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ATAHUALLPA (atahu, Lat. virtus, and a...

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Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 822 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ATAHUALLPA (atahu,
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Lat. virtus, and allpa, sweet)
  , " the last of the Incas " (or Yncas) of Peru, was the son of the ruler Huayna Capac, by Pacha, the daughter of the conquered
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sovereign of
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Quito . His
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brother Huascar succeeded Huayna Capac in 1527; for, as Atahuallpa was not descended on both sides from the
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line of Incas, Peruvian law considered him illegitimate . He obtained, however, the
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kingdom of Quito . A jealous feeling soon sprang up between him and Huascar, who insisted that Quito should be held as a dependent province of his
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empire . A
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civil war broke out between the brothers, and, about the time when the
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Spanish conqueror Pizarro was beginning to move inland from the
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town of
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San Miguel, Huascar had been defeated and thrown into prison, and Atahuallpa had become Inca . Pizarro set out in September 1532, and made for Caxamarca, where the Inca was . Messengers passed frequently between them, and the Spaniards on their march were hospitably received by the inhabitants . On the 15th of November, Pizarro entered Caxamarca, and sent his brother and Ferdinando de Soto to request an interview with the Inca . On the evening of the next day, Atahuallpa. entered the
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great square of Caxamarca, accompanied by some five or six thousand men, who were either unarmed or armed only with short clubs and slings concealed under their dresses . Pizarro's artillery and soldiers were planted in readiness in the streets opening off the square . The interview was carried on by the priest Vicente de Valverde, who addressed the Inca through an interpreter . He stated briefly and dogmatically the
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principal points of the Christian faith and the
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Roman Catholic policy, and concluded by calling upon Atahuallpa to become a Christian, obey the commands of the pope, give up the administration of his kingdom, and pay tribute to Charles V., to whom had been granted the
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conquest of these lands .

To this extraordinary harangue, which from its own nature and the faults of the interpreter must have been completely unintelligible, the Inca at first returned a very temperate

answer . He pointed out what seemed to him certain difficulties in the Christian religion, and declined to accept as monarch of his dominions this Charles, of whom he knew nothing . He then took a bible from the priest's hands, and, after looking at it, threw it violently from him, and began a more impassioned speech, in which he exposed the designs of the Spaniards, and upbraided them with the cruelties they had perpetrated . The priest retired, and Pizarro at once gave the
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signal for attack . The Spaniards rushed out suddenly, and the Peruvians, astonished and defenceless, were cut down in hundreds . Pizarro himself seized the Inca, and in endeavouring to preserve him alive, received, accidentally, on his hand the only wound inflicted that day on a Spaniard . Atahuallpa, thus treacherously captured, offered an enormous sum of
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money as a ransom, and fulfilled his engagement; but Pizarro still detained him, until the Spaniards should have arrived in sufficient numbers to secure the country . While in captivity, Atahuallpa gave secret orders for the assassination of his brother Huascar, and also endeavoured to raise an army to expel the invaders . His plans were betrayed, and Pizarro at once brought him to trial . He was condemned to
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death, and, as being an idolator, to death by fire . Atahuallpa, however, professed himself a Christian, received
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baptism, and his sentence was then altered into death by strangulation (August 29, 1533) . His
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body was afterwards burned, and the ashes conveyed to Quito .

End of Article: ATAHUALLPA (atahu, Lat. virtus, and allpa, sweet)
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