Sinchi Roca

Sinchi Roca, Sinchi Rocca, Cinchi Roca (in Hispanicized spellings), Sinchi Ruq'a or Sinchi Ruq'a Inka (Quechua for "valorous generous Inca") (c.1230  c.1260) was the second Sapa Inca of the Kingdom of Cusco (beginning around 1230 CE, though as early as 1105 CE according to some) and a member of the Hurin dynasty (first dynasty).[1]

Sinchi Roca
Emperor Sinchi Roca
Sapa Inca of the Kingdom of Cusco
Reignc.1230c.1260
PredecessorManco Cápac
SuccessorLloque Yupanqui
Bornc.1230
Tampuquiro, Cusco, Inca Empire, modern-day Peru
Diedc.1260 (aged c.30)
Cusco, Inca Empire, modern-day Peru
SpouseMama Cura (sister)
IssueLloque Yupanqui
QuechuaSinchi Ruq'a
DynastyHurin
FatherManco Cápac
MotherMama Ocllo

Family

Said to have been the son of two of the original Inca siblings, Manco Capac and Mama Ocllo, whom they conceived in Huaynacancha. He was Manco Capac's successor and continued the rule after his father's death.[2]

The father of Lloque Yupanqui.[3]

His wife was Mama Cura, of the lineage Sanu, daughter of Sitic-huaman. They had a son named Sapaca. Manco Capac, Mama Huaco, Sinchi Rocca, and Manco Sapaca erected the House of the Sun.[4]:35–36,40

Reign

The Kingdom of Cuzco later became Tahuantinsuyu (Inca empire) under the rule of Pachacuti. In one of the Inca foundation myths, Sinchi Roca led his family to the valley of Cuzco.

He is said to have created a territorial division of his domains and is considered to be the initiator of the first census of the Inca population.

He also ordered all members of his ethnic group (Inca) to pierce their ears as a sign of nobility.

The 16th century Spanish writers, including Cabello de Balboa quoted by María Rostworowski,[5] also affirm that Sinchi Roca would have been the first Inca to use Mascapaicha[6] or Maskaypacha (Quechua: Mask'ay seek; Pacha land, world, or space-time), which would become the distinctive sign of Inca sovereignty. Among the Incas, the imperial crown was composed of several elementsː the mascapaicha, the most important, was a fringe of red wool,[7] ordered on the forehead because each of its strands "passed through a small tube of gold".[8] Above this fringe were two or three black and white feathers of the sacred bird Korekenke (or Andean mountain caracara ). This fringe and feathers were secured on the forehead by a turban or headband known as the llautu or llauto consisting of a multicoloured braid "of extremely fine vicuña wool", wrapped several times around the head. The mascapaicha was the mark of absolute imperial power, to the point that "to take" or "to gird the mascapaicha" or "to claim the scarlet fringe" was the periphrase in use to signify the coming of the new emperor or Sapa Inca, during a ceremony where he received it from the hands of the Willaq Umu, the high priest or pontiff of the Inca religion.

One of the stories told about Sinchi Roca was that during his reign a llama shepherd had entered his house and took a young woman whom he cherished very well. The Inca then had them captured and tortured him to tell why he had committed such a sin; the young woman, not wanting to see the villager tortured anymore, revealed that she had fallen in love with the llamamichi (shepherd of llamas) as soon as he saw him wearing a wacanqui (amulet of love), and the shepherd confessed, in turn, that he had received such an object from a demon in a cave.[9]

Building program

The chronicler Pedro Cieza de León states that Sinchi Roca built terraces and imported enormous quantities of soil in order to improve the fertility of the valley.[10]

Sinchi came to be used as the title for a warlord,[11] while Cápac, one of his father's names, became the title for a sovereign.

References

  1. The Ceque System of Cuzco translated by Eva M. Hooykaas
  2. Bauer, Brian S. (1991). "Pacariqtambo and The Mythical Origins of The Inca". Latin American Antiquity. 2 (1): 19. doi:10.2307/971893. JSTOR 971893.
  3. The Incas: the royal commentaries of the Inca, Garcilaso de la Vega
  4. de Gamboa, P.S., 2015, History of the Incas, Lexington, ISBN 9781463688653
  5. Rostworowski, María (12 September 2014). Le grand Inca ː Pachacútec Inca Yupanqui. ISBN 9791021002517. Retrieved 2019-08-21. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  6. "THE EMPIRE OF THE INCAS IN PERU, section ː LIST OF EMPERORS - INCAS". archive.wikiwix.com. Archived from the original on 2020-08-03. Retrieved 2019-08-21.
  7. Carmen Bernand, Les Incas, peuple du soleil, Gallimard, coll. « Découvertes », 24 novembre 1988 (ISBN 2070359816 et 978-2070359813), p.25
  8. Alfred Métraux, Les Incas, Éditions du Seuil, coll. « Points Histoire n° H66 », 1961 et 1983 (ISBN 2020064731 et 978-2020064736), p. 71
  9. Millones, Luis; León, Laura (2003). Luis Millones e Laura León (2003). «Hechizos de amor: Poder y magia en el norte del Perú (PDF). Senri Ethnological Reports, nº 43, pp. 149-177. p. 150.
  10. The second part of the Chronicle of Peru by Pedro de Cieza de León. Printed for the Hakluyt Society.
  11. McEwan, Gordon Francis (2006). The Incas: New Perspectives. ABC-CLIO. p. 220. ISBN 9781851095742. SINCHE: (also spelled sinchi) Quechua term for the elective office of a community war leader held temporarily in times of emergency.
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