Encyclopedia of the Incas

(Bozica Vekic) #1
and prejudices  of  Crown   officials.  For instance,   “Who    were    their   rulers  in
heathen times? What rights did their former lords have over them? What did
they pay in tribute? What forms of worship, rites, and good or evil customs
did they practice?” Respondents were also encouraged to draw maps of the
layouts of towns, or, in the case of towns along the coast, of the islands off the
coast. Unfortunately, in only a handful of cases did respondents take the time
to draw town maps or ones that depicted the geographical setting of a town or
a group of settlements.
In any case, the Relaciones Geográficas de Indias are exceptionally
important sources of information for understanding the world of the Incas and
the nature of some of the major transformations following the Spanish
conquest.

Further Reading
Cline, Howard F. “The Relaciones Geográficas of the Spanish Indies, 1577–1586.” Hispanic American
Historical Review 44, no. 3:341–74, 1964.
Mundy, Barbara E. “Relaciones Geográficas.” In Guide to Documentary Sources for Andean Studies,
1530–1900, edited by Joanne Pillsbury, vol. 1, 144–59. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press,
2008.
■GARY URTON

RELIGION
Inca religion can be defined in two ways. First, it embraced the beliefs and ritual
practices of the inhabitants of the Cuzco valley, composed of the “Incas-by-
blood,” descendants of the mythical founding ancestor, Manco Capac, and the
Incas by privilege, who were not direct descendants of noble Inca lineages.
Second, it was the religious doctrine of the empire, which saw many adjustments
as it merged and incorporated the beliefs of the scores of ethnic and linguistic
groups under the imperial yoke. This doctrine was made manifest and spread
through feasts and rituals that legitimated the rule of the Sapa Inca (the sole,
unique Inca), and his representatives.


The Incas’  tutelary    god was Inti,   the Sun god,    from
whom the Inca rulers believed they descended.
Guaman Poma de Ayala, Felipe, El primer nueva
corónica y buen gobierno. Edited by John V.
Murra and Rolena Adorno, 232/258. Mexico City:
Siglo Veintiuno, 1980 [1615].
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