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You've
probably heard about the people called the Incas. They
were the last and greatest of Perú's many ''.
If you've looked at my other slide shows, you'll already have seen pictures
of some of the buildings and carvings made by earlier peoples (Chan Chan
city of the Moche people, Sechín and Chavín). The Incas
created a great empire called Tawantinsuyu which stretched well beyond
the limits of present-day Perú.
At its peak, it was twice the size of Spain.
Perú
is not an easy country to live in. Part of it is desert, part dense jungle
but most of it is high mountain. To make matters worse, it suffers regular
earthquakes and terrible landslides as well as having a couple of active
volcanoes. So how did the people manage to survive here at all?
The Inca
state was well organised. They had a system of roads (over 15,000 kilometres
of them!) so that messages could be quickly sent through the kingdom using
a system of runners. The people built terraces (andenes from which
the name 'Andes' comes) on the mountainsides to make small strips of flat
land which they used to grow crops like potatoes, for Perú is the
home of the potato. They built acequias - channels to carry water
to the crops and to towns. And they also had incredible skills in building
with stone. Inca stonemasons carved blocks so that they fitted perfectly
into other blocks in the walls of buildings, locking together so tightly
that you can't push a knife-blade between them. I know - I've tried! These
strong walls helped resist earthquakes and needed no mortar to stick them
together. But even more incredible is the size of some of the neatly-fitting
stones they used. Some are many times higher than I am as you'll see.
How could they manage all this without modern machines? Nobody knows for
sure except that they did!
In
my slide show, I visit the great fortress above Cuzco, the Inca capital.
The Incas fought a terrible battle here against the Spanish conquistadors
(conquerors) - and lost. The Sacred Valley of the Incas is just a few
miles to the north. Here there's some flat land on the valley floor with
a great river - the Rio Urubamba - flowing through the middle of it. Further
downstream, this river flows far below the famous Machu Picchu ruins.
But here in the Sacred Valley, the Incas grew many food crops as people
still do today. Perched high above this
valley at Pisac is a wonderful set of Inca buildings where my friends
found a stone bath.
It was
here in the Sacred Valley that my friends and I tried some of the local
drink called chicha. This is a sort of beer made from fermented
maize.
Click
here to see my slide show
And that,
kids, is that. I didn't set a very good example there, did I? But me getting
tiddly on chicha was also a good way to celebrate the end of my
trip. Which means that this is the end of my Perú slide shows.
Hope you enjoyed travelling around with me in this wonderful country!
Back
to Perú slide shows home page
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The
conquistadors: the Spanish conquest of America
Question:
What happened in 1492?
Everyone
knows that, don't they? The Spanish 'discovered' America. Of course,
America had been discovered long before by other peoples who had,
over thousands of years, built up their own empires and cultures.
You probably know aboutthe Incas of Perú, the Aztecs and Mayas of
Mexico.
But the
Spanish, the first European colonists to reach the Americas, set
about conquering all these peoples. They managed this partly because
they had horses and guns (which the native people had never seen)
and partly because they used every mean trick in the book. The conquistador
who conquered the Incas was called Francisco Pizarro. He had with
him just 180 soldiers. What they wanted more than anything was gold.
It was this greed for gold - which the Incas had in large amounts
- which became the driving force behind the brutal war against the
Andean peoples. But the conquistadors pretended that their
real reason for conquering the native people was to make them follow
the Christian religion. The Incas worshipped the Sun god, called
Inti. So the conquistadors set about destroying all
the Inca temples and built churches on the ruins. The people were
forced to abandon their old religion.
Within a
few years, the Spanish ruled most of Latin America (though the Portuguese
had bagged Brazil). Further north, the British, French and Dutch
had done the same with North America - what are now the USA and
Canada. The native peoples suffered terribly in every case, losing
their lands and, often, their lives. Many died from European diseases
like smallpox. And though today, all American countries are independent,
the native people often remain poor, second-class citizens.
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