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sacred animals, and used them for food and clothing","They built an advanced system of roads and bridges that helped them control their empire",1,{"id":36,"data":37,"type":38,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":34},"9d68c12d-e11f-43f0-bd34-6f1813b8d3fc",{"type":38,"intro":39},10,[40,41],"Who was the first ever Incan ruler, and what was special about his staff?","Which spitting animal did the Incas regard as sacred?",[43,59,94],{"id":44,"data":45,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":48},"349c2b03-c5b1-4554-aa1f-795d702df6e1",{"type":34,"markdownContent":46,"audioMediaId":47},"The Incas were a powerful civilization that flourished in the Andes Mountains of South America. They built impressive cities like Cusco and Machu Picchu, with monumental buildings constructed using large stones cut and fitted together without mortar.\n\n![Graph](image://8f24ce6c-e2f1-4aa8-90bf-b4df7d090e8f \"Machu Picchu today. Image: Diego Delso, CC BY-SA 4.0 \u003Chttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\")\n\nThe Incas’ territory was rich in gold, silver and other precious metals, which they often used for religious purposes, like making intricate staffs for priests. They also venerated llamas as sacred animals, as well as using them for food and clothing.\n\nThe Incas were ruled by emperors known as the Sapa Inca, who held absolute power over their subjects. At the height of its power, this empire stretched all the way down the western coast of South America, from modern Ecuador to Chile.","cbbaf93a-919f-4302-9c94-7283d6ec6422",[49],{"id":50,"data":51,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"22ab760d-beeb-4bc1-9c2c-8b3d7b1c8325",{"type":52,"reviewType":20,"spacingBehaviour":34,"binaryQuestion":53,"binaryCorrect":55,"binaryIncorrect":57},11,[54],"The Incas were ruled by emperors known as what?",[56],"The Sapa Inca",[58],"The Supo Inca",{"id":60,"data":61,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":64},"601626a9-ee02-4888-94e8-deb752819bfb",{"type":34,"markdownContent":62,"audioMediaId":63},"The Incas started off as a farming settlement in the Andes mountains of Peru. Their first ruler was Manco Capac, who was said to carry a golden staff. According to legend, he and his sisters built the city of Cusco after Manco Capac had stuck this staff in the ground.\n\nThe Incas continued to grow in strength, and in the 15th century, they started to build an empire. Whenever they encountered another tribe, they tried to come to diplomatic agreements, but if the tribe refused, the Incas would use their military might instead.\n\n![Graph](image://4c41205c-583e-41ac-a7af-dab9809b71b6 \"Manco Capac. Image: Rodolfo pimentel, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons\")\n\nWhile the Incas’ territory was rich in gold and precious metals, they did not have access to iron or steel. Because of this, they used wooden weapons, like clubs and spears. Sometimes, they would also take advantage of the mountainous terrain, rolling rocks down slopes to crush enemy soldiers.","cc22a289-7c53-4dbc-a069-f4b44bcf52f8",[65,85],{"id":66,"data":67,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"dc006b7a-bf90-47ce-99c0-3f1198e2ffe9",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"collapsingSiblings":68,"multiChoiceQuestion":72,"multiChoiceCorrect":74,"multiChoiceIncorrect":76,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":6,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6,"matchPairsQuestion":80,"matchPairsPairs":82},[69,70,71],"9bb88b83-320d-455c-9ae9-5a9d1bfd7fc2","bc300c67-d3f5-40ec-b52d-1a6b4d6d577e","9318d734-6375-45a1-9f9a-c9d51e3e936f",[73],"Which of these figures founded the Incan Empire?",[75],"Manco Capac",[77,78,79],"Osman I","Sonni Ali the Great","Isabella & Ferdinand",[81],"Match the pairs below:",[83],{"left":75,"right":84,"direction":19},"Incan empire",{"id":86,"data":87,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"4a291704-9afd-4858-9fe1-32ce7bf7f4f1",{"type":52,"reviewType":20,"spacingBehaviour":34,"binaryQuestion":88,"binaryCorrect":90,"binaryIncorrect":92},[89],"According to legend, which city did Manco Capac and his sisters build?",[91],"Cusco",[93],"Lima",{"id":95,"data":96,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":99},"ea18f07e-911b-4c3c-ac97-c191c5ceedf0",{"type":34,"markdownContent":97,"audioMediaId":98},"As the Incas claimed more and more territory, they also made sure to build infrastructure which kept their empire interconnected.\n\nThey built roads through mountains and valleys, which meant that goods, messages and government officials could travel easily from place to place. They even constructed rope bridges over treacherous ravines and gorges. These bridges were extremely strong, and marvels of early modern engineering.