Legends The Ayar Brothers Four pairs of brothers and their tribes left
Pacaritambo: Ayar Cachi and Mama Huaco, Ayar Uchu and Mama Ipacura or Cura, Ayar Auca and Mama Raua, and Ayar Manco and Mama Ocllo. From the summit of the
Wanakawri mountain, Ayar Cachi with his sling shot a stone against a hill and turned it into a
quebrada, then he did the same with three more hills, completing the four cardinal points. His brothers saw his strength and, mistrusting him, they sent him to bring gold objects from
Pacaritambo and locked him up with a large stone. After getting rid of Ayar Cachi, they lived in
Wanakawri for a year, they planted potatoes on the back of the mountain, and Mama Huaco became another wife of Ayar Manco. After the year, they moved to a hill called Matagua, from there they looked at the valley of Cuzco, and the inhabitants and subjects of Alcaviza, who was the chief of a village with 30 houses, all thatched and very dilapidated. They deemed it a good place, so they agreed to conquer and populate it, they also agreed that one of them had to stay in
Wanakawri to become a
huaca and intercede with the Sun, their father, to increase their children and send good times. Ayar Uchu grew large wings and offered himself, he flew and after being in the "heavens", returned and told Ayar Manco to rename himself
Manco Capac, because that is what the
Sun commands, and to go the place they had seen because the residents would receive them well; he also gave him his wife Mama Cura to serve him. Having said all that, Ayar Uchu turned into a stone figure with wings. Manco Capac, Ayar Auca, the four women and their respective
ayllus, went to see Alcaviza. Before entering his land, in a nearby town called Acamama, Mama Huaco hit a man with a
bolas, killing him instantly, and then ripping out his heart, the people feared her and fled to the valley of Guallas. From there the group walked and spoke with Alcaviza, who accepted them. And so the city of Cuzco was founded, the brothers made their house for them and the four women, with seeds that they brought from
Pacaritambo they dedicated themselves to planting corn. Ayar Auca died after two years and had no children; while Manco Capac and Mama Ocllo only had one,
Sinchi Roca. This was as told by
Juan de Betanzos, the different versions of this story are related by:
Bernabé Cobo,
Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa,
Martin de Murúa,
Pedro Cieza de León,
Juan de Santa Cruz Pachacuti, and
Cristóbal de Molina. '', under the title: "History of the Incas, kings of Peru".
Manco Capac and Mama Ocllo This legend was told by
Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, a
mestizo chronicler who was a descendant of
Tupac Yupanqui on his mother's side. The
Sun, seeing the state in which the men lived, took pity on them and sent his son, named
Manco Capac, and a daughter, named
Mama Ocllo, to civilize the inhabitants of the earth. With this mandate, the
Sun placed his children in
Lake Titicaca, and told them to go wherever they wanted, and that wherever they stopped to eat or sleep, they would have to sink a golden rod into the ground, where that rod would sink with just one hit, the Sun wanted them to stop there and make their home. Thus, they left the
Titicaca Lake and walked north, all the way, wherever they stopped, they stuck the golden rod into the ground and it never sank. They went through a small inn or house, called
Paqariq Tampu, and from there they arrived at the valley of Cuzco, which was pure wilderness. The first stop they made was on the hill called
Huanacauri, there Manco Capac tried to sink the gold rod into the ground, which very easily sank at the first blow they gave it, so much so that they no longer saw it. Then he said to his sister and wife: "In this valley our father, the Sun, commands that we stop and make our seat and dwelling to fulfil his will." They both left from
Huanacauri, each on their own to summon people,
Manco Capac to the north and
Mama Ocllo to the south. They told all the men and women they met that their father, the
Sun, had sent them from heaven to be their teachers and the benefactors to the inhabitants of all that land, to get them out of the ferocious life they had and show them how to live like men. The people, marveling on the one hand to see those two dressed with the ornaments that the Sun had given them, their ears pierced and as open as their descendants had, and on the other hand, fond of the promises they were told, they believed everything they said, and adored and revered them as children of the sun and obeyed as kings. Seeing that many people were following them, they ordered some to take care of feeding everyone by working the land so that hunger wouldn't spread them through the mountains again and also instructed them with the outline of how they had to build their huts and houses. In this way they began to populate the city of
Cuzco, divided into two that they called
Hanan Cuzco (Upper part) and
Hurin Cuzco (Lower part), similarly, they divided the lineages by establishing the
Hanan ayllu and
Hurin ayllu, and the upper and lower districts,
Hanan saya and
Hurin saya. Those brought by Manco populated
Hanan Cuzco and those brought by the Coya populated
Hurin Cuzco. .
Historical Explanation It's very likely the Incan ethnic group started as a caravan of
Puquina-speaking immigrants forced to move to the north from the decaying
Tiwanaku culture, as this was invaded by huge waves of military forces from the south, said invaders would've been the ethnic group known as the
aymaras. There is archaeological evidence discovered by
Francis de Castelnau in 1845 and confirmed by
Max Uhle that
Tiwanaku was attacked when it was populated, as unfinished constructions were found. The exact reasons for the crumbling of the Tiwanaku state may have been the speed and strength of the invasions, giving little to no time for the organization of a proper defense, the support given by the conquered chiefdoms towards the invaders, or both. The caravan stumbled across
Pacaritambo, and after a few years of settling down,
Manco Capac left with a group made of 10 ayllus. They reached the
Wanakawri mountain, and from there they planned to take the Huatanay Valley (Cusco), which belonged to several native ayllus. Although successful in the conquest, the foundation of the city was at risk. Their status as foreign invaders posed the threat of potential wars from their more powerful and larger neighboring chiefdoms, as well as the potential for future uprisings from those who would be conquered seeking to reclaim their land. == Kingdom of Cusco ==