Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
Sapa Inka, Atawallpa ruled an empire encompassing almost one thousand square miles and approximately ten million subjects.1 He had an
army of at least one hundred thousand men, so it is unlikely that he
considered the band of fewer than two hundred “barbarians” much
of a risk. True, the Sapa Inka’s advisors and generals were troubled by
reports of new weapons and horses, but Atawallpa had far more serious concerns. Having just vanquished his half-brother Waskar in a
brutal civil war, his main concern was to consolidate power and wrest
the Inkan capital of Cuzco from his mutinous sibling. The strangers,
who had left themselves dangerously exposed by rashly blundering
into the heart of the Inkan Empire, could now be easily dealt with.
Although Atawallpa’s priorities were entirely understandable, he
should have taken the Spaniards more seriously. Led by Francisco
Pizarro, the barely literate illegitimate son of a Spanish nobleman,
111
112 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
the conquistadors were a rapacious band of fortune seekers. Far from
being professional soldiers, they were armed speculators who won
royal sanction by promising to spread Christianity and carve out a
New World empire for the Spanish Crown. Above all, these relatively
common men sought to become rich enough to join the ranks of the
lower nobility.
Initially, Pizarro and his partner, Diego de Almagro, struggled
to fi nd suffi ciently lootable prizes along the Pacifi c coast of Central
and South America. Their fortunes changed in 1528 when their ally
Bartolomé Ruiz captured a raft carrying gold and silver jewelry, gems,
and fi nely woven cloth. Drawn by the strong whiff of treasure, Ruiz
continued southward until he found an Inkan outpost at Tumbez.
Pizarro used Ruiz’s booty to convince Charles V to grant him a
capit-
ulación
, an imperial contract giving him the authority to conquer the
Andean highlands as a knight, captain general, and, ultimately, royal
governor of the new lands that came to be called Peru.2 Almagro was
to be the commandant of Tumbez with the promise of a governorship
over the as yet undiscovered regions lying beyond Pizarro’s realm.
In return, the Spaniards promised the Crown that they would civilize
the Andeans by turning them into Christians.
Armed with this royal sanction, Pizarro claimed the right to lead
the expedition to Peru, which included his half-brothers Hernando,
Juan, and Gonzalo, while Almagro raised reinforcements. His troop of
approximately two hundred conquistadors and thirty horses reached
Tumbez in 1531. When Ruiz fi rst encountered the city three years
earlier it had been secure and prosperous under the rule of Atawallpa’s father, Wayna Qhapaq. Since then, the Sapa Inka’s death from
what was most likely smallpox or measles had plunged the empire
into a civil war between his sons so widespread in its devastation that
the Pizarrists found Tumbez in ruins. Relying on captured translators, they learned that the Inkas were precariously divided. Local
people also warned that Atawallpa was brutal and ruthless, but the
conquistadors’ relatively easy victories over Inka vassals on the coast
gave them the confi dence to push inland.
It took Pizarro two years to reach the plaza at Cajamarca. As the
conquistadors plundered their way into the highlands they learned
that common Andeans had no love for their imperial rulers. Although
the Spaniards did not know it, the Inka Empire was little more than
a century old. It was still in the process of assimilating the recently
Spanish
Peru 113
conquered peripheral territories that the Pizarrists encountered on
their inward march. Pizarro made alliances with these restive Inkan
subjects as he grew more conversant in Andean politics. But he also
covered his bets by sending a message to Atawallpa offering Spanish military support in the war with the Sapa Inka’s brother Waskar.
Atawallpa in turn granted Pizarro an audience, and the two leaders
exchanged gifts through their intermediaries.
Not surprisingly, the Inkas and Spaniards both secretly prepared
for a military confrontation. Plotting to entrap the conquistadors,
Atawallpa bragged that he would sacrifi ce some of the Pizarrists to
the sun god and turn the survivors into eunuchs to serve the women
of his court. The nobles who attended him in the plaza concealed
weapons and armor under their clothes, and a force of twelve thousand men stood at the ready throughout the town. If these forces
somehow proved insuffi cient to deal with 62 Spanish horsemen
and 106 foot soldiers, Atawallpa’s seventy-thousand-man army was
camped nearby.