\n\n![Graph](image://29f8127d-2c5c-4eba-bbd1-0f3c7dfd1cf7 \"Incan bridge. Image: Ondando, CC BY-SA 3.0 \u003Chttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\")\n\nThese roads and bridges were suitable for llamas, which were often used for transport, as well as chasqui runners: professional messengers who carried documents around the empire. All in all, it was an advanced system – especially for the time – which helped the Incas to maintain communication and control.\n\n![Graph](image://c48c7257-4def-403f-959d-151a5b9f81d6 \"Chasqui runner. Image: Public domain\")","1e38911e-b925-4cac-bb58-d735e08cbc42",[100,119,137,149,157],{"id":101,"data":102,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"a93c7be0-5ded-4f5a-b2c3-df4cb9138200",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"collapsingSiblings":103,"multiChoiceQuestion":107,"multiChoiceCorrect":109,"multiChoiceIncorrect":111,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":6,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6,"matchPairsQuestion":115,"matchPairsPairs":116},[104,105,106],"19d5fbfc-75ce-4cdf-96d2-9e5b209f3158","ab4ca573-85f5-4369-aa63-92b4faac17d1","a2f86bf3-58eb-437a-b93a-990cb8adf3cb",[108],"Which of these was the original home of the Incas?",[110],"Andes",[112,113,114],"Anatolia","Niger River","Caspian coast",[81],[117],{"left":118,"right":110,"direction":19},"Original home of the Incas",{"id":120,"data":121,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"48e0cb9b-d586-4b03-9c54-f095afa488ac",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"collapsingSiblings":122,"multiChoiceQuestion":126,"multiChoiceCorrect":128,"multiChoiceIncorrect":129,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":6,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6,"matchPairsQuestion":133,"matchPairsPairs":134},[123,124,125],"08172239-0df5-407c-a725-404b019f3bc1","61158cd0-f932-46cd-8a44-8c5e7bffd55a","ad026844-7427-4988-9b74-68ec0501dc0a",[127],"Which of these was the Incan capital?",[91],[130,131,132],"Tenochtitlán","Timbuktu","Tabriz",[81],[135],{"left":136,"right":91,"direction":19},"Incan capital",{"id":138,"data":139,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"b4fcd437-81ee-4a60-901c-7b94daeff34c",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"multiChoiceQuestion":140,"multiChoiceCorrect":142,"multiChoiceIncorrect":145,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":148,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6},[141],"Which of these materials was abundant in Incan territories?",[143,144],"Gold","Silver",[146,147],"Iron","Steel",true,{"id":150,"data":151,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"cf93d570-d959-423b-976b-352304e607ad",{"type":52,"reviewType":152,"spacingBehaviour":34,"clozeQuestion":153,"clozeWords":155},4,[154],"The Incas built roads through mountains and valleys, and rope bridges over ravines.",[156],"rope bridges",{"id":158,"data":159,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"35a3f14c-9368-4d3a-b0cf-cd22e17b116a",{"type":52,"reviewType":20,"spacingBehaviour":34,"binaryQuestion":160,"binaryCorrect":162,"binaryIncorrect":164},[161],"What was the name of the professional messengers employed throughout the Inca empire?",[163],"Chasqui runners",[165],"Quipu runners",{"id":167,"data":168,"type":20,"version":20,"maxContentLevel":19,"summaryPage":170,"introPage":177,"pages":183},"05250a08-885e-4d55-b1c2-e1024fc8ae03",{"type":20,"title":169},"Knots and gold",{"id":171,"data":172,"type":19,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":34},"b86bae86-6c30-485a-b83c-a8eab13447e9",{"type":19,"summary":173},[174,175,176],"The Incas used a system of quipu knots for communication and record-keeping","Llamas played a significant role in Inca religion and stories","Gold was considered sacred by the Incas, and represented the sun's regenerative powers",{"id":178,"data":179,"type":38,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":34},"29358a7e-953b-4d80-873c-d9c1dadc14cb",{"type":38,"intro":180},[181,182],"What was unique about the Incan writing system?","What precious metal did the Incas call sweat of the sun?",[184,201,225],{"id":185,"data":186,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":189},"28058f5d-34f3-450d-b82a-4865cda7a2c9",{"type":34,"markdownContent":187,"audioMediaId":188},"\nThe Incas did have a writing system, but it was unlike anything else in the world. They communicated using quipu knots: strings of knotted cords, usually made from cotton or animal fibres.\n\nThe knots were tied in different ways to represent different numerical values. This allowed the Incas to keep track of their taxes and census data with great accuracy. These records were often carried around the empire by the chasqui messengers.