12
The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

The Incas:Children of the

Sun Essential Question: In what ways

were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

Page 2: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

Who Were the Who Were the Incas?Incas?• The Incas were a small tribe of South American Indians.

• Lived in the city of Cuzco, high in the Andes Mountains of Peru.

Page 3: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

• The Inca Empire expanded into what are now the modern countries of Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Bolivia and Argentina.

Page 4: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

Inca GovernmentInca Government• Strong central government.

Sapa Inca: The head of government was the Inca, sometimes called the “Sapa Inca” (“the Only Inca”). The Sapa Inca was all-powerful.

Pachacuti was the leader that brought the Inca together in 1440s.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQPSYenhtoY

Page 5: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

Activity Activity

Read The Inca and complete the following pyramid which shows the hierarchy of the Inca political organization.

Page 6: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

Common People Had No Common People Had No FreedomFreedom

• The Incas were divided into nobles and common people.

• Nobles govern regions. • Common young men required to serve in the army.

Page 7: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

Service TaxService Tax• Local officials kept an detailed census—an official count of all the people in an area.

• Each person listed had to pay a tax = forced labor. • People paid their tax each year in physical labor—serving in the army, working in the mines, or building roads, temples, and palaces.

Page 8: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

GeographyGeography• Geography helped the Inca grow• Three main geographical regions:

• Each was a natural barrier.

1. The Andes Mountains

2. The Amazon jungle

3. The coastal desert

Page 9: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

Inca Inca RoadsRoads

• The Incas connected their empire with 14,000 miles of well-built roads.

•The roads belonged to the government. No one could travel the roads without special permission.

Page 10: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

1. Making Inferences Judging by the pictures of the Inca Trail, how did the Inca usually travel? What types of transportation were well suited to the trail? What types of transportation were not well suited to the trail? Explain.

Page 11: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

 Machu Picchu

2. Drawing Conclusions What do the ruins of Machu Picchu suggest about the civilization of the Inca?

http://www.history.com/topics/machu-picchu

Page 12: The Incas: Children of the Sun Essential Question: In what ways were civilizations in early Mesoamerica and the Andes unique?

Quipu Quipu The Inca had no writing

system. Kept records using a

system of knotted strings called the quipu.

The quipu enabled the Inca to record the number of men who went to war and goods that were exchanged.