The islands of Titicaca and Koati, illustrated . ABORIGINAL MYTHS AND TRADITIONS 303 say: the great Collao. In this settlement he established hisseat and royal court in order that the Indians he had con-quered might not rebel, and after he had them well subjectedand pacified, his days came to an end. . .^^ He furtherstates that the seventh Inca war-chief, whom he calls TopaYnga Yupangue, conquered the settlement of Cuzco andestablished there the tribe of the Inca.^*^ The list of Inca chiefs furnished by Gutierrez does notagree with that of Betanzos in some respects, neither doesit with the lis


The islands of Titicaca and Koati, illustrated . ABORIGINAL MYTHS AND TRADITIONS 303 say: the great Collao. In this settlement he established hisseat and royal court in order that the Indians he had con-quered might not rebel, and after he had them well subjectedand pacified, his days came to an end. . .^^ He furtherstates that the seventh Inca war-chief, whom he calls TopaYnga Yupangue, conquered the settlement of Cuzco andestablished there the tribe of the Inca.^*^ The list of Inca chiefs furnished by Gutierrez does notagree with that of Betanzos in some respects, neither doesit with the list of Cieza, whereas it fully agrees with that ofGarcilasso de la Vega.^^ But it does not seem possible thatthe book of the latter could already have been consulted byGutierrez. The agreement in the names and the sequenceof the war-chiefs points to a common source of the other hand traditions about the conquest of theCollao from Titicaca Island, in the tenth century, about,recall the statements of Oviedo and Pedro Pizarro, in ag


Size: 1083px × 2308px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidislandsoftit, bookyear1910