10.3 - spanish speaking south america

21
Spanish Speaking Spanish Speaking South America South America

Upload: dan-ewert

Post on 19-May-2015

1.805 views

Category:

Education


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Some history of Spanish speaking South America.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

Spanish SpeakingSpanish SpeakingSouth AmericaSouth America

Page 2: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• We’re going to look at this part of South America first and then we’ll look at Brazil next (they speak Portuguese there, not Spanish).

Page 3: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

The Incas

• The Incan civilization was located in modern-day Peru.

• They lasted from about 1200 to 1550.

Page 4: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• It was a fairly powerful civilization (for the time and area, anyway) that dominated the area.

• Among the more interesting points about the Incas:

• They spoke Quechua. This came to be the standard language of the area and there are still around 12 million people who still speak some version of it.

Page 5: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• Their record-keeping method was called quipu.

• This was a system of knotted strings.

Page 6: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America
Page 7: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• It may resemble an old mop, but it practically amounted to a system writing. The sort of knots used and their placement determined what they said.

Page 8: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• They had an alcoholic beverage called chicha that was made by fermenting maize (corn) that was essentially corn beer.

Page 9: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• We already looked at Machu Picchu.

Page 10: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America
Page 11: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• Cute little guinea pigs are indigenous (native) to this area and they were domesticated and bred by the Incas.

Page 12: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• Errr… here’s the thing, though.

• They ate them.

Page 13: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America
Page 14: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• Guinea pig is actually still a staple food of the Peruvian people and they eat around 65 million of them each year.

• Apparently, they taste like rabbit and are delicious.

Page 15: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• They’re actually a good food source since they’re high in protein, low in fat and cholesterol, require less food than livestock, take up a lot space than livestock, reproduce quickly, and can be raised in urban environments.

• It was and is so important to Peru that paintings of the Last Supper show them eating guinea pig.

Page 16: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

Spanish Conquest

• The Incas are eventually conquered by the Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro in 1532, not long after Cortez took out the Aztecs.

Page 17: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• The main “battle” was the Battle of Cajamarca.

• The Incan emperor was simply known as The Inca. He had absolute power and was considered divine.

• The emperor at the time was Atahualpa. By the time Pizarro came along, he had just won a civil war against his brother Huascar who was now imprisoned.

• Nearly 100,000 people died in this civil war and when he won, Atahualpa exercised terrible retribution on the opposition.

Page 18: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

Atahualpa

Page 19: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• Atahualpa had agreed to meet with Pizarro at Cajamarca.

• This was in the interior and he had an overwhelming force. He had little to fear from Pizarro whom he figured couldn’t get out of the country anyway.

• In an encounter with Hernan de Soto, de Soto does some equestrian tricks, including running straight at Atahualpa and stopping just inches from him. Others were scared, but Atahualpa didn’t even blink. He was tough.

Page 20: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• At Cajamarca, Atahualpa had an army of 80,000. The Spaniards had an army of 168.

• Most of the 80,000 stayed encamped outside the city. Atahualpa entered with only 4,000 of his entourage who were unarmed as a show of good faith.

• Pizarro, though, had stationed his men, cavalry and 3 small cannons around the plaza.

• After some talking, the Spaniards attacked, slaughtered all 4,000 Incas and took Atahualpa hostage.

• Only 2 Spaniards were injured and they were accidents.

Page 21: 10.3 - Spanish Speaking South America

• Incan authority was highly centralized and they were nearly paralyzed without Atahualpa.

• Atahualpa agrees to buy his freedom by filling a room once with gold and twice with silver. He does, but he’s not released. The Spaniards eventually execute him.

• The Spaniards continue conquering the Incan empire. It takes nearly 40 years to completely stamp out resistance.