There were ayllus in Hanan Cusco (upper) and Hurnin Cusco (lower). Each Sapa had his own Allyu. For example, Pachacuti's descendants formed the Hatun ayllu and Topa Inca Yupanqui's desendants formed the Qhapaq ayllu. Members of an ayllu were responsible for maintaining the lands, crops, and animals on the land in which their Sapa had found.
the paharoahsThe members of Capac Ayllu clan.
The foundation of Incan Society was the ayllu. Each ayllu had its own farmland and homes, but the ayllu did not own the land. The government loaned land to the ayllus for living and for farming. The people of an ayllu then worked this communal land cooperatively to grow crops and produce goods.
A yanakuna is an individual in the Inca Empire who left the ayllu system and worked full-time at a variety of tasks for the Inca, their queen or the religious establishment.
Sorry you should know it yourself.
Sorry you should know it yourself.
A community ofa lot of families that didn't own land because the emperor controlled all of the Inca civilizations land.
1/3 to the gods 1/3 to the sapa inca 1/3 to for them to have
ayllu
The alluy
No, the emperor gave the land to each ayllu, which was allowed to live and farm on the plot of land.
In Inca society, the land was collectively owned by the ayllu members, and each family within the ayllu was allocated a portion of land for cultivation. Ownership of the land was communal, and individuals had rights to use the land but did not own it in the modern sense of private property.
The alluy