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Inca Empire - Coggle Diagram
Inca Empire
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The inca government
TUPAC YUPANQUI
He was the tenth Inca to stand out as a military man, as his father greatly expanded the empire. After assuming the throne, he expanded the borders to the south until he reached the Biobio River in Chile. I have subdued some peoples of the Altiplano and northern Argentina.
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Subdued the peoples of Chachapoya Peru, Huancabamba, Palta
Loja, Ecuador and Cañari Cañar, Ecuador around 1450. He failed to defeat the Norandine Confederation led by the Duchicela who joined the Alausíes from the north so he returned to Cuzco in 1460.
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HUAYNA CÁPAC
In 1487, there was a confrontation with the Quito Confederation where Cacha Duchicela died and Huayna Cápac won
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They established their residence for her in Quito. In 1490, Huayna Cápac returned to the south and reduced the uprisings in Paita, Túmbez and the Huancavilcas of Puná Island, and returned to Cuzco.
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He was the XI Inca. This great empire had spread along the southern coasts of Peru, Chile (Tacna), Argentina (Tucumán) and Bolivia (Sucre). He defeated the Chachapoyas (Peru) and annexed the Gulf of Guayaquil region
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THE INCA PACHACUTEC
It improved the organization of the State, regulated taxes, the way to collect and distribute them.
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He organized the chasquis, true messengers and also trained them to run quickly during his journey.
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Within the government of the ninth Inca, Pachacutec, there was a great expansion of the empire, from Titicaca to Junín.
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Pachacutec divided the empire into four regions or
suyos. That is to say, the empire of the four parts of
the world, the four cardinal points. Tahuantisuyo.
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Cácap Inca ("The mighty Inca") and Sapac Inca ("the Inca, the only one"), were the names to call the sovereign of the greatest, advanced and implacable empire of pre-Columbian America. The emperor was the highest authority of the empire he considered himself the son of the Sun. He had the power of the executive head of the State, the board of nobles, and the priest who replaced the Inca in his absence.
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ROADS, BRIDGES AND TAXES
One of the inheritances that the Incas owed to the Wari was the system of roads through the Andes.
To cross rivers and streams, quickly building bridges, made of ropes, that allowed their armies to pass through. The Incas had a messenger who was the chasquis, they trained to walk long distances. It is known that the total production of a community was not divided. in three parts: one for the people, another for the Sun and another for the Inca.
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