He was charismatic as well as a skilled military leader (the Napoleon of the Andes).
Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui was the Inca leader that greatly expanded the Inca empire. Machu Picchu was built for him as a palace.
The Inca roads were built by the Inca civilization, a pre-Columbian civilization that existed in South America. The roads were constructed primarily by the labor of thousands of Inca workers, who painstakingly built and maintained the extensive network of roads that connected the Inca Empire.
Machu Picchu was built by the Inca Empire in the 15th century. It served as a royal estate or retreat for the Inca rulers.
The Inca built an extensive network of roads, known as the Inca road system, spanning thousands of miles across their empire. They also constructed impressive suspension bridges, such as the Q'eswachaka bridge, to traverse difficult terrain and maintain communication and trade between distant regions.
inca
built a system of roadways throughout their empires
Pachacuti built the Inca Empire with a large, powerful army.
A fortress built by the Colla people, and adapted for use in the Inca empire. It is currently a ruin that is along the Inca trail.
they built huge walls
The Inca built thousands of miles of roads to link all parts of the empire to their capital at Cuzco in present-day Peru...(Btw I got this in a book)
The roads built by the Inca empire were primarily used by the Inca people and their armies for transportation, communication, and trade. These roads were also used by other indigenous groups, messengers, and traders. After the Spanish conquest, the roads were used by the Spanish colonizers and later by indigenous and mestizo populations during the colonial period.
the inca built the ancheint road system through the andes