Pizarro and his men realized the precariousness of their situation.
They gambled that horses, armor, guns, military experience, and sheer
ruthlessness would compensate for their lack of manpower if they
could convince Atawallpa to meet them in the narrow confi nes of the
plaza. On open ground, the Inkas would overwhelm them. Pizarro
therefore sent a delegation of horsemen under Hernando de Soto to
goad the Sapa Inka into granting them an audience in the town. De
Soto and his men found Atawallpa sitting on a stool. Defi antly, they
brought their horses so close that the animals’ breath disturbed the
fringe of gold and feathers that was his imperial crown. Confi dent in
his power and unwilling to hesitate before the barbarians, Atawallpa
barely blinked and agreed to meet the Spanish in the plaza the following day.
This is how Friar Vicente came to meet Atawallpa. Accompanied
by Felipillo, one of the Pizarrists’ kidnapped translators, his job was to
fulfi ll the conquistador’s obligations under the
capitulación
by offering to instruct the Sapa Inka in Christianity. Oblivious to this legal
fi g leaf, Atawallpa demanded that the Spanish return the treasure and
captives they had looted on their way to Cajamarca, and he angrily
fl ung the friar’s Bible aside. This was the signal for the Spaniards
to attack. Hidden about the square, the horsemen charged, yelling,
“Santiago, Santiago!” while their gunmen opened fi re on the massed
114 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
Andeans. Pizarro and his guard swiftly captured Atawallpa, hacking
off the arms and hands of the aristocrats holding his litter above the
fray. Panicked and demoralized, the Sapa Inka’s troops broke down a
plaza wall and trampled each other in a desperate bid to escape the
carnage. Spanish chroniclers estimated that the Pizarrists slaughtered
approximately six thousand to seven thousand of them, including key
Inka nobles, generals, and administrators.3
Despite his victory, Pizarro knew full well that the massed Inkan
army was camped nearby. Seeking to buy time until Almagro and his
reinforcements arrived from the coast, he tried to consol Atawallpa:
“You should consider it to be your good fortune that you have not
been defeated by a cruel people, such as you are yourselves, who
grant life to none. We treat our prisoners and conquered enemies
with kindness, and only make war on those who attack us, and, being
able to destroy them, we refrain from doing so, but rather pardon
them.”4 The Sapa Inka in turn calculated that he could crush the
Spaniards if he escaped their clutches. He therefore proposed to buy
his freedom with a ransom of gold, silver, gems, and jewelry, enough
to fi ll a 3,366-cubic-foot room in the palace. This was wealth beyond
Pizarro’s wildest dreams, and he settled down in Cajamarca for the
eight months it took Atawallpa’s followers to gather the treasure.
The conquistador captain spent this time learning about Inka politics and teaching Atawallpa how to play chess. Secure in the knowledge that the Sapa Inka had ordered the Andeans to cooperate, he sent
out bands of men to loot cities and shrines throughout the Andes.
More signifi cantly, he exploited divisions in Inkan society by courting subject Andean communities and making overtures to Waskar,
whom Atawallpa’s men held prisoner in Cuzco. Waskar recognized
that Cajamarca had rendered the civil war moot and offered to double
his brother’s ransom if the Spanish backed him instead. Atawallpa
found this intolerable and ordered his men to drown his rival before
he could conclude an alliance with the invaders.
