father Calancha as follows: “Close to Vitcos [or Uiticos] in a village
called
Chuquipalpa, is a House of the Sun, and in it a white rock over a
spring of
water where the Devil appears as a visible manifestation and was
worshipped by
those idolators. This
was the principal
mochadero of those forested mountains. The
word ‘mochadero’2
is the common name which the Indians apply to their places of worship.
In other
words it is the only where They practice the sacred ceremony of
kissing. The
origin of this, the principal part of their ceremonial, is that very
practice,
which Job abominates when he solemnly clears himself of all offence
before God
and says to Him: ‘Lord, all these punishments and even greater burdens
would I
have deserved had I that which the blind Gentiles do when the sun
shines
resplendent or the moon shines clear and they
exult in their hearts and extend their hands toward
the sun and throw
kisses to it,’ an act of very grave iniquity which is equivalent to
denying the
true God.”
Thus does the
ecclesiastical
chronicler refer to the
practice in Peru of that particular form of worship of the heavenly
bodies
which was also widely spread in the East, in Arabia, ad Palestine and
was
inveighed against by Mohammed as well as the ancient Hebrew prophets.
Apparently this ceremony “of the most profound resignation and
reverence” was
practiced in Chuquipalpa, close to Uiticos, in the reign of the Inca
Titu Cusi.
Calancha
goes on to say: “In this white stone of the
aforesaid House of the Sun,
which is called Yurac Rumi [meaning, Quichua, a white rock], there
attends a
Devil who is Captain of a legion. He and his legionaries show great
kindness to
the Indian idolators, but great terrors to the Catholics. They abuse
with
hideous cruelties the baptized ones who now no longer worship them with
kisses,
and many of the Indians have died from the horrible frights these
devils have
given them.”
One day, when the
Inca and his
mother and their
principal chiefs and counselors were away from Uiticos on a visit to
some of
their outlying estates, Friar Marcos and Friar Diego decided to make a
spectacular attack on this particular Devil, who was at the great
“white rock
over a spring of water.” The two monks summoned all their converts to
gather at
Puquiura, in the church or the neighboring plaza, and asked each to
bring a
stick of firewood in order that they might burn up this Devil who had
tormented
them. “An innumerable multitude” came together on the day appointed.
The
converted Indians were most anxious to get even with this Devil who had
slain
their friends and inflicted wounds on themselves; the doubters were
curious to
see the result; the Inca priests were there to see their god defeat the
Christians’; while, as may readily be imagined, the rest of the
population came
to see the excitement. Starting out from Puquiura they marched to “the
Temple
of the Sun, in the village of Chuquipalpa, close to Uiticos.”
Arrived at the sacred
palisade,
the monks raised the
standard of the cross, recited their orisons, surrounded the spring,
the white
rock and the Temple of the Sun, and piled high the firewood. Then,
having
exorcised the locality, they called the Devil by all the vile names
they could
think of, to show their lack of respect, and finally commanded him
never to
return to this vicinity. Calling on Christ and the Virgin, they applied
fire to
the wood. “The poor Devil then fled roaring in a fury, and making the
mountains
to tremble.”
It took remarkable
courage on
the part of the two
lone monks thus to desecrate the chief shrine of the people among whom
they
were dwelling. It is almost incredible that in this remote valley,
separated
from their friends and far from the protecting hand of the Spanish
viceroy,
they should have dared to commit such an insult to the religion of
their hosts.
Of course, as soon as the Inca Titu Cusi heard of it, he was greatly
annoyed.
His mother was furious. They returned immediately to Puquiura. The
chiefs
wished to “slay the monks and tear them into small pieces,” and
undoubtedly would
have done so had it not been for the regard in which Friar Diego was
held. His
skill in curing disease had so endeared him to the Indians that even
the Inca
himself dared not punish him for the attack on the Temple of the Sun.
Friar
Marcos, however, who probably originated the plan, and had done little
to gain
the good will of the Indians, did not fare so well. Calancha says he
was stoned
out of the province and the Inca threatened to kill him if he ever
should
return. Friar Diego, particularly beloved by those Indians who came
from the
fever-stricken jungles in the lower valleys, was allowed to remain, and
finally
became a trusted friend and adviser of Titu Cusi.
One day a Spaniard
named
Romero, an adventurous
prospector for gold, was found penetrating the mountain valleys, and
succeeded
in getting permission from the Inca to see what minerals were there. He
was too
successful. Both gold and silver were found among the hills and he
showed
enthusiastic delight at his good fortune. The Inca, fearing that his
reports
might encourage others to enter Uilcapampa, put the unfortunate
prospector to
death, notwithstanding the protestations of Friar Diego. Foreigners
were not
wanted in Uilcapampa.
In the year 1570, ten
years
after the accession of
Titu Cusi to the Inca throne in Uiticos, a new Spanish viceroy came to
Cuzco.
Unfortunately for the Incas, Don Francisco de Toledo, an indefatigable
soldier
and administrator, was excessively bigoted, narrow-minded, cruel, and
pitiless.
