Home Categories historical fiction Inca Empire 3 Light of Machu Picchu

Chapter 32 postscript

In 1520, ten years before Francisco Pizarro discovered Peru, the east of the Inca Empire was harassed by a ragtag group of Tupinambas.These Indians came from Brazil, led by a European named Alejo Garcia.The Sons of the Sun stopped their advance at last, and they settled at the foot of the mountain ever since, calling themselves Chiriganos. It was rumored that Alegiu Garcia was a descendant of the Flemish people of Portugal, and had captured an Inca princess to accompany him, and the two disappeared in the East ever since.And it is said that this man has a pair of blue eyes that are like the color of ceramics...

After rescuing his captured son Titu Kuji, Manco lived in seclusion in the Vilkabamba Forest for several years.Until 1544, Manco was in Vico, where he was killed by seven Almagro factions who took refuge in him.The latter tried to win Gonzalo Pizarro's forgiveness by means of despicable assassination methods. In 1543, Paul took the name of Cristobal and was crowned king in the presence of the most important nobles in the family.In 1545, he was also made the last Spanish nobleman.In the gloomy Inca epic, Paul is described as one of the few kings who "died of natural causes".He died in 1549.

The dwarf Simb Sanctore probably spent the last years of his life in his domain in the Ukai Valley.He had many children, and two of his children, girls, inherited his short stature.However, their footprints finally disappeared without a trace with the dark history of the last years of the Inca Empire. Hernando Pizarro was imprisoned in Spain for nearly two decades.He was imprisoned in the castle of La Mota in the Medina del Campo, and since he married the daughter of his brother Francesco, he has devoted himself to , Unrelenting management of the vast but useless wealth of the Pizarro family. He was released in 1561 and built a royal palace in his hometown of Trujillo. He died here in 1578, almost blind, at the age of seventy-one.

Gonzalo Pizarro has always maintained a consistent style, never giving up his ambition, and the fate of his life seems to have treated him well. In 1544, he proclaimed himself the governor of Peru, openly confronting the Spanish royal court.During his nearly four-year reign, he continued to sow terror in his opponents' camp, especially by relying on his right-hand man, General Francisco de Carbajal.This person is known as the "Devil of the Indian Highlands". In 1548, Gonzalo was finally defeated by the royal family and was beheaded on the battlefield. Manco's successor continued to rebel against Spanish rule in Vilcabamba, during which guerrilla action alternated with negotiations at the price of peace.Until 1572, the Inca king Tupac Amaru (Tupac Amaru), who lived in the forest in seclusion, was captured.Francisco Toledo ordered the last Inca emperor to be sent to Cuzco to be beheaded in the ancient capital's Plaza de Armes.

Not only did the head of the last Inca king survive the decapitation, but it grew more radiant with time, making it a growing object of worship.To this day, mysterious legends still predict that his head will eventually find the body that was cut off that day, and at that time, it will also be the time when the Inca king returns.
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