Yet Atawallpa’s days also became numbered as the room in Cajamarca slowly fi lled with plunder. By mid-1533, the ransom amounted
to thirteen thousand pounds of gold and twenty-six thousand pounds
of silver, much of it melted down into ingots from priceless works
of decorative and ceremonial art. Shared out among the conquistadors, it came to forty-fi ve pounds of gold and ninety pounds of silver per man. Horsemen received larger shares than foot soldiers, and
Spanish
Peru 115
one-fi fth of the treasure, which equaled 262,259 pesos, went to the
Spanish Crown. Pizarro ruled that Almagro and his contingent of
150 men, who arrived late on the scene, were not eligible for a full
share, a decision that eventually would lead the conquistadors to turn
on each other.5
This windfall had an immediate and corrupting impact on the
Spaniards. Suddenly rich and powerful, men from humble backgrounds spent their time gambling, fi ghting, and preying upon Inkan
noblewomen. Having paid his ransom, Atawallpa now became a liability. Pizarro knew full well that the Sapa Inka would seek retribution
once free, and cynically condemned Atawallpa to death by garroting
for the murder of his royal brother Waskar. The Sapa Inka accepted
baptism before his execution on August 29, 1533, thereby earning a
full Christian burial. Pizarro appointed a seemingly compliant prince
named Manqu to be the new Sapa Inka.
Most Spanish chroniclers depicted the Pizarrists as daring heroes
who single-handedly overthrew a mighty heathen tyrant, but in
reality they hijacked one of the great empires of the New World by
exploiting the deep rifts in the Inkan Empire. Although the conquistadors’ guns, horses, and armor gave them a tactical advantage, these
military innovations would have not amounted to much if they had
encountered the Inkas at the height of their power. Old World epidemics of smallpox, measles, and infl uenza preceded the Pizarrists
into the highlands and indirectly touched off the civil war by killing
Atawallpa’s father, Wayna Qhapaq. Many of Atawallpa’s rivals in this
fratricidal struggle joined Pizarro as foot soldiers after the carnage at
Cajamarca decapitated the Inkan imperial government. Understandably, the Inkas’ newly conquered subjects also viewed Atawallpa’s
downfall as potentially liberating and many threw in with the Spaniards. Where Claudius and Tariq ibn Ziyad needed thousands of seasoned soldiers to conquer Britain and Spain, in the early modern era
Pizarro demonstrated that it was possible to build an empire with
only a handful of followers if audacious imperial entrepreneurs could
exploit divisions in a conquered society. In effect, the conquistadors
enlisted New World peoples in their own subjugation.
Peru became a domain of the Spanish Crown, but in the immediate
decades after Pizarro’s coup at Cajamarca it was essentially a private
imperial state. Rarely, if ever, had such a small group of marauders
been able to lay their hands on the levers of imperial exploitation
116 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
for such an extended period. The conquistadors’ capture of the Inkan
state led to an orgy of looting and naked exploitation that probably
would have seemed extreme to even the most hardened ancient and
medieval empire builders. Claudius and Tariq certainly plundered
and enslaved vanquished Britons and Iberians. But they lacked the
means, and perhaps even the will, to match the ruthless tactics that
the Pizarrists used to wring wealth out of subject Andeans. While the
capitulación
gave the conquistadors’ empire a veneer of royal and
Christian legitimacy, Pizarro and his men viewed the Andeans as a
disposable resource and raised imperial extraction to new heights of
brutality.
The conquistadors had almost total freedom to do as they pleased
in the New World because they were free from royal supervision.
The marriage of Isabella and Ferdinand brought most of the Iberian
Peninsula together by joining the kingdoms of Castile and Aragón.
Through matrimony, inheritance, and dynastic alliance their grandson Charles became the ruler of Spain and Habsburg Austria. Elected
Holy Roman Emperor in 1520, his realm was so large and powerful that contemporary European observers assumed that it would
eventually encompass the entire world. Of this, the Americas were
only a secondary concern for Charles. He profi ted from his share of
the conquistadors’ plunder, but the limits of transatlantic travel and
communication kept his focus on Europe. Although Columbus’s
discoveries allowed Spanish monarchs to burnish their Catholic
credentials through state-sanctioned evangelism in a hemisphere
that had never encountered Islam, they initially had no more direct
control over their American possessions than the Umayyad caliphs
had over Al-Andalus.