\n\nHistorians believe that quipus were used for more than just numerical records; they think the Incas also used them to store words and literary content such as stories or poems. Unfortunately, though, any stories told by quipu knots are yet to be decoded.\n\n![Graph](image://0f5b90dd-38d6-424d-92f1-31ade6905eac \"Quipu knots. Image: Claus Ableiter nur hochgeladen aus enWiki, CC BY-SA 3.0 \u003Chttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/>, via Wikimedia Commons\")","9c5741cc-d218-41ed-9b76-d1cb438854f0",[190],{"id":191,"data":192,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"6dae7598-6702-4520-bcf9-b1fee5714982",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"multiChoiceQuestion":193,"multiChoiceCorrect":195,"multiChoiceIncorrect":197,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":6,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6},[194],"How did the Incas keep track of their taxes and census data?",[196],"Quipu knots",[198,199,200],"Deer-hide codices","Clay tablets","Oral reports",{"id":202,"data":203,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":206},"3749797d-fabc-48c2-9a6d-cfec8b3cd4fd",{"type":34,"markdownContent":204,"audioMediaId":205},"The Incas believed in a pantheon of gods, with the sun god Inti being the most important. They built temples to honor him, such as the Sun Temple in Cusco, which had walls completely covered by sheets of gold.\n\nLlamas were also important animals in Inca religion, and played a role in many of their oldest stories. For example, in one story, the llamas warned people to move to higher ground. Afterwards, a flood swept through the valley, washing away all the people who did not listen.\n\nThe Incas often sacrificed llamas and alpacas, but they only practiced human sacrifice on rare occasions, like an emperor’s funeral. The sacrifices were usually children, probably because adults were no longer innocent and pure.","db2b15be-46e5-40be-b98c-3ca1f0836798",[207,214],{"id":208,"data":209,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"5ab865c5-069c-4562-816f-071e34ea7132",{"type":52,"reviewType":34,"spacingBehaviour":34,"activeRecallQuestion":210,"activeRecallAnswers":212},[211],"Who was the Incan god of the sun?",[213],"Inti",{"id":215,"data":216,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"da4b641b-f655-417f-a3cc-eb6280599c94",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"multiChoiceQuestion":217,"multiChoiceCorrect":219,"multiChoiceIncorrect":221,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":6,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6},[218],"The Incas occasionally sacrificed children. But what did they sacrifice more often?",[220],"Both of these",[222,223,224],"Llamas","Alpacas","Neither of these",{"id":226,"data":227,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":230},"aee1fd76-5b79-4ddf-8532-6b1c4b2b90a2",{"type":34,"markdownContent":228,"audioMediaId":229},"The Incas had access to vast supplies of gold and silver, but they did not view these precious metals in terms of pure material value. Instead, they had religious importance.\n\nThe Incas believed gold was the sweat of the sun, and represented the sun's regenerative powers. Temples were often adorned with gold, while priests wore golden jewelry and carried golden staffs.\n\nThe neighboring Muisca people had access to even more gold than the Incas. Supposedly, the Muisca chief would cover his body in gold dust, then jump into a lake as part of a religious ritual. Stories like these may have inspired the myth of El Dorado – a city of gold which was said to exist somewhere deep in South America.","31240b42-2eeb-4ed6-b85f-0267b0a617e3",[231,238,245],{"id":232,"data":233,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"d1910090-e861-4306-96c8-c0365f9ee053",{"type":52,"reviewType":152,"spacingBehaviour":34,"clozeQuestion":234,"clozeWords":236},[235],"According to Incan religion, gold was the sweat of the sun.",[237],"sweat",{"id":239,"data":240,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"dd879a0d-5b78-47ae-947b-71205b5e261f",{"type":52,"reviewType":34,"spacingBehaviour":34,"activeRecallQuestion":241,"activeRecallAnswers":243},[242],"Which neighboring civilization had even more gold than the Incas?",[244],"Muisca people",{"id":246,"data":247,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"43b57647-6bd2-4eda-81f1-736011fbf900",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"multiChoiceQuestion":248,"multiChoiceCorrect":250,"multiChoiceIncorrect":252,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":6,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6},[249],"What