The Inca-Chanka war was a semi-legendary,[1] mytho-historical,[2] potentially mythical,[3] military conflict fought between Cusco and the Chanka chiefdom, several generations prior to the arrival of Europeans.[1] It is the final conflict between these two people.[4]
Chanka-Inca war | |||||||
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![]() Painting representing Inca warriors fighting the Chankas. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Cusco Chiefdom | Chanka Chiefdom | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Pachacuti |
Astoy Huaraca Tomay Huaraca |
The exact date of the conflict is unknown;[1] it potentially took place at the beginning of the 15th century.[5]
The chanka confederation was a loose defensive alliance of various independent chiefdoms, while the Cusco confederation, which later became the Inca Empire, was a unified, hierarchically structured polity with a ruling elite and a cultural identity.[3]
After a victory during the chanka attack of Cusco, the Inca armies marched into Chanka territory and defeated them at the battle of Yahuar Pampa.[6]
The war was an important event to the geo-politics of the region, and opened the way for the creation of the Inca Empire. Because of his victory, Cusi Yupanqui, whose later name was Pachacuti, gained universal recognition, overthrowing his father, the ruler of Cusco, and his brother Urco, the co-ruler and designated heir. Through his new found prestige he rapidly initiated the Inca expansion.[6]
The effects of the war were exaggerated by the Inca ruling class, which made Cusi Yupanqui the archetype of its philosophical principals.[7] The historical accuracy of the story told by colonial documents of the episode of the chanka attack against Cusco is regularly questioned.[3][8]
Historicity
editThe historicity of the traditional story told by the Incas of Cusco is regularly called into question,[3] because of similarities with other cyclical stories of Inca mytho-history and a lack of alphabetically written sources.[3][9] Transmitted through quipus knotted cords), linked to oral texts and pictographic images,[10][3] Inca historiography was separated into various genres, and each lineage had its own version of Inca history.[11] Archeological evidence sometimes contradicts, and sometimes complements the traditional story.[1]
According to the archaeologist and anthropologist Gary Urton, two historiographical traditions exist; one considers Spanish colonial sources reliable and supports that the Chanka attack on Cusco represented the moment Inca myth became history, while the other thinks that the Chanka-Inca War was semi-legendary, but contained historical details, including the occupation of former Wari lands.[2] Since the early 1980s, following the publication of a paper by the French anthropologist Pierre Duviols, the academic consensus has seen the war as a largely mythical event.[9] The Peruvian ethno-historian María Rostworowski thought the Chanka-Inca War to be the Incas' explanation for their rapid ascension.[1] According to her and González Carré, the Chankas were warrior hordes who defeated the Wari State in the 11th century, and Yupanqui's imperial title, Pachacuti, was an ancient title formerly used by Wari rulers.[12] Reiner Tom Zuidema[3] and Clementina Battcock consider the event to have been linked to conflicts between the religious ruling class and the warrior chieftains ("sinchis") who, according to Battcock, would have took power following the news of a Chanka attack.[9] Franck Garcia indicates that archeological research in the Andahuaylas region supports the existence of a powerful polity,[7] while for Franck Meddens and Cirilo Vivanco Pomacanchari, the chanka confederation was a loose defensive alliance of various independent local chiefdoms, while the Inca chiefdom of Cusco had a ruling elite, a unified cultural identity, and was in the process of developing a state structure.[3] According to them, the expansionist Inka state either invaded a chanka chiefdom "ripe for conquest" and used the narrative of a Chanka attack to justify the conquest of territories northwest of Cusco, or started hostilities with the Chanka prior to the attack.[3] For Luis Millones and Brian Bauer, the war was a "legendary saga" conceived to explain Inca ascension to power, which would have been of part of ancient Wari tradition.[13] For Terence N. D'Altroy, while the chankas might have been an important adversary of the Incas in the early years of expansion, the "sagas of the Chanka wars may still be mostly a glorious epic invoked to burnish the image of the emperor's father", Viracocha Inca.[14] According to him, scepticism also arises from the confusion in the Inca ruler list, as Urco, usually represented as Viracocha Inca's favourite son and heir to the throne, was described by the colonial chronicler Pedro Cieza de León as an independent ruler of Cusco, during the Viracocha Inca's life.[14] This assertion was later refuted by the indigenous chronicler Yamqui Pachacuti.[14] For María Rostworowski, Urco was co-ruler of Viracocha Inca while the latter still lived, and was supposed to succeed him.[15] In order to take power from Urco, a short civil war occurred between Pachacuti and Urco following the Inca victory over the Chankas.[15][16] According to Cieza de Leon, the Incas removed Urco from the list of Inca rulers.[15] This inconsistency has been linked to a general debate between academics on Inca sueccesoral customs, some finding the Incas to have had concepts of absolute monarchy and primogeniture, others judging the latter two to be euro-centric concepts, believing the Incas to have evaluated the capacities of the successor by naming him co-regent of the Inca ruler, and others think a "generational succession" was also observable in the Andes.[17]
