my coco
The Incas were weaked by the Civil War before the Spanish came.
Alexander the Great took over the Empire.
The war of two brothers, Huáscar and Atahualpa, weakened the Inca Empire by leading to a devastating civil conflict that drained resources, divided loyalties, and destabilized the central authority. Their struggle for power weakened the empire's military strength, making it vulnerable to external threats, particularly the Spanish conquistadors. Additionally, the internecine strife disrupted agricultural production and trade, further exacerbating the empire's decline. Ultimately, the fragmentation caused by their rivalry paved the way for the Spanish conquest.
The Spanish conquistadors formed alliances with enemies of the Aztecs. Also, European diseases such as smallpox severely weakened the Aztecs. Once the Spaniards captured Montezuma, their leader, the Aztec empire soon fell.
The Inca Empire was already weakened because of their civil war.
The problems that weakened the Spanish Empire included economic decline due to costly wars, inflation from importing silver, inefficient government bureaucracy, and rebellions in colonies seeking independence.
The Incas were weaked by the Civil War before the Spanish came.
Some problems that weakened the Inca Empire were internal civil wars over succession, a smallpox epidemic that devastated the population, and a lack of immunity to European diseases brought by the Spanish. Additionally, the empire's vast size made it difficult to govern effectively and respond quickly to external threats.
Songahi
The Inca Empire was weakened by European exploration and colonization through introduced diseases, warfare, and the conquest led by Spanish conquistadors like Francisco Pizarro. These factors resulted in the downfall of the Inca Empire and the eventual colonization of the region by the Spanish.
Alexander the Great took over the Empire.
The decline of the Inca Empire was primarily due to the arrival of Spanish conquistadors led by Francisco Pizarro in the 16th century. The Inca were vulnerable to Spanish diseases, conquered through military tactics, and weakened by internal divisions that the Spanish exploited. This ultimately led to the fall of the Inca Empire.
Civil war among Inca rulers weakened the empire and made it susceptible to outside conquest. Additionally, the arrival of diseases introduced by the Spanish, such as smallpox, decimated the Inca population, further destabilizing the empire and making it easier for the Spanish to conquer.
the umayyads
Diseases from Europe that the Spanish were immune to affected and weakened the natives.
The war of two brothers, Huáscar and Atahualpa, weakened the Inca Empire by leading to a devastating civil conflict that drained resources, divided loyalties, and destabilized the central authority. Their struggle for power weakened the empire's military strength, making it vulnerable to external threats, particularly the Spanish conquistadors. Additionally, the internecine strife disrupted agricultural production and trade, further exacerbating the empire's decline. Ultimately, the fragmentation caused by their rivalry paved the way for the Spanish conquest.
The Tang Empire was weakened by a peasant revolt led by Huang Chao weakened the empire. The emperors were incompetent after Emperor Xuanzong. The Emperor Ai was forced to abdicate in 907 AD.