mythical city may have been inspired by the gold-rich Muisca?",[251],"El Dorado",[253,254,255],"Atlantis","Shangri-La","Xanadu",{"id":257,"data":258,"type":20,"version":20,"maxContentLevel":19,"summaryPage":260,"introPage":268,"pages":274},"706f32a1-e15f-4104-9e3f-b6a5a068cef5",{"type":20,"title":259},"Decline of the Incas",{"id":261,"data":262,"type":19,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":34},"23f5e25f-7a09-4547-90e4-4d5a435fa8b0",{"type":19,"summary":263},[264,265,266,267],"Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro captured Emperor Atahualpa in 1532","The Inca Empire collapsed after that, due to weak leadership and European diseases","Incas were enslaved, and their culture suppressed, as they fell under Spanish rule","Machu Picchu survived the Spanish conquest and is now an important archaeological site",{"id":269,"data":270,"type":38,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":34},"d515da90-58db-453c-8969-97c733308aa9",{"type":38,"intro":271},[272,273],"How did a small group of Spaniards manage to capture the Incan emperor?","How did the Incan Empire finally fall?",[275,301,337],{"id":276,"data":277,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":280},"7b17fd2b-7a9e-4b20-bb17-d92f47d8d9a6",{"type":34,"markdownContent":278,"audioMediaId":279},"In 1532, Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro arrived at the edge of the Inca Empire with a small force of men. He caught the Incas during a period of instability; a recent succession crisis had only just been resolved, with Atahualpa becoming Sapa Inca.\n\n![Graph](image://e39d2831-9a65-4fb1-a4c5-2a5e39f80ad2 \"Atuahalpa. Image: Public domain\")\n\nAtahualpa decided to meet with the Spanish. They assembled in the town of Cajamarca, and a Spanish priest was sent forward to speak with Atahualpa. The priest offered the Sapa Inca a Bible – the Spanish thought, if they could convert Atahualpa to Christianity, there would be no need for fighting.\n\nBut Atahualpa had never seen a book before. He put it next to his ear and waited for it to talk to him. When it did not, he threw the Bible to the ground, exasperated. The Spanish were insulted, and launched an attack, killing 2000 Incas and taking Atahualpa hostage.","9abb022d-513b-493c-babc-19e5e296e5f2",[281,292],{"id":282,"data":283,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"c56cf9d0-d3b0-451f-b330-67fd184e00f0",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"multiChoiceQuestion":284,"multiChoiceCorrect":286,"multiChoiceIncorrect":288,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":6,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6},[285],"In 1532, who arrived at the edge of the Incan empire?",[287],"The Spanish, led by Francisco Pizarro",[289,290,291],"The Spanish, led by Hernán Cortés","The British, led by John Cabot","The British, led by Walter Raleigh",{"id":293,"data":294,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"ea37f98f-c882-4140-8817-9d541d1f5fdf",{"type":52,"reviewType":20,"spacingBehaviour":34,"binaryQuestion":295,"binaryCorrect":297,"binaryIncorrect":299},[296],"When the Spanish arrived in the Incan empire, who had recently become Sapa Inca?",[298],"Atahualpa",[300],"Moctezuma",{"id":302,"data":303,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":306},"6230fb40-236a-4892-8474-553636c575f5",{"type":34,"markdownContent":304,"audioMediaId":305},"After taking Atahualpa hostage, the Spanish demanded a room full of gold in return for the emperor’s life. The Incas scrambled to do as the Spanish had asked, but when the gold was assembled, the Spanish killed Atahualpa anyway.\n\nWithout their Sapa Inca, the empire’s collapse was swift and devastating. Several new emperors came to power, but they were weak and easily defeated. To make things worse, many Incas were killed by European diseases such as smallpox, which they had no natural immunity against. In some places, more than 90% of the local people were killed by European disease.\n\nThose who survived faced a new way of life under Spanish rule, with their culture and religion suppressed and replaced with Catholicism. Thousands of Incas were enslaved by the Spaniards, and forced to work in mines.","fbda7270-220f-4d1d-9d7e-094a25586293",[307,326],{"id":308,"data":309,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"f8149aaa-4a62-45e3-8436-53370de9cf8c",{"type":52,"reviewType":310,"spacingBehaviour":34,"matchPairsQuestion":311,"matchPairsPairs":313,"matchPairsShowExamples":6},6,[312],"Put these events in order (1 = earliest, 4 = latest)",[314,317,320,323],{"left":315,"right":316,"direction":19},"1","The Spanish meet the Incas at Cajamarca",{"left":318,"right":319,"direction":19},"2","The Spanish take Atahualpa