francisco pizzaro & the incas the great inca rebellion 1532-1533

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Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

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Page 1: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Francisco Pizzaro&

The Incas

The Great Inca Rebellion1532-1533

Page 2: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Common Core

• 5.H.1.1- Evaluate the relationships between European explorers (French, Spanish and English) and American Indian groups, based on accuracy of historical information (beliefs, fears and leadership).

Page 3: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

What I will Know

• 5.H.1.1 - How European explorers and American Indian groups interacted with each other.

Page 4: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

What I will Understand

• 5.H.1.1- Relationships between different cultural groups can have both positive and negative effects based upon their interactions with one another.

Page 5: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Francisco PizarroSpanish Conquistador

• “Courage, guns, and steel weapons give us such an advantage that we can vanquish thousands”

• Francisco Pizarro

Page 8: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Discovery• In 2004 the city of Lima was

going to build a highway on the outskirts of Lima

• A team of scientists/archeologists wanted to dig the area because they believed their was an Incan grave site where they were going to put the new highway

• Very quickly they found the grave site

Page 9: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Grave Site• At first they found about 20

graves all people buried in the graves were in an upright position facing the sun as was Incan custom

• Later in the dig they noticed something very strange

• Above the normal graves were more graves but the bodies were lying down which was not in Incan tradition when burying the dead

Page 10: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Importance of the Dead

• The burying of the dead was of high importance to the Incan people

• They needed to be in an upright position facing the sun god so they could be reincarnated

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g15YujwcU3w

Page 11: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Archeologists are Startled

• When the team of scientists/archeologist begin to examine the skeletons of the strange grave site they are shocked– Bones crushed and

violently broken– Skulls with holes

Page 12: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Mochito

• One skeleton who archeologists named Mochito was (the severed one) because of his horrific injuries

Page 13: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Mochito

• A bio-archeologist examined Mochito and concluded he had died a violent death– “the index, middle, and ring

finger on the left hand had been perhaps cut off or twisted off”

– “He clearly received some sort of blow to the face”

– “He also has a perimortema fracture to the ribs and a bad break to the femur”

Page 14: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Mochito• Mochito had wounds that could not

have been from Inca war weapons

• The wounds were from sharp metal weapons

• These were weapons that the Inca did not have yet, weapons only carried by Spaniards

• These Incan bodies were the first ever discovered that had been victims of the Spanish Conquistadors

Page 15: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Spanish Conquistadors

• The Spanish brought with them 2 things that the Incans had never seen.– Horses– Guns & Steel Weapons– Disease

Page 16: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Spanish Horses• Horses allowed the Spanish to travel

fast through open fields and through the woods

• Horses helped the Spanish outrun the weapons thrown at them

• Horses also spooked the Incas because they had never seen them before

• A pack of horses that had escaped from Pizzaro & Cortez formed the wild Mustangs that roam the hearland

Page 17: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Guns & Steel Weapons

• The Conquistadors carried

• Harquebus was the equivalent of a rifle. It could be fired one time and would have to be reloaded

• Cross bows were heavy duty bow and arrows that shoot accurately up to 40-50 ft

Page 18: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Guns & Steel Weapons• Lances were used by Spanish

Calvary before they drew their swords. The lance (big spear) was used as a close combat weapon from a horse

• Swords were used after the lances and were used to clip off heads and arms of the enemy whiling riding on a horse

• Falconets were small cannons that were fired from a distance at large groups of Incas

Page 19: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Incas already falling• The Incas were like the

Romans of South America

• They had been conquering every other Native American tribe in the Andes Mountain Range for the last 100 years

• After your territory had been conquered by the Incans you could either join the Incas or die

Page 20: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Incas already falling• Their territory had gotten so big that

King Atahualpa could no longer control it

• Many of the Inca Territories to the South had grown tired of King Atahualpa rule

• Many of those Incan territories had joined with the Spanish to take back their Kingdoms that the Incas had conquered

• Without help from the Southern Incans the Spanish would have never taken the Incan empire

Page 21: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Be Careful what you Believe• The Spanish Conquistadors

were mostly illiterate (they could not read or write)

• The Conquistadors were mostly from rural parts of Spain had agreed to go on this adventure with Pizzaro because it paid very well

