Inca Empire - History.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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The Incas’ public works were built through a labor tax known as mit’a.
This tax required most people incorporated into the Inca Empire to provide labor for public worksduring certain portions of each year.
This labor tax supported large-scale public works that required the marshalling of large labor forces, such as for the building offorts, roads, and bridges, or the mining of metals and gems.
It also allowed the emperor to raise large armies to undertake wars of conquest.
Road building was important to establishing communication throughout the huge, complex empire.
The Inca emperors built a 16,000-km (10,000-mi) network of stoneroads.
Trained runners carried official messages, working in relays to cover up to 400 km (250 mi) per day.
Government officials traveled on two main north-southroads and lesser crossroads that ran to every village in the empire.
Local government officers managed tambos, or rest houses, which were spaced a day's journey apart and stocked with food and equipment.
To span the deep river gorges separating cities, the Inca built suspension bridges of rope that were marvels of engineering.
Some of these rope bridges were nearly100 m (330 ft) in length.
One of the Incas’ greatest engineering feats was a bridge that crossed a dangerously steep gorge along the Apurímac.
Constructed in 1350,this bridge—made from ropes of twined plant fibers—survived for more than 500 years, until it was abandoned in 1890.
To increase agricultural production, the government commissioned stone terraces in the steep, narrow Andean valleys.
Officials also oversaw the construction of grainwarehouses, which served as storage centers for a portion of each year’s grain harvest.
The government distributed this grain to the people during times of scarcity andfamine, and also as forms of payment for labor.
Among the most impressive of the Incas’ building projects were their vast temples, palaces, and fortresses.
Massive stone buildings, such as the fortress atSacsahuaman near Cuzco, were skillfully erected with a minimum of engineering equipment.
The wall of Sacsahuaman was made of enormous stones, the largest ofwhich weighed 200 tons.
Stones were transported with the help of wooden rollers, and they fitted together so exactly that no mortar was necessary.
Cuzco itself was a marvel of Inca building and metalwork.
The great Temple of the Sun was almost entirely sheathed with gold plate.
In its courtyard, figures fashionedof gold depicted scenes from Inca life.
Gold corn appeared to grow out of clods of earth made of gold, and golden llamas grazed on gold grass.
Other cities includedMachu Picchu, whose ruins were discovered in 1911.
D Society
The basis of Inca society was the ayllu, typically ayllus were families living together and sharing land, animals, and crops.
The ayllus varied in size, from small farmingvillages to larger towns.
Everyone belonged to an ayllu.
An individual was born into an ayllu and died within it.
Even the choice of a mate could be determined by theayllu.
If an Inca man did not marry by the age of 20, the head of the ayllu selected a mate for him.
Most Incas were farmers who worked the land.
The emperor owned all the land in the empire.
He administered its use through the ayllu, which divided land intoallotments large enough for a family to farm.
Families planted and harvested the land communally.
Each autumn the ayllu adjusted land allotments to match increasesor decreases in the size of each family.
Aside from producing their own food, each ayllu worked additional fields to support the emperor and the state religion.
The daily life of the people of the Inca Empire varied widely according to social class.
The emperor lived in a dazzling palace with gold and silver walls, plates, and cups.He wore a gold fringe around his forehead as the emblem of his office.
His throne was merely a low stool, possibly of red wood, although sometimes of gold.
Althoughhis blankets were made of soft vicuna wool, he slept on the floor like his lowliest subjects.
Although the emperor and other nobles often had many wives, the emperor traditionally married his sister as his principal wife.
The next emperor would be chosen fromamong the sons born of this union.
Since both the emperor and his sister were considered direct descendents of the god Inti, this union guaranteed that the son whosucceeded to the throne would also be a pure-blood descendant of Inti.
The heir was given strict training to make him able to outdo other boys in strength andendurance.
Royalty and nobility were exempt from taxation and had such privileges as land, llamas, fine clothing, and litters, which were mats upon which the royaltyand nobility would sit and be carried around by people of lesser social levels.
Inca farmers, in contrast, led a life of hard work.
After breakfasting at daybreak on chicha, a kind of thick beer made from fermented corn, the entire family worked in the fields until midmorning.
Then they ate the day’s main meal, consisting of such foods as corn kernels boiled with chili peppers and herbs; soup or stew of guinea-pigmeat thickened with potato flour; or cornmeal mixed with water and baked in hot ashes into a hard bread.
Potatoes were a staple, especially in the mountains.
Inaddition to working in the fields, women made chicha, ground corn and potatoes into flour, and produced cloth by spinning and weaving cotton or wool.
If an Inca manwere not a noble, he could have only one wife.
A typical Inca house was a one-room rectangular building of adobe brick or stone with a thatched, gabled roof, and without windows or a chimney.
At night people slepton the floor around a crude stove, which was made of stone cemented with mud.
During the day, people spent most of their time outdoors.
Upper-class houses wereoften larger and partitioned into several rooms.
Although the quality of clothing varied, poor and rich and even the emperor dressed in the same basic fashion.
Men wore breechcloths, sleeveless knee-length tunics,and cloaks or ponchos.
Women wore long dresses and capes fastened with a pin of copper, silver, or gold.
All garments were of woven cotton or wool cloth.
The menfixed their hair in a distinctive style to signify the allyu to which they belonged and wore decorative earplugs of shell or metal.
Although there was little social mobility, some Inca peasants escaped the grinding labor and harsh life of their class.
Specially gifted boys were trained in crafts or inkeeping records and used their skills to serve the emperor.
Also exempt from menial labor were the yanacona, unusually intelligent boys who were trained and employed by the emperor as servants, pages, or temple attendants.
They were slaves, but they made important contacts and might rise high in government service.Some Inca girls also received education and distinction as “chosen women.” The most beautiful 10-year-old girls of each ayllu were selected.
After studying religion anddomestic arts, they were placed in the households of the emperor and his nobles.
Sometimes they were sacrificed to the gods and buried atop Andean mountain peaks.
E Economy
Agriculture was the basis of the economy, producing almost all the foods in the Inca diet.
Each ayllu had its own self-supporting farm community.
Ayllu members workedthe land cooperatively to produce food crops and cotton.
All work was done by hand because the Incas lacked wheeled tools and draft animals.
Their simple implementsincluded a heavy wooden spade or foot plow called a taclla, a stone-tipped club to break up clods, a bronze-bladed hoe, and a digging stick.
The inhabitants of the Andean region developed more than half the agricultural products that the world eats today.
Among these are more than 20 varieties of corn;240 varieties of potato; as well as one or more varieties of squash, beans, peppers, peanuts, and cassava (a starchy root); and quinoa, which is made into a cereal.
Byfar the most important of these was the potato.
The Incas planted the potato, which is able to withstand heavy frosts, as high as 4600 m (15,000 ft).
At these heightsthe Incas could use the freezing night temperatures and the heat of the day to alternately freeze and dry the potatoes until all the moisture had been removed.
TheIncas then reduced the potato to a light flour.
They cultivated corn up to an altitude of 4100 m (13,500 ft) and consumed it fresh, dried, and popped.
They also made itinto an alcoholic beverage known as saraiaka or chicha..
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