Inca - translation to English
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Inca - translation to English

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Inka; Inka (disambiguation); INCA

Inca         
  • [[Manco Cápac]], First Inca, 1 of 14 Portraits of Inca Kings, Probably mid-18th century. Oil on canvas. [[Brooklyn Museum]]
  • Diorite [[Viracocha]] Inca sculpture from Amarucancha archeological site, [[Cusco]]
  • [[Copper]] heads for maces
  • Camelid Conopa, 1470–1532, [[Brooklyn Museum]], Small stone figurines, or ''conopas'', of llamas and alpacas were the most common ritual effigies used in the highlands of modern-day Peru and what is now Bolivia. These devotional objects were often buried in the animals' corrals to bring protection and prosperity to their owners and fertility to the herds. The cylindrical cavities in their backs were filled with offerings to the gods in the form of a mixture including animal fat, coca leaves, maize kernels and seashells.
  • The first image of the Inca in Europe, [[Pedro Cieza de León]], ''Crónica del Perú'', 1553
  • Convent of Santo Domingo]] in [[Cusco]], built on the base of the [[Coricancha]]
  • [[Coca]] leaves
  • Quipu, 15th century. [[Brooklyn Museum]]
  • The four ''suyus'' or quarters of the empire
  • Inca expansion (1438–1533)
  • [[Inti]], as represented by [[José Bernardo de Tagle]] of Peru
  • "The Maiden", one of the [[Llullaillaco mummies]]. Inca human sacrifice, [[Salta province]] ([[Argentina]]).
  • [[Atahualpa]], the last [[Sapa Inca]] of the empire, was executed by the Spanish on 29 August 1533.
  • [[Manco Cápac]] and [[Mama Ocllo]], children of the [[Inti]], [[Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala]], ''[[El primer nueva corónica y buen gobierno]]'', ''circa'' 1615
  • [[Sacsayhuamán]], the largest Inca ''[[pukara]]'' (largest Inca fortresses)
  • Inca farmers]] using a ''chakitaqlla'' (Andean foot plough), [[Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala]], ''[[El primer nueva corónica y buen gobierno]]'', ''circa'' 1615
  • Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection]] website}}</ref>
inca
inca         
n. Inca, member of a group of South American Indians that ruled Peru before the coming of Spaniards in the sixteenth century
inca         
Inca
a gold Peruvian coin

Definition

inca
adj.
Perteneciente o relativo a los aborígenes americanos que, a la llegada de los españoles, habitaban en la parte oeste de la América del Sur, desde el actual Ecuador hasta Chile y el norte de la República Argentina y que estaban sometidos a una monarquía cuya capital era la ciudad del Cuzco.
sust. masc.
1) Denominación que se daba al soberano que los gobernaba.
2) Descendiente de este soberano.
3) Habitante del Cuzco y de sus alrededores.
4) Individuo comprendido en la unidad política del imperio incaico.
5) Economía. Moneda de oro de la república del Perú.

Wikipedia

Inca (disambiguation)

The Inca Empire was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America.

Inca, Inka, or İncə may also refer to:

  • Inca civilization, centered in what is now Peru
  • Inca people, the people of the Inca Empire
  • Quechua people, the people of the Inca civilization
  • Inca language, the Quechuan languages
  • Sapa Inca or Inka, the main ruler of the Inca Empire
Examples of use of Inca
1. "It‘s from both the Inca and pre–Inca cultures; it has a sequence," Washington Camacho, director of the Sacsayhuaman Archaeological Park, told the AP on Thursday.
2. Archaeologists say the temple could predate Inca structures.
3. He sat and waited and waited but still couldn‘t get by Brave Inca.
4. Bingham had multiple theories about Machu Picchu: that it was a training ground for Inca priestesses; the last Inca stronghold abandoned as the Spanish invaded; or the city of origin of the Inca empire, which dominated South America from Colombia to Chile for about a century.
5. Toledo dubbed himself Pachacutec after the greatest Inca emperor, and traveled to the Inca ruins of Machu Picchu a day after his inauguration to be blessed in a traditional ceremony.