• 5.H.1.1- The writing of the events were done mostly by scribes

Page 22: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Be Careful what you Believe• 5.H.1.1- Many writings by the

scribes were exaggerated to glorify the Spaniards

• 5.H.1.1- The stories go on & on about how the Spaniards face huge Incan armies and defeat them against all odds

• 5.H.1.1- They also conveniently left out the fact that thousands of angry Incans fought on the side of the Spanish

Page 23: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

One Story, Two Truths (Spanish)

• 5.H.1.1- We approached a massive Incan army waiting to slaughter us

• We fearlessly rode into battle fighting the great and capturing its leader

• The men fought heroically against all odds

Page 24: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

One Story, Two Truths (Incas)• 5.H.1.1- The Incas are celebrating a

battle victory over another Native Tribe

• The Inca are totally unarmed

• The Spanish ride down the mountain side and massacre the Incas

• They kidnap King Atahualpa and demand a huge ransom of gold

• After the Incans pay the ransom in gold Pizzaro executes the great king any way

Page 25: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Real Truth• The Incas version of the truth

was real as it was proven by Latin American history and corroborated by small amounts of Spanish scribes

• After the Spanish kill King Atahualpa they march to the capital city Cuzco and take the city with ease.

• Within 3 months the Inca Empire belongs to Pizzaro

Page 26: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Great Rebellion

• For the next 4 years the Inca people amass an army and attack Cuzco & Lima

• The Natives would not let Pizzaro have the Empire of the Incas without a fight

Page 27: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Story of the Siege of Lima

• August of 1536 the city of Lima is only a year and a half old

• An estimated 40,000-50,000 Incan soldiers surround Lima

• They were there to pay Pizzaro a visit and reclaim the Incan territory

• Pizzaro is heavily outnumbered

Page 28: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Story of the Siege of Lima

• The Spanish scribes write that in a bold move Pizzaro takes his Calvary and rides right into the middle of the Incan army to attack their leader

• The story goes that the Incans scatter and the Incan leader is killed

• Was this the real story??

Page 29: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Story of the Siege of Lima

• Remember Mochito

• Of all the burials Mochito’s stands out. He must have been a leader

• Mochito however didn’t die of Spanish guns or steel but of the blunt force of a club, from another Incan

• That’s right the Siege of Lima was won by other Incans fighting along side Pizzaro

Page 30: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Story of the Siege of Lima

• Upon Pizzaro landing in South America met and married a young Incan girl named Quispe sita to create an alliance

• In exchange Quispe Sita and her people would be granted the freedom that the Inca ruler Atahualpa wouldn’t let them have

• Pizzaro’s young Inca wife was there the day of the Siege on Lima

• She sent 3 messengers to her mother who was a Chief of another Inca Territory to the south

Page 31: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Story of the Siege of Lima

• Quispe Sita’s mother quickly dispatched a huge army to help Pizzarro

• The Quispe Sita Inca army met the Inca Rebellion Army (which was actually more like 6,000-7,000 men)

• Quispe Sita’s army destroyed the Inca Rebellion Army as the Spanish stayed behind and watched

Page 32: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Story of the Siege of Lima

• In the end it was Native Inca who allied with Pizzaro who conquered the vast Inca Empire and Pizzaro who took credit

• 5.H.1.1- For the alliance Quispe Sita received death

• She and her people were introduced to Small Pox which they had no immunity to

• It wiped out almost her whole tribe

• That is the real story of Pizzaro and his conquest of the Incan Empire

Page 33: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Mochito

• As for Mochito, this was the likely scenario

Page 34: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

The Final Story

Page 35: Francisco Pizzaro & The Incas The Great Inca Rebellion 1532-1533

Important Points• The relationship between Quespe

Sita, her people & Pizzarro and his people was beneficial to Pizzarro but not to Quespe Sita’s people

• The Inca Empire was taken by Pizzaro by allying with Quespe Sita

• Francisco Pizzaro is given credit for conquering the Inca people

• The chronicles (book) written by the Spanish scribes gives credit to the Spaniards and hardly any to the Inca people that helped Pizzaro

• The final battle that destroyed the Inca Empire was called the Siege of Lima

• The Inca Empire was located in Peru, South America

• Spanish introduced horses to South America and Mexico

• The Spanish hardly fought the Incas at all they let the Southern Incas do it