Atlas of Hispanic-American History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
of Ecuador and Colombia. At the
moment Pizarro arrived, Atahualpa had
just defeated and captured his half-broth-
er Huáscar in a civil war and was march-
ing triumphantly toward Cuzco to take
power. To overthrow him, Pizarro used
every tactic of Cortés’s: playing Native
American factions against one another;
making false promises; terrifying the
locals with firearms, steel swords, and
horses; and capturing the ruler.
The conquest began in 1532, when
Pizarro lured Atahualpa into a trap and
took him prisoner. Pizarro accepted
Atahualpa’s offer of a roomful of gold as a
ransom, but rather than letting Atahualpa
go, Pizarro had him garroted. Huáscar
was already dead, on Atahualpa’s order, so
Pizarro installed a new puppet emperor,
Manco Inca. In 1535, viewing Cuzco as

too far inland to serve as a viable capital,
Pizarro founded Ciudad de los Reyes,
“City of the Kings,” near the coast as the
region’s new capital. It soon became
known as Lima, a corruption of the
Quechua Indian name Rímac, meaning
“Talker.”
Manco proved to be less compliant
than Pizarro had hoped. Supported by
Native Americans, Manco led a revolt
against the Spanish in 1536. He lost and
retreated to Vilcabamba, where an inde-
pendent Inca kingdom survived until
1572, when the last pretender to the Inca
throne, Manco’s son Tupac Amaru, was
defeated.
By then Pizarro was long dead.
Despite his achievement in conquering
for Spain an even richer empire than that
of the Aztec, he enjoyed not even Cortés’s

38 ATLAS OF HISPANIC-AMERICAN HISTORY


New Spain in 1600

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