The Inca
Until the 1400's AD, the
Pacific coast of South America was made up of
a lot of small independent kingdoms. These kingdoms often raided each other,
but then they went home again and made peace. This was like the city-states
of ancient Greece, or
the Etruscan period
in Italy. Then one of those kingdoms, the Inca, began to take over the others
and keep control of them, instead of just raiding them (like Philip
of Macedon, or like the Romans).
Gradually the Inca put together an empire.
The Inca did not call themselves the Inca; they actually called themselves the Tawantin Suyu, which means The Four United Regions (like the United States). The capital was Cuzco (in modern Peru). The Inca are the people that are in the movie, The Emperor's New Groove (the one about the emperor who gets turned into a llama).
The Inca did not call themselves the Inca; they actually called themselves the Tawantin Suyu, which means The Four United Regions (like the United States). The capital was Cuzco (in modern Peru). The Inca are the people that are in the movie, The Emperor's New Groove (the one about the emperor who gets turned into a llama).
To find out more about Inca history, check out these books from Amazon.com or from your library:
Ancient Rome (Eyewitness Books), by Simon James (2004). For kids.
Handbook of Mediterranean Roman Pottery, by John W. Hayes (1997). Hayes has been the leading expert on Roman pottery for the last several decades.
Roman Pottery, by Kevin Greene (1992). Greene is another pottery expert, particularly interested in what pottery can tell us about the Roman Economy.