hostage",{"left":321,"right":322,"direction":19},"3","The Spanish demand a whole room full of gold",{"left":324,"right":325,"direction":19},"4","The Spanish kill Atahualpa",{"id":327,"data":328,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"36ad0cd3-5aeb-4ff7-8adb-190260951910",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"multiChoiceQuestion":329,"multiChoiceCorrect":331,"multiChoiceIncorrect":333,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":6,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6},[330],"In some places, more than 90% of Incan people were killed by what?",[332],"European diseases",[334,335,336],"Rival tribes","Spanish invaders","Catholic priests",{"id":338,"data":339,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":342},"8471e4e4-852f-491b-b74f-c5c7f93f2972",{"type":34,"markdownContent":340,"audioMediaId":341},"\nCertain aspects of the Incan Empire survived the Spanish onslaught. For example, in parts of modern Peru, millions of people still speak Quechua – a group of languages once spoken in the Incan Empire. In addition to this, some of their customs have survived, such as a traditional weaving technique using llama wool and natural dyes.\n\n![Graph](image://7a20a785-9ba6-4733-a88d-d137c09319be \"Quechua speaking children. Image: Thayne Tuason, CC BY 4.0 \u003Chttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\")\n\nApart from this, most of the Incan legacy was eliminated by their Spanish conquerors. They destroyed temples, burned quipu knots, and stamped out any Incan religious practices.\n\nOne place which the Spanish did not manage to destroy was Machu Picchu: a mountain settlement so remote that the Spanish did not know it existed. It was rediscovered in the 1900s, and is a rich archaeological site. Its inhabitants probably died of smallpox, but their legacy lives on in the ruins and artifacts that historians can study today.","80a5ede1-b2af-4a00-bad0-befb0137ba2e",[343,360,367,377],{"id":344,"data":345,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"26494c10-530a-42d9-999c-ee3a365294cb",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"collapsingSiblings":346,"multiChoiceQuestion":350,"multiChoiceCorrect":352,"multiChoiceIncorrect":353,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":6,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6,"matchPairsQuestion":357,"matchPairsPairs":358},[347,348,349],"b3c48af3-2077-4b6d-81fa-d4072300120f","090a11b9-8cdb-47a6-af85-4f08aa0be3fa","5fd164be-f111-4b93-8269-c485adcfb49a",[351],"Which of these would you most associate with the Incan Empire?",[222],[354,355,356],"Gunpowder","Cowrie shells","Woodblock prints",[81],[359],{"left":17,"right":222,"direction":19},{"id":361,"data":362,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"36ac7777-2a58-473c-a975-b272fe056a0d",{"type":52,"reviewType":152,"spacingBehaviour":34,"clozeQuestion":363,"clozeWords":365},[364],"In modern Peru, millions of people still speak Quechua – a group of languages once spoken by the Incas.",[366],"Quechua",{"id":368,"data":369,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"b95412e3-4772-4a05-be4a-4f30688ac7d2",{"type":52,"reviewType":19,"spacingBehaviour":34,"multiChoiceQuestion":370,"multiChoiceCorrect":372,"multiChoiceIncorrect":374,"multiChoiceMultiSelect":6,"multiChoiceRevealAnswerOption":6},[371],"Which Incan city was so remote that the Spanish never discovered it?",[373],"Machu Picchu",[91,375,376],"Ingapirca","Chan Chan",{"id":378,"data":379,"type":52,"version":34,"maxContentLevel":19},"a251d1a6-bd5a-465d-88b9-807eb87ce872",{"type":52,"reviewType":34,"spacingBehaviour":34,"activeRecallQuestion":380,"activeRecallAnswers":382},[381],"How did the inhabitants of Machu Picchu probably die?",[383],"Smallpox",[385,492,568],{"id":23,"data":24,"type":20,"version":20,"maxContentLevel":19,"summaryPage":26,"introPage":35,"pages":386},[387,424,454],{"id":44,"data":45,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":48,"parsed":388},{"data":389,"body":392,"toc":422},{"title":390,"description":391},"","The Incas were a powerful civilization that flourished in the Andes Mountains of South America. They built impressive cities like Cusco and Machu Picchu, with monumental buildings constructed using large stones cut and fitted together without mortar.",{"type":393,"children":394},"root",[395,402,412,417],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":398,"children":399},"element","p",{},[400],{"type":401,"value":391},"text",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":403,"children":404},{},[405],{"type":396,"tag":406,"props":407,"children":411},"img",{"alt":408,"src":409,"title":410},"Graph","image://8f24ce6c-e2f1-4aa8-90bf-b4df7d090e8f","Machu Picchu today. Image: Diego Delso, CC BY-SA 4.0 \u003Chttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons",[],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":413,"children":414},{},[415],{"type":401,"value":416},"The Incas’ territory was rich in gold, silver and other precious metals, which they often used for religious purposes, like making intricate staffs for priests. They also venerated llamas as sacred animals, as well as using them for food and clothing.