Furthermore, Philip II and his Council of the Indies had decided that
it would
be worth while to make every effort to get the Inca out of Uiticos. For
thirty-five years the Spanish conquerors had occupied Cuzco and the
major
portion of Peru without having been able to secure the submission of
the
Indians who lived in the province of Uilcapampa. It would be a great
feather in
the cap of Toledo if he could induce Titu Cusi to come and live where
he would
always be accessible to Spanish authority.
During the ensuing
rainy
season, after an unusually
lively party, the Inca got soaked, had a chill, and was laid low. In
the
meantime the viceroy had picked out a Cuzco soldier, one Tilano de
Anaya, who
was well liked by the Inca, to try to persuade Titu Cusi to come to
Cuzco. Tilano was instructed to
go by way of Ollantaytambo and the Chuquichaca bridge. Luck was against
him.
Titu Cusi’s illness was very serious. Friar Diego, his physician, had
prescribed the usual remedies. Unfortunately, all the monk’s skill was
unavailing and his royal patient died. The “remedies” were held by Titu
Cusi’s
mother and her counselors to be responsible. The poor friar had had to
stiffer
the penalty of death “for having caused the death of the Inca.”
The
third
son of Manco, Tupac Amaru, brought up as a playfellow of the Virgins of
the Sun
in the ‘Temple near Uiticos, and now happily married, was selected to rule the little
kingdom. His brows were
decked with the Scarlet Fringe of Sovereignty, but, thanks to the
jealous fear
of his powerful illegitimate brother, his training had not been that of
a
soldier. He was destined to have a brief, unhappy existence. When the
young
Inca’s counselors heard that a messenger was coming from the viceroy,
seven
warriors were sent to meet him on the road. Tilano was preparing to
spend the night
at the Chuquichaca bridge when he was attacked and killed.
The viceroy heard of
the murder
of his ambassador at
the same time that he learned of the martyrdom of Friar Diego. A blow
had been
struck at the very heart of Spanish domination; if the representatives
of the
Vice-Regent of Heaven and the messengers of the viceroy of Philip II
were not
inviolable, then who was safe? On Palm Sunday the energetic Toledo,
surrounded
by his council, determined to make war on the unfortunate young Tupac
Amaru and
give a reward to the soldier who would effect his capture. The council
was of
the opinion that “many Insurrections might be raised in that Empire by
this
young Heir.” “Moreover it was alledged,” says Garcilasso...... “That by
the
Imprisonment of the Inca, all that Treasure
might be discovered, which appertained to former kings,
together with that
Chain of Gold, which Huayna Capac commanded to be made for himself to
wear on
the great and solemn days of their Festival”! Furthermore, the “Chain
of Gold
with the remaining Treasure belong’d to
his Catholic Majesty by right of Conquest”! Excuses were not wanting.
The Incas
must be exterminated.
The expedition was
divided into
two parts. One
company was sent by way of Limatambo to Curahuasi, to head off the Inca
in case
he should cross the Apurimac and try to escape by one of the routes
which had
formerly been used by his father, Manco, in his marauding expeditions.
The
other company, under General Martin Hurtado and Captain Garcia, marched
from
Cuzco by way of Yucay and Ollantaytambo. They were more fortunate than
Captain
Villadiego whose force, thirty-five years before, had been met and
destroyed at
the pass of Panticalla. That was in the days of the active Inca Manco.
Now
there was no force defending this important pass. They descended the
Lucumayo
to its junction with the Urubamba and came to the bridge of Chuquichaca.
The narrow suspension
bridge,
built of native
fibers, sagged deeply in the middle and swayed so threateningly over
the gorge
of the Urubamba that only one man could pass it at a time. The rapid
river was
too deep to be forded. There were
no
canoes. It would have been a difficult matter to have constructed
rafts, for
most of the trees that grow here are of hard wood and do not float. On
the
other side of the Urubamba was young Tupac Amaru, surrounded by his
councilors,
chiefs, and soldiers. The first. hostile forces which in Pizarro’s time
had
endeavored to fight their way into Uilcapampa had never been allowed by
Manco
to get as far as this. His youngest son, Tupac Amaru, had had no
experience in
these matters. The chiefs and nobles had failed to defend the pass; and
they
now failed to destroy the Chuquichaca bridge, apparently relying on
their
ability to take care of one Spanish soldier at a time and prevent the
Spaniards
from crossing the narrow, swaying structure. General Hurtado was not
taking any
such chances. He had brought with him one or two light mountain field
pieces,
with which the raw troops of the Inca were little acquainted. The sides
of the
valley at this point rise steeply from the river and the reverberations
caused
by gun fire would be fairly terrifying to those who had never heard
anything
like it before. A few volleys from the guns and the arquebuses, and the
Indians
fled pell-mell in every direction, leaving the bridge undefended.
Captain Garcia, who
had married
the daughter of
Sayri Tupac, was sent in pursuit of the Inca. His men found the road
“narrow in
the ascent, with forest on the right, and on the left a ravine of great
depth.”
