yes, they sure did.
Yes, the Incas did fight back when Francisco Pizarro and his Spanish forces attacked. Led by their emperor, Atahualpa, the Incas initially resisted the Spanish invaders, engaging in battles such as the skirmish at Cajamarca. However, they were ultimately outmatched due to the Spanish's superior weaponry, tactics, and the impact of disease on the Inca population. The combination of these factors led to the swift downfall of the Inca Empire.
The Sapa Inca or Inka
Amautas, were the tutors to the Inca nobility
Sapa Inca
yes, they sure did.
Yes, the Incas did fight back when Francisco Pizarro and his Spanish forces attacked. Led by their emperor, Atahualpa, the Incas initially resisted the Spanish invaders, engaging in battles such as the skirmish at Cajamarca. However, they were ultimately outmatched due to the Spanish's superior weaponry, tactics, and the impact of disease on the Inca population. The combination of these factors led to the swift downfall of the Inca Empire.
The Sapa Inca or Inka
The Sapa Inca was on the top of the Inca society.
He decided that the Inca's needed help, so the Inca King wanted to to rule to help out.
Amautas, were the tutors to the Inca nobility
We do not have first-hand information from the Inca people about the beginnings of their empire because the Inca did not have a written language. People who study the Inca civilization have pieced together information from different sources. They believe that the Inca people started living in the Cuzco Valley in A.D. 1100. By the early 1400s, the Inca empire still reached only 20 miles beyond the capital city of Cuzco. Rulers Viracocha Inca, and later his son, Pachacuti Inca, increased the size of the Inca empire through conquest. From the 1400s to the early 1500s, the empire grew and developed. After a civil war in the Inca empire, the triumphant ruler Atahualpa agreed to meet with a Spanish explorer named Francisco Pizarro. This was in the year 1532. Instead of the peaceful meeting Atahualpa expected, the Spaniards took him captive. Atahualpa tried to meet the Spaniards' demands for silver and gold, but he was killed in 1533. The Inca army fought the Spaniards but lost the war in 1536. Inca warriors continued to fight the Spaniards. When the last Inca leader was killed in 1572, the Inca empire was officially over. Like the Aztecs, many inhabitants of the Inca empire died as a result of the diseases the explorers unknowingly brought with them. The Spaniards forced the Inca to convert to Christianity.
there was no topa inca
The Sapa Inca is the highest rank in the Inca class structure. Also known as the emperor the Incan civilization.
Sapa Inca
coya
inca