Peru THE SPANISH CONQUEST, 1532-72
Woodcut of Potosí's Cerro Rico 123 by Agustín de Zárate,
1555
Church of San Antonio Abad in Cusco
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
Pizarro and the Conquistadors
While the Inca empire flourished, Spain was beginning
to rise
to prominence in the Western world. The political union of
the
several independent realms in the Iberian Peninsula and
the final
expulsion of the Moors after 700 years of intermittent
warfare
had instilled in Spaniards a sense of destiny and a
militant
religious zeal. The encounter with the New World by
Cristóbal
Colón (Christopher Columbus) in 1492 offered an outlet for
the
material, military, and religious ambitions of the newly
united
nation.
Francisco Pizarro, a hollow-cheeked, thinly beared
Extremaduran of modest hidalgo (lesser nobility) birth,
was not
only typical of the arriviste Spanish conquistadors who
came to
America, but also one of the most spectacularly
successful.
Having participated in the indigenous wars and slave raids
on
Hispañiola, Spain's first outpost in the New World, the
tough,
shrewd, and audacious Spaniard was with Vasco Nuñez de
Balboa
when he first glimpsed the Pacific Ocean in 1513 and was a
leader
in the conquest of Nicaragua (1522). He later found his
way to
Panama, where he became a wealthy
encomendero (see Glossary)
and leading citizen. Beginning in 1524, Pizarro
proceeded to mount several expeditions, financed mainly
from his
own capital, from Panama south along the west coast of
South
America.
After several failures, Pizarro arrived in northern
Peru late
in 1531 with a small force of about 180 men and 30 horses.
The
conquistadors were excited by tales of the Incas' great
wealth
and bent on repeating the pattern of conquest and plunder
that
was becoming practically routine elsewhere in the New
World. The
Incas never seemed to appreciate the threat they faced. To
them,
of course, the Spaniards seemed the exotics. "To our
Indian
eyes," wrote Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala, the author of
Nueva
crónica y buen gobierno (New Chronicle and Good
Government),
"the Spaniards looked as if they were shrouded like
corpses.
Their faces were covered with wool, leaving only the eyes
visible, and the caps which they wore resembled little red
pots
on top of their heads."
On November 15, 1532, Pizarro arrived in Cajamarca, the
Inca's summer residence located in the Andean highlands of
northern Peru, and insisted on an audience with Atahualpa.
Guamán
Poma says the Spaniards demanded that the Inca renounce
his gods
and accept a treaty with Spain. He refused. "The Spaniards
began
to fire their muskets and charged upon the Indians,
killing them
like ants. At the sound of the explosions and the jingle
of bells
on the horses' harnesses, the shock of arms and the whole
amazing
novelty of their attackers' appearance, the Indians were
terrorstricken . They were desperate to escape from being
trampled by
the horses, and in their headlong flight a lot of them
were
crushed to death." Guamán Poma adds that countless
"Indians" but
only five Spaniards were killed, "and these few casualties
were
not caused by the Indians, who had at no time dared to
attack the
formidable strangers." According to other accounts, the
only
Spanish casualty was Pizarro, who received a hand wound
while
trying to protect Atahualpa.
Pizarro's overwhelming victory at Cajamarca in which he
not
only captured Atahualpa, but devastated the Inca's army,
estimated at between 5,000 and 6,000 warriors, dealt a
paralyzing
and demoralizing blow to the empire, already weakened by
civil
war. The superior military technology of the
Spaniards--cavalry,
cannon, and above all Toledo steel--had proved unbeatable
against
a force, however large, armed only with stone-age battle
axes,
slings, and cotton-padded armor. Atahualpa's capture not
only
deprived the empire of leadership at a crucial moment, but
the
hopes of his recently defeated opponents, the supporters
of
Huáscar, were revived by the prospect of an alliance with
a
powerful new Andean power contender, the Spaniards.
Atahualpa now sought to gain his freedom by offering
the
Spaniards a treasure in gold and silver. Over the next few
months, a fabulous cache of Incan treasure--some eleven
tons of
gold objects alone--was delivered to Cajamarca from all
corners
of the empire. Pizarro distributed the loot to his "men of
Cajamarca," creating instant "millionaires," but also
slighting
Diego de Almagro, his partner who arrived later with
reinforcements. This sowed the seeds for a bitter
factional
dispute that soon would throw Peru into a bloody civil war
and
cost both men their lives. Once enriched by the Incas'
gold,
Pizarro, seeing no further use for Atahualpa, reneged on
his
agreement and executed the Inca--by garroting rather than
hanging--after Atahualpa agreed to be baptized as a
Christian.
Data as of September 1992
|