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":418,"children":419},{},[420],{"type":401,"value":421},"The Incas were ruled by emperors known as the Sapa Inca, who held absolute power over their subjects. At the height of its power, this empire stretched all the way down the western coast of South America, from modern Ecuador to Chile.",{"title":390,"searchDepth":20,"depth":20,"links":423},[],{"id":60,"data":61,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":64,"parsed":425},{"data":426,"body":428,"toc":452},{"title":390,"description":427},"The Incas started off as a farming settlement in the Andes mountains of Peru. Their first ruler was Manco Capac, who was said to carry a golden staff. According to legend, he and his sisters built the city of Cusco after Manco Capac had stuck this staff in the ground.",{"type":393,"children":429},[430,434,439,447],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":431,"children":432},{},[433],{"type":401,"value":427},{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":435,"children":436},{},[437],{"type":401,"value":438},"The Incas continued to grow in strength, and in the 15th century, they started to build an empire. Whenever they encountered another tribe, they tried to come to diplomatic agreements, but if the tribe refused, the Incas would use their military might instead.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":440,"children":441},{},[442],{"type":396,"tag":406,"props":443,"children":446},{"alt":408,"src":444,"title":445},"image://4c41205c-583e-41ac-a7af-dab9809b71b6","Manco Capac. Image: Rodolfo pimentel, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons",[],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":448,"children":449},{},[450],{"type":401,"value":451},"While the Incas’ territory was rich in gold and precious metals, they did not have access to iron or steel. Because of this, they used wooden weapons, like clubs and spears. Sometimes, they would also take advantage of the mountainous terrain, rolling rocks down slopes to crush enemy soldiers.",{"title":390,"searchDepth":20,"depth":20,"links":453},[],{"id":95,"data":96,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":99,"parsed":455},{"data":456,"body":458,"toc":490},{"title":390,"description":457},"As the Incas claimed more and more territory, they also made sure to build infrastructure which kept their empire interconnected.",{"type":393,"children":459},[460,464,469,477,482],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":461,"children":462},{},[463],{"type":401,"value":457},{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":465,"children":466},{},[467],{"type":401,"value":468},"They built roads through mountains and valleys, which meant that goods, messages and government officials could travel easily from place to place. They even constructed rope bridges over treacherous ravines and gorges. These bridges were extremely strong, and marvels of early modern engineering.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":470,"children":471},{},[472],{"type":396,"tag":406,"props":473,"children":476},{"alt":408,"src":474,"title":475},"image://29f8127d-2c5c-4eba-bbd1-0f3c7dfd1cf7","Incan bridge. Image: Ondando, CC BY-SA 3.0 \u003Chttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons",[],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":478,"children":479},{},[480],{"type":401,"value":481},"These roads and bridges were suitable for llamas, which were often used for transport, as well as chasqui runners: professional messengers who carried documents around the empire. All in all, it was an advanced system – especially for the time – which helped the Incas to maintain communication and control.