essay

The formation of Tawantinsuyu: mechanisms of colonization and relationship with ethnic groups

inca and aztec states, 1400-1800 : anthropology and historyNew York • Published In 1982 • Pages: 173-198

By: Pease G. Y., Franklin, 1939, Berg, Mary G..

Abstract
This document analyzes how various Andean regions, varying in cultural complexity, fared under Inka rule. 'In some regions multiethnic kingdoms that had practiced colonization on their own endured Inka rule without much internal change. The ethnically stratified altiplano kingdom of Lupaqa, for example, colonized territories as distant as the Pacific coast long before the Inka advent. According to Pease, Lupaqa's internal organization changed little even after the Inka resettled some of its altiplano population and began to exact ribute. At the other extreme, the independent communities of the Chachapoyas region at the tropical forest fringes of Inka expansion, for example, resembled stateless societies until the Inka imposed YANA retainers as CURACAS having administrative authority and control at the local level. Pease concludes that the monolithic character of Inka state control suggested by the Cuzco-centered view of the chroniclers was a misrepresentation of the substantial regions diversty in multiethnic stratification and in level and quality of articulation to the state (p. 173)'
Subjects
Theoretical orientation in research and its results
Acculturation and culture contact
Dependencies
External relations
culture
Inka
HRAF PubDate
2005
Region
South America
Sub Region
Central Andes
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 2003
Field Date
no date
Coverage Date
1532-1661
Coverage Place
Peru
Notes
Franklin Pease G. Y. ; translated by Mary G. Berg
Includes bibliographical references (p. 194-198)
LCCN
82006760
LCSH
Incas