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  2. Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_conquest_of_the...

    The Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire, also known as the Conquest of Peru, was one of the most important campaigns in the Spanish colonization of the Americas.After years of preliminary exploration and military skirmishes, 168 Spanish soldiers under conquistador Francisco Pizarro, along with his brothers in arms and their indigenous allies, captured the last Sapa Inca, Atahualpa, at the ...

  3. History of the Incas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Incas

    The Inca state was known as the Kingdom of Cuzco before 1438. Over the course of the Inca Empire, the Inca used conquest and peaceful assimilation to incorporate the territory of modern-day Peru, followed by a large portion of western South America, into their empire, centered on the Andean mountain range.

  4. Inca Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inca_Empire

    The Spanish began the conquest of the Inca Empire in 1532, and by 1572 the last Inca state was fully conquered. From 1438 to 1533, the Incas incorporated a large portion of western South America , centered on the Andean Mountains, using conquest and peaceful assimilation, among other methods.

  5. Francisco Pizarro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisco_Pizarro

    Conquest of the Incas, John Hemming, 1973. ISBN 0-15-602826-3; The Discovery and Conquest of Peru by William H. Prescott. ISBN 0-7607-6137-X; Fiction. Cajamarca o la Leyenda Negra, a tragedy for the theater in Spanish by Santiago Sevilla in Liceus El Portal de las Humanidades; Pizarro, a tragedy, by Richard Brinsley Sheridan, in Google books

  6. Siege of Cusco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Cusco

    Francisco Pizarro, Hernando's older brother, received chief rights of discovery and conquest in Peru, or New Castile, and the Governorship of the territory from King Charles I of Spain in the Capitulation of July 1529. [1] Pizarro and his Spanish conquistadors invaded Peru and captured Atahualpa, the Sapa Inca, on November 16, 1532, at ...

  7. History of Peru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Peru

    When the Spanish arrived in the sixteenth century, Peru was the homeland of the highland Inca Empire, the largest and most advanced state in pre-Columbian America. After the conquest of the Incas, the Spanish Empire established a Viceroyalty with jurisdiction over most of its South American domains.

  8. Battle of Cajamarca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Cajamarca

    Following Pizarro's assassination in 1541, she married the interpreter Juan de Betanzos who later wrote Narratives of the Incas, part one covering Inca history up to the arrival of the Spanish and part two covering the conquest to 1557, mainly from the Inca viewpoint and including mentions of interviews with Inca guards who were near Atahualpa ...

  9. Inca Civil War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inca_Civil_War

    The estimated population of the Inca empire before an epidemic (probably of a European disease) and the Spanish conquest is estimated at between 6 and 14 million people. [34] The civil war, an epidemic, and the Spanish conquest resulted in a population decline over several decades estimated as 20:1 or 25:1, meaning that the population declined ...