For the Inca lineages (panakas), who, according to their ascent, attributed the war to either Inca Viracocha or Pachacuti, the Pachacuti-Viracocha era was an explanatory unit used to describe the ascension of the Inca State, and Pachacuti became a national hero and an archetype of good government.[9][7]
Attribution of the conquest
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Chronology
editThe exact date of the conflict is unknown,[1] since it took place several generations prior to the Spanish arrival.[1]
For the Peruvian historian José Antonio del Busto Duthurburu, the war lasted from 1424 to 1425.[18] According to the north-American archaeologist and anthropologist John Howland Rowe, the attack took place in 1438.[19] The Peruvian ethno-historian María Rostworowski thought the conflict was fought at the beginning of the 15th century.[20] The Peruvian sociologist and political militant Manuel Dammert wrote the event most likely took place somewhere between 1430 and 1440.[21]
War
editDuring the reign of Viracocha Inca, the Chanka armies left their territory, around 1430, in order to conquer Cusco. Their forces were divided into three, in respect to the ancient tradition of the Andes. One army was heading towards Cusco, while the other two were in charge of conquering Kunti Suyu.[22]
Once Viracocha Inca and his son, Urco, who he had named co-ruler, heard of the Chanka attack, they fled Cusco together with their court. Another son of Viracocha Inca, Cusi Yupanqui, stayed with a handful of generals in order to protect the capital.[23] The Canas and the Canchis, to the south of Cusco, allied with the Inca, while the Ayarmaca allied with the Chanka. But the majority of the surrounding Chiefdoms waited to see the outcome of the war.[24]
Siege of Cusco
editThe Chanka forces, convinced of their victory, attacked Cusco. However, against previous expectations, the Inca managed to defeat the Chankas, who were forced to retreat. Cusi Yupanqui, wanting to annihilate the Chanka chiefdom, led his armies into Chanka territory in order to win a decisive victory.[25][7]
Battle of Yahuar Pampa
editThe two armies met at the village of Ichupampa, where a battle ensued, which the Incas won. This victory established Inca dominance over the region.[26]
Inca conquest
editWhen Cusi Yupanqui became emperor, his first act was to lead a military campaign against the previous Allies and confederates of the Chankas. After having conquered the old Chanka territory he organized a triumph in Cusco.[27][26]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g Rostworowski, María (1999). History of the Inca Realm. Translated by B. Iceland, Harry. Cambridge University Press. p. 22.
- ^ a b Urton, Gary (1999). Inca Myths. British Museum Press. pp. 56–57.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Pomacanchari, Cirilo Vivanco; Meddens, Franck (2005). "The Chanca confederation; political myth and archeological reality" (PDF). Xama. 15 (18): 73–99.
- ^ Rostworowski, María. History of the Inca Realm. Translated by B. Iceland, Harry. Cambridge University Press.
- ^ Rostworowski, María (2001) [1953]. Pachacútec Inca Yupanqui (in Spanish). Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos. pp. 124–125.
- ^ a b Rostworowski, María (2001) [1953]. Pachacútec Inca Yupanqui. Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos.
- ^ a b c d Garcia, Franck (2019). Les Incas [The Incas] (in French). Ellipses. pp. 146–152.
- ^ Battcock, Clementina (2018). La Guerra entre Incas y Chancas [The War between Incas and Chancas] (PDF). National Autonomous University of Mexico. p. 16.
- ^ a b c d Battcock, Clementina (June 2013). "El episodio de la guerra entre incas y chancas: una propuesta sobre su construcción e interpretación" [The episode of the war between incas and chancas: a proposal about its construction and interpretation]. Tzintzun (in Spanish) (57).
- ^ Pärssinen, Martti (1992). Tawantinsuyu: The Inca State and Its Political Organization. SHS. pp. 26–51. ISBN 978-951-8915-62-4.
- ^ Julien, Catherine (2009). Reading Inca History. University of Iowa Press.
- ^ Rostworowski, María (1999). History of the Inca Realm. Translated by B. Iceland, Harry. Cambridge University Press. pp. 34–35.
- ^ Battcock, Clementina (2018). La Guerra entre Incas y Chancas [The War between Incas and Chancas] (PDF) (in Spanish). National Autonomous University of Mexico. p. 25.
- ^ a b c N. D'Altroy, Terence (2014). The Incas. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 95.
- ^ a b c Rostworowski, María (2001). Pachacútec Inca Yupanqui (in Spanish). Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos. pp. 105–107.
- ^ Espinoza Soriano, Waldemar (1997). Los Incas (3d ed.). Lima: Amaru Editores. p. 75.
- ^ Mannion, Sean (31 May 2014). Las sucesiones en el imperio de los incas (in Spanish). Hispanic American Historical Review.
- ^ del Busto Duthurburu, José Antonio (2000). Una cronología aproximada del Tahuantinsuyo [An approximate chronology of the Tawantinsuyu] (in Spanish). Lima: Pontifical Catholic University of Peru. pp. 16–24. ISBN 9789972423505.
- ^ H. Rowe, John (January 1945). "Absolute Chronology in the Andean Area". American Antiquity. 10 (3): 265–284. doi:10.2307/275130. JSTOR 275130.
- ^ Rostworowski, María (2001) [1953]. Pachacútec Inca Yupanqui (in Spanish). Instituto de Estudios Peruanos. pp. 124–125.
- ^ Dammert, Manuel. La red de parques arqueológicos: el apogeo del Tahuantinsuyo y el desarrollo regional del Cusco [The network of archaeological parks: the heyday of Tahuantinsuyo and the regional development of Cusco] (in Spanish). Instituto Nacional de Cultura & Dirección Regional de Cultura de Cusco. p. 25. ISBN 9789972296734.
- ^ de Betanzos, Juan de. Suma y Narración de los Incas (in Spanish).
- ^ Garcia, Franck. Les Incas. Ellipses. p. 147.
- ^ Espinoza, Waldemar (1997). Los Incas. Lima: Amaru Editores.
- ^ de Gamboa, Pedro Sarmiento. Historia de los Incas (in Spanish).
- ^ a b Rostworowski, María. Le Grand Inca: Pachacútec Inca Yupanqui. Tallandier.
- ^ Favre, Henri. Les Incas. Presses Universitaires de France.