This book is about the 50 unbelievable years starting in 1530 when a group of at first 170 Spaniards ended up taking control of the mighty Inca empire, with at least 3 million people spanning via Andes from Southern Colombia to Northern Argentina.
The surprise conquest of Mexico by Cortez and 500 men in 1519-1529 had fired the imagination of many youngsters searching for glory, so Pizarro, already an experienced soldier of the West Indies, was authorised to claim the lands in the south to the Spanish crown where no-one had an idea lies a great empire.
How were they able to do it? Some factors were:
- Extreme luck with timing. As they managed to take the ruler Atahualpha (who had just won the civil war against his brother) a hostage, he played along doing what the Spanish asked him to do, because it didn't seem possible they'd get away with it in the end.
- Incas had conquered most of the continent just a few generations before, so Spanish ended up replacing incas in a way, and in some places were seen as liberators.
- Superior technology of the Spanish was key, and also justified the spread of their best technology, Christianity. Soldiers riding on horseback, armed with metal weapons and European war tactics polished over centuries (none of these Incas had or could easily copy) were deadly efficient - for example a group of 62 horsemen and 106 foot soldiers could easily butcher 5000-10000 natives on an open terrain in a few hours.
- Treachery, manipulation, and walking back on their word whenever they were in power position helped, too. Especially sad were the executions of several Inca rulers, with manufactured charges and without the approval of the Spanish king (which at those times took at least 6 months to obtain) where Incas behaved with high integrity, even converting to Christianity before they died, and making moving thoughtful speeches worthy of history books.
The story includes a lot of juicy details, including the fascination of travelling to a new land and discovering the empire with such scale and sophistication (gold, stonework, irrigation, culture) that no-one in Europe had ever heard of.
The cast of characters includes the four Pizzarro brothers, none of whom died naturally but who dominated the colonization story for a good 30 years. Lima, the Peruvian capital on the coast that has much milder climate than Cuzco in the Andes with over 3 km elevation, was founded by Francisco Pizzarro who also served as the Governor of Peru. Viceroy Toledo a few decades later was the most notable, putting in place systems of Spanish rule and forced labor (which was still milder than in North America) which lasted until the 19th century.
After most of the Inca gold was pillaged (it had a decorative use only, for Incas had no monetary system, no writing system apart from knots called quipus used for accounting that no-one really understands to present day, and no wheel as it had little use in the mountains), mines were discovered and natives forced to work in them in gruelling conditions. The most famous was the "silver mountain" Potosi in present day Bolivia which sponsored the Spanish empire for several centuries and made all the colonization effort pay off. Spanish treasures first travelled to the coast, then sailed to the Isthmus of Panama (as Canal was opened much later in 1914), carried overland to the other side, then sailed to Havana, then to Canaries, and only then to Spain.
Peru is full of ruins from Inca and earlier civilizations. The most famous, Machu Picchu, was likely an estate of Pachacuti, the earlier creator of the Inca Empire. It was re-discovered along with the long-sought-for "last city of the Incas" Vilcabamba by an American professor Bingham during just one trip in 1910. How fascinating it must have been for the explorers to scout Peru in the 1960s and 1970s and find these exact places in the mountains and rivers where the battles described in Spanish and Peruvian chronicles in the 16th century had taken place. When travelling in Cuzco and the surrounding valleys nowadays, the legends are all still there.
I nicked a star because the book is very diligently put together (entirely 36% of it is made up of notes and comments!) and it hurts readability at times. At the same time, many chapters are just fascinating, especially if you have been to Peru. Reader can also really appreciate the author's approach of presenting different viewpoints by the most renowned experts, and being one of them, adding a personal opinion with probabilities of truth of what might have happened.
I'll leave this review with a few more highlights, just to leave a taste of what all went down back then:
- But it was no trap, and the conquistadores witnessed the wild final scenes of one of the last great royal hunts, in which ten thousand natives took part, surrounding many miles of land and killing some eleven thousand head of game.
- In their awe, the sixteenth-century chroniclers soon exhausted the mighty buildings of Spain with which to compare Sacsahuaman.
- This was an extraordinary move. ‘Probably never before or since has a mighty emperor—and in 1550 Charles V was the strongest ruler in Europe with an overseas empire besides—in the full tide of his power ordered his conquests to cease until it could be decided whether they were just.’ Amazingly, the prohibition on expeditions was totally effective until it was repealed in 1559. No campaigns of conquest occurred during that decade - because unauthorised conquistadors knew that they would lose their gains and probably also their heads.
- ‘we cannot conceal the great paradox that a barbarian, Huayna-Capac, kept such excellent order that the entire country was calm and all were nourished, whereas today we see only infinite deserted villages on all the roads of the kingdom.’
- Under the Incas they had lived in a paternalistic society without money, personal property or writing. It was impossible for them to grasp that they were now regarded by the authorities as free individuals expected to earn money, compete and stand up for their rights, if necessary by written Spanish law.
- The miners then spent three million pesos in the construction of a system of thirty-two lakes, a ten-mile artificial sluiceway, eighteen dams and hundreds of waterwheels: a remarkable feat of engineering that guaranteed the power to grind a steady flow of silver.*
- By the end of the sixteenth century, the boom city of Potosí had all the trappings of a Klondike: fourteen dance halls, thirty-six gambling houses, seven or eight hundred professional gamblers, one theatre, a hundred and twenty prostitutes, and dozens of magnificent baroque churches.... For almost two centuries its manually produced bars and coins were recognised throughout the western world.
- Amerindians grow little facial hair, and a moustache is a sign of European blood in South America to this day.
- The 35-year-old American even looked like Harrison Ford of the Indiana Jones movies. He was tall (6 foot, 4 inches; 1.93 metres), ruggedly handsome, fit, ambitious and bursting with energy.
- It was the National Geographic Society that realised how important it was, devoting an entire issue of its magazine in 1913 to Machu Picchu and helping to finance major expeditions there in 1913 and 1915.
- The archaeologists calculated that the man-days expended in this earthmoving represented a staggering sixty per cent of all the work of building Machu Picchu.