apart from flattering histories that Inca nobles told soon after the arrival of Spanish conquistadores. The Inca had no system of hieroglyphic writing, as the Maya did, and any portraits that Inca ...
Around 40,000 Inca nobles ruled an empire of 12 million conquered people throughout the Andes mountain range in South America. The Incas diverted rivers and used sophisticated irrigation systems ...
Some believe the tunnels may have served as discreet routes for Inca nobles or priests traveling between key ceremonial sites. File photo (July 1995) Panoramic view of the the Inca citadel of ...
Silver and gold were abundant, but only used for aesthetics. Inca kings and nobles amassed stupendous riches which accompanied them, in death, in their tombs. But it was their great wealth that ...
has the Inca builders digging trenches, lining them with stone walls, and topping them with carved-beam ceilings. The size of the tunnel would indicate that perhaps even the nobles in the litter ...
Around 40,000 Inca nobles ruled an empire of 12 million conquered people throughout the Andes mountain range in South America. The Incas diverted rivers and used sophisticated irrigation systems ...