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":483,"children":484},{},[485],{"type":396,"tag":406,"props":486,"children":489},{"alt":408,"src":487,"title":488},"image://c48c7257-4def-403f-959d-151a5b9f81d6","Chasqui runner. Image: Public domain",[],{"title":390,"searchDepth":20,"depth":20,"links":491},[],{"id":167,"data":168,"type":20,"version":20,"maxContentLevel":19,"summaryPage":170,"introPage":177,"pages":493},[494,524,546],{"id":185,"data":186,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":189,"parsed":495},{"data":496,"body":498,"toc":522},{"title":390,"description":497},"The Incas did have a writing system, but it was unlike anything else in the world. They communicated using quipu knots: strings of knotted cords, usually made from cotton or animal fibres.",{"type":393,"children":499},[500,504,509,514],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":501,"children":502},{},[503],{"type":401,"value":497},{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":505,"children":506},{},[507],{"type":401,"value":508},"The knots were tied in different ways to represent different numerical values. This allowed the Incas to keep track of their taxes and census data with great accuracy. These records were often carried around the empire by the chasqui messengers.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":510,"children":511},{},[512],{"type":401,"value":513},"Historians believe that quipus were used for more than just numerical records; they think the Incas also used them to store words and literary content such as stories or poems. Unfortunately, though, any stories told by quipu knots are yet to be decoded.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":515,"children":516},{},[517],{"type":396,"tag":406,"props":518,"children":521},{"alt":408,"src":519,"title":520},"image://0f5b90dd-38d6-424d-92f1-31ade6905eac","Quipu knots. Image: Claus Ableiter nur hochgeladen aus enWiki, CC BY-SA 3.0 \u003Chttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/>, via Wikimedia Commons",[],{"title":390,"searchDepth":20,"depth":20,"links":523},[],{"id":202,"data":203,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":206,"parsed":525},{"data":526,"body":528,"toc":544},{"title":390,"description":527},"The Incas believed in a pantheon of gods, with the sun god Inti being the most important. They built temples to honor him, such as the Sun Temple in Cusco, which had walls completely covered by sheets of gold.",{"type":393,"children":529},[530,534,539],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":531,"children":532},{},[533],{"type":401,"value":527},{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":535,"children":536},{},[537],{"type":401,"value":538},"Llamas were also important animals in Inca religion, and played a role in many of their oldest stories. For example, in one story, the llamas warned people to move to higher ground. Afterwards, a flood swept through the valley, washing away all the people who did not listen.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":540,"children":541},{},[542],{"type":401,"value":543},"The Incas often sacrificed llamas and alpacas, but they only practiced human sacrifice on rare occasions, like an emperor’s funeral. The sacrifices were usually children, probably because adults were no longer innocent and pure.",{"title":390,"searchDepth":20,"depth":20,"links":545},[],{"id":226,"data":227,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":230,"parsed":547},{"data":548,"body":550,"toc":566},{"title":390,"description":549},"The Incas had access to vast supplies of gold and silver, but they did not view these precious metals in terms of pure material value. Instead, they had religious importance.",{"type":393,"children":551},[552,556,561],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":553,"children":554},{},[555],{"type":401,"value":549},{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":557,"children":558},{},[559],{"type":401,"value":560},"The Incas believed gold was the sweat of the sun, and represented the sun's regenerative powers. Temples were often adorned with gold, while priests wore golden jewelry and carried golden staffs.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":562,"children":563},{},[564],{"type":401,"value":565},"The neighboring Muisca people had access to even more gold than the Incas. Supposedly, the Muisca chief would cover his body in gold dust, then jump into a lake as part of a religious ritual. Stories like these may have inspired the myth of El Dorado – a city of gold which was said to exist somewhere deep in South America.",{"title":390,"searchDepth":20,"depth":20,"links":567},[],{"id":257,"data":258,"type":20,"version":20,"maxContentLevel":19,"summaryPage":260,"introPage":268,"pages":569},[570,600,622],{"id":276,"data":277,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":280,"parsed":571},{"data":572,"body":574,"toc":598},{"title":390,"description":573},"In 1532, Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro arrived at the edge of the Inca Empire with a small force of men. He caught the Incas during a period of instability; a recent succession crisis had only just been resolved, with Atahualpa becoming Sapa