It was only a footpath, barely wide enough for two men to pass. Garcia,
with
customary Spanish bravery, marched at the head of his company. Suddenly
out of
the thick forest an Inca chieftain named Hualpa, endeavoring to protect
the
flight of Tupac Amaru, sprang on Garcia, held him so that he could not
get at
his sword and endeavored to hurl him over the cliff. The captain’s life
was
saved by a faithful Indian servant who was following immediately behind
him,
carrying his sword. Drawing it from the scabbard “with much dexterity
and
animation,” the Indian killed Hualpa and saved his master’s life.
Garcia fought several
battles,
took some forts and
succeeded in capturing many prisoners. From them it was learned that
the Inca
had “gone inland toward the valley of Simaponte; and that he was flying
to the
country of the Manaries Indians, a warlike tribe and his friends, where
balsas
and canoes were posted to save him and enable him to escape.” Nothing
daunted
by the dangers of the jungle nor the rapids of the river, Garcia
finally
managed to construct five rafts, on which he put some of his soldiers.
Accompanying them himself, he descended the rapids, escaping death many
times
by swimming, and finally arrived at a place called Momori, only to find
that
the Inca, learning of their approach, had gone farther into the woods.
Garcia
followed hard after, although he and his men were by this time
barefooted and
suffering from want of food. They finally captured the Inca. Garcilasso
says
that Tupac Amaru, “considering that he had not People to make
resistance, and
that he was not conscious to himself of any Crime, or disturbance he
had done
or raised, suffered himself to be taken; choosing rather to entrust
himself in
the hands of the Spaniards, than to perish in those Mountains with
Famine, or
be drowned in those great Rivers.... The Spaniards in this manner
seizing on
the Inca, and on all the Indian Men and Women, who were in Company with
him,
amongst which was his Wife, two Sons, and a Daughter, returned with
them in Triumph
to Cuzco; to which place the Vice-King went, so soon as he was
in-formed of the
imprisonment of the poor Prince.” A mock trial was held. The captured
chiefs
were tortured to death with fiendish brutality. Tupac Amaru’s wife was
mangled
before his eyes. His own head was cut off and placed on a pole in the
Cuzco
Plaza. His little boys did not long survive. So perished the last of
the Incas,
descendants of the wisest Indian rulers America has ever seen.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE
LAST FOUR
INCAS
1534. The Inca Manco
ascends the throne of his fathers.
1536. Manco
flees
from Cuzco to Uiticos and Uilcapampa.
1542. Promulgation of
the “New
Laws.”
1545. Murder of Manco
and accession of his son Sayri
Tupac.
1555. Sayri
Tupac goes to Cuzco and Yucay.
1560. Death of Sayri
Tupac. His half brother Titu Cusi becomes Inca.
1566. Friar Marcos
reaches
Uiticos. Settles in
Puquiura.
1566. Friar Diego
joins him.
1508-9 (?). They burn
the House
of the Sun at Yurac
Rumi in Chuquipalpa.
1571. Titu Cusi
dies. Friar Diego suffers
martyrdom. Tupac Amaru becomes Inca.
1572. Expedition of
General
Martin Hurtado and
Captain Garcia de Loyola. Execution of Tupac Amaru.
_______________
1
Another version of this event is that the quarrel was over a game of chess between the Inca and Diego Mendez,
another of the refugees, who lost his temper and called the Inca a dog.
Angered
at the tone and language of his guest, the Inca gave him a blow with
his fist.
Diego Mendez thereupon drew a dagger and killed him. A totally
different
account from the one obtained by Garcilasso from his informants is that
in a
volume purporting to have been dictated to Friar Marcos by Manco’s son,
Titu
Cusi, twenty years after the event. I quote from Sir Clements Markham’s
translation:
“After these Spaniards had been
with my Father for several years in the said town of Viticos they were
one day,
with much good fellow-ship, playing at quoits with him; only them, my
Father
and me, who was then a boy [ten years old]. Without having any
suspicion,
although an Indian woman, named Banba, had said that the Spaniards
wanted to
murder the Inca, my Father was playing with them as usual. In this
game, just
as my Father was raising the quoit to throw, they all rushed upon him
with
knives, daggers and some swords. My Father, feeling himself wounded,
strove to
make some defence, but he was one and unarmed, and they were seven
fully armed;
he fell to the ground covered with wounds, and they left him for dead.
I, being
a little boy, and seeing my Father treated in this manner, wanted to go
where
he was to help him. But they turned furiously upon me, and hurled a
lance which
only just failed to kill me also. I was terrified and fled amongst some
bushes.
They looked for me, but could not find me. The Spaniards, seeing that
my Father
had ceased to breathe, went out of the gate, in high spirits, saying,
‘Now that
we have killed the Inca we have nothing to fear.’ But at this moment
the
captain Rimachi Yupanqui arrived with some Antis, and presently chased
them in
such sort that, before they could get very far along a difficult road,
they
were caught and pulled from their horses. They all had to suffer very
cruel
deaths and some were burnt. Notwithstanding his wounds my Father lived
for
three days.’’
Another version is
given by
Montesinos in his Anales. It is
more like Titu Cusi’s.
2 A
Spanish derivative from the Quichua mucha “a kiss.”
Muchani means
‘to adore, to reverence, to kiss the hands.’
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