The Twighlight of the Inkas Empire Theatre Play |
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Author:
| Jefferson, Alberto |
ISBN: | 978-1-4910-4459-9 |
Publication Date: | Jul 2013 |
Publisher: | CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $20.00 |
Book Description:
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The story is located in the Inkas civilization. Is the XV century and the great and luxurious Inca empire collapsed by a civil war between the two brothers who they are fighting for the crown. A bunch of intrepid and cunning Spaniards, take the Inca prissioner and he offer a incredible ransome. The story begins with the initiating rites of the noble youngsters who would become the noble men, commanders of the Army and rulers of the two sides of this civil war.The arrival of the...
More DescriptionThe story is located in the Inkas civilization. Is the XV century and the great and luxurious Inca empire collapsed by a civil war between the two brothers who they are fighting for the crown. A bunch of intrepid and cunning Spaniards, take the Inca prissioner and he offer a incredible ransome. The story begins with the initiating rites of the noble youngsters who would become the noble men, commanders of the Army and rulers of the two sides of this civil war.The arrival of the Spaniards coincided with the intrigues in the two Incas palaces in Quito and Cusco, who fed the ambitions of the two Inka brothers, Huascar and Atao Huallpa, with each one coveting the Inka throne and thus they began a civil war.With the dramatic force of an epic work, this play shows us the development of the struggle and confrontation between the victorius Inka Atao Huallpa and the Spaniards who captured him in the city of Cajamarca, in spite of the Inca's Army surrounding the city. It also shows how cunningly the Conquistadors played to their advantage the civil war among the two brothers and their followers and how the friar Valverde played an important role in the most periouls moment of the Inkas's capture.This story is based in authentic documents of the Spanish chroniclers. Unearthed in the last decade in the chroniclers archives in Seville, Spain by historians like Fray Antonio de la Calancha and Peruvians like Maria Rostorovski, Federico Kaufman Doig, Fernando Cabieses, and others. They brought to light what really happened in those years of the conquest of the Inka Empire by the Spaniards, debunking many wives tales than even now are being taught in the schools of South America and Spain.