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- Inca Empire - Wikipedia
The Inca Empire, [a] officially known as the Realm of the Four Parts (Quechua: Tawantinsuyu pronounced [taˈwantiŋ ˈsuju], lit 'land of four parts'[5]), was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America [6] The administrative, political, and military center of the empire was in the city of Cusco
- The Great Inka Road: Engineering an Empire
The Inka Empire rose rapidly and burned bright In little more than 100 years, it grew from a small kingdom in the highlands of Peru to become the largest empire in the Americas
- Inca | Ancient Empire, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile, Quechua, Culture . . .
Inca religion was a highly organized state religion, combining animism, fetishism, and the worship of nature gods It included elaborate forms of divination and sacrifices, with the sun god Inti being the head of the pantheon How did the Inca empire facilitate communication and transportation?
- The Inka, an introduction - Smarthistory
The Inka empire at its greatest extent sprawled from the modern-day city of Quito in Ecuador to Santiago in Chile The Inka called their empire Tawantinsuyu, usually translated as “Land of the Four Quarters” in their language, Quechua At the center of the empire was the capital city of Cusco
- Inka - Summary - eHRAF Archaeology
While the original Inka homeland was the Cuzco valley of south-central Peru, the Inka empire eventually encompassed the Andean highlands and much of the Pacific coastal zone from northern Ecuador at the Colombian border, to north-central Chile and northwestern Argentina, in the vicinity of Santiago and Mendoza
- Inca: Empire, Religion Civilization | HISTORY
Grab your fedora and bullwhip as we unearth eight amazing yet obscure ancient empires in this episode of History Countdown The Inca first appeared in modern-day Peru sometime during the 12th
- Inka stone vessels – Smarthistory
The British Museum’s collection includes both Inka (1400-1531 C E ) and Inka-colonial (sixteenth – eighteenth century) objects These range from large stone offering vessels (cocha) to miniature gold and silver figurines that were once used as offerings to the mountain deities in Inka state rituals
- History Timeline | The Inka Empire
Fourteen thousand years of unique cultures preceded the Inka in the Andes Four in particular— Chavín, Tiwanaku, Wari, and Chimú — influenced Inka traditions and laid the groundwork for the rise of the Inka Empire and the Qhapaq Ñan, or Great Inka Road system
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