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Page 1: Incan Civilization and Culture

Incan Civilization and Culture

Page 2: Incan Civilization and Culture

The Incan Empire

• The Inca civilization began as a small group of warlike people.

• At one time, their empire stretched 2,500 miles from Ecuador down the Pacific coast through Argentina.

• Today, Incas mostly live in the Andes Mountain region and in southern Peru.

Page 3: Incan Civilization and Culture

The Emperors• The first emperor of the

Incas was Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui.

• The emperor lived in the capital city of Cuzco located in the country of Peru.

• The 13th and last emperor of the Inca Empire was Atahualpa.

• Atahualpa was captured by Spaniards and executed in 1533.

• His death marked the end of the Inca Empire.

Page 4: Incan Civilization and Culture

Inca Farming• Most Incas worked as

farmers and lived in mud huts.

• They would carve large steps up the side of the mountain creating flat land for farming.

• This type of farming is called terrace gardening .

• No one ever went hungry, because enough food was grown to feed the entire empire.

Page 5: Incan Civilization and Culture

Great Incan Accomplishments

• In order to bring water to the large terraces high in the mountains, Incas built aqueducts.

• An aqueduct is a pipe or channel designed to carry water from a distant source.

• The Incas were also excellent road builders and managers.

• They built more than 14,000 miles of road over some of the most mountainous land in the world.

• These roads helped them to control their large empire.

Page 6: Incan Civilization and Culture

Inca Crime and Punishment• All of the Incas worked together to

provide for the empire, there was no reason to steal and as a result no prisons.

• The worst crimes one could commit were murder and saying something bad about the gods.

• Punishment for these crimes was being thrown off a cliff.

• Smaller crimes were punished by cutting off the hands and feet or gouging out the eyes.

Page 7: Incan Civilization and Culture

Pizarro Conquers the Incas• Francisco Pizarro, like Cortes, was

a Spanish conquistador that had heard stories of the rich Inca kingdom.

• In 1531, he sailed to South America with 180 soldiers.

• Pizzaro captured and killed the Incan emperor and other leaders, taking over the entire empire by 1535.

• The Spanish had guns, cannons, and horses that native Americans had never seen before.

• These advantages, plus the spread of European diseases aided in the swift takeover of South America.

Page 8: Incan Civilization and Culture

Colonization and Conquest• By the 1540’s, colonization and conquest had changed the development of South

America. • Natives were forced to learn Spanish and convert to Christianity.• Spain even gave it’s settlers the right to demand taxes and labor from the natives. • Many Native Americans died from overwork, malnutrition, and European diseases.• The native population shrank from 25 million to only 3 million within the first 50 years of

Spanish rule.• Colonization and Conquest had the greatest influence on the early development of South

America.


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