Inca.",{"type":393,"children":575},[576,580,588,593],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":577,"children":578},{},[579],{"type":401,"value":573},{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":581,"children":582},{},[583],{"type":396,"tag":406,"props":584,"children":587},{"alt":408,"src":585,"title":586},"image://e39d2831-9a65-4fb1-a4c5-2a5e39f80ad2","Atuahalpa. Image: Public domain",[],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":589,"children":590},{},[591],{"type":401,"value":592},"Atahualpa decided to meet with the Spanish. They assembled in the town of Cajamarca, and a Spanish priest was sent forward to speak with Atahualpa. The priest offered the Sapa Inca a Bible – the Spanish thought, if they could convert Atahualpa to Christianity, there would be no need for fighting.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":594,"children":595},{},[596],{"type":401,"value":597},"But Atahualpa had never seen a book before. He put it next to his ear and waited for it to talk to him. When it did not, he threw the Bible to the ground, exasperated. The Spanish were insulted, and launched an attack, killing 2000 Incas and taking Atahualpa hostage.",{"title":390,"searchDepth":20,"depth":20,"links":599},[],{"id":302,"data":303,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":306,"parsed":601},{"data":602,"body":604,"toc":620},{"title":390,"description":603},"After taking Atahualpa hostage, the Spanish demanded a room full of gold in return for the emperor’s life. The Incas scrambled to do as the Spanish had asked, but when the gold was assembled, the Spanish killed Atahualpa anyway.",{"type":393,"children":605},[606,610,615],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":607,"children":608},{},[609],{"type":401,"value":603},{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":611,"children":612},{},[613],{"type":401,"value":614},"Without their Sapa Inca, the empire’s collapse was swift and devastating. Several new emperors came to power, but they were weak and easily defeated. To make things worse, many Incas were killed by European diseases such as smallpox, which they had no natural immunity against. In some places, more than 90% of the local people were killed by European disease.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":616,"children":617},{},[618],{"type":401,"value":619},"Those who survived faced a new way of life under Spanish rule, with their culture and religion suppressed and replaced with Catholicism. Thousands of Incas were enslaved by the Spaniards, and forced to work in mines.",{"title":390,"searchDepth":20,"depth":20,"links":621},[],{"id":338,"data":339,"type":34,"maxContentLevel":19,"version":20,"reviews":342,"parsed":623},{"data":624,"body":626,"toc":650},{"title":390,"description":625},"Certain aspects of the Incan Empire survived the Spanish onslaught. For example, in parts of modern Peru, millions of people still speak Quechua – a group of languages once spoken in the Incan Empire. In addition to this, some of their customs have survived, such as a traditional weaving technique using llama wool and natural dyes.",{"type":393,"children":627},[628,632,640,645],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":629,"children":630},{},[631],{"type":401,"value":625},{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":633,"children":634},{},[635],{"type":396,"tag":406,"props":636,"children":639},{"alt":408,"src":637,"title":638},"image://7a20a785-9ba6-4733-a88d-d137c09319be","Quechua speaking children. Image: Thayne Tuason, CC BY 4.0 \u003Chttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons",[],{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":641,"children":642},{},[643],{"type":401,"value":644},"Apart from this, most of the Incan legacy was eliminated by their Spanish conquerors. They destroyed temples, burned quipu knots, and stamped out any Incan religious practices.",{"type":396,"tag":397,"props":646,"children":647},{},[648],{"type":401,"value":649},"One place which the Spanish did not manage to destroy was Machu Picchu: a mountain settlement so remote that the Spanish did not know it existed. It was rediscovered in the 1900s, and is a rich archaeological site. Its inhabitants probably died of smallpox, but their legacy lives on in the ruins and artifacts that historians can study today.",{"title":390,"searchDepth":20,"depth":20,"links":651},[],{"left":4,"top":4,"width":653,"height":653,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":654},24,"\u003Cpath fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\" d=\"m9 18l6-6l-6-6\"/>",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":653,"height":653,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":656},"\u003Cpath fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\" d=\"M4 5h16M4 12h16M4 19h16\"/>",1778179237098]