most     elaborate   waterworks  dedicated   to  the     cult    of  water   are     found   at  royal
estates in  the Cuzco   heartland.
Although    the hanan/hurin division    most    likely  was applied to  most,   if  not all,
settlements,     its     identification  remains     speculative;    there   are     no  architectural
features    defining    it. Equally speculative is  the existence   of  ceque   systems at  sites
outside  of  Cuzco.  Specific    astronomical    alignments  of  buildings   and     other
elements,   on  the other   hand,   have    been    demonstrated    to  exist   at  many    sites.
Inca     settlement  planning    played  a   strategic   role    in  the     expansion   and
governance  of  the Inca    Empire. It  allowed Cuzco   to  keep    in  contact with    far
away    settlements,    facilitated the swift   movement    and provision   of  the armies, the
political   integration and control of  local   populations,    and supported   the economy
of  the state.  The settlements were    a   symbol  and reminder    of  the power   of  the
Inca.
Further Reading
Agurto   Calvo,  Santiago.  Estudios    acerca  de  la  construcción,   arquitectura,   y   planeamiento    inca.    Lima:
Camera  Peruana de  la  Construcción,   1987.
Canziani     Amico,  José.  Ciudad   y   territorio  en  los     Andes:  Contribuciónes  a   la  história    del     urbanismo
prehispánico.   Lima:   Fondo   editorial,  Pontífica   Unviversidad    Católica    del Perú,   2009.
Gasparini,  Graziano,   and Luise   Margolies.  Inca    Architecture.   Translated  by  Patricia    Lyon.   Bloomington:
Indiana University  Press,  1980.
Hardoy, Jorge   E.  Ciudades    Precolombinas.  Buenos  Aires:  Ediciones   Infinito,   1964.
Hyslop, John.   Inka    Settlement  Planning.   Austin: University  of  Texas   Press,  1990.
Morris, Craig.  “State  Settlement  in  Tawantinsuyu:   A   Strategy    of  Compulsory  Urbanism.”  In  Contemporary
Archaeology,    edited  by  M.  P.  Leone,  393–401.    Carbondale: Southern    Illinois    University  Press,  1972.
von Hagen,  Adriana,    and Craig   Morris. The Cities  of  the Ancient Andes.  London: Thames  and Hudson,
1998.
■JEAN-PIERRE    PROTZEN
POLO    ONDEGARDO,  JUANBorn     in  Valladolid,     Spain,  about   1520    and     arriving    in  Peru    in  1544,   Polo
Ondegardo    was     a   noted   jurist,     viceregal   functionary,    owner   of  a   grant   of
encomienda  (protector  of  Natives with    rights  to  collect tribute from    them),  as
well     as  a   prodigious  producer    of  legal,  historical,     and     cultural    documents.
Polo    Ondegardo   spent   years   in  Lima,   Cuzco,  and Charcas (in central Bolivia,
near    the mining  town    of  Potosí) from    the mid-1540s   until   his death,  in  1575.
He  knew    a   great   deal    about   the Andean  world   during  the period  beginning   a
decade  after   the Spanish conquest,   particularly    as  he  was commissioned    to