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  1. Jul 1, 2021 · Adding to the already great importance and wealth of Lima were Spanish trade regulations dictating that goods from all parts of the Viceroyalty of Peru had to pass through Spanish merchants in Lima and had to be exclusively shipped from and to the nearby harbor of Callao, which made the port Lima’s gateway to Europe (Spain) and later as well ...

    • Eva Summer
  2. In 1528, Emperor Huayna Capac ruled the Inca Empire. He could trace his lineage back to a "stranger king" named Manco Cápac, the mythical founder of the Inca clan, [7]: 144 who, according to tradition, emerged from a cave in a region called Paqariq Tampu.

    • 1532-1572
    • Western South America
  3. The adobe Huaca Pucllana building in Lima's Miraflores district became the first permanent centre of the area's maritime culture. The Huari, the Ychma and the Inca all ruled the region at various points in the history of Callao, prior to Spanish settlement.

  4. 2 days ago · Lima, with the nearby port of Callao, was the entrepôt for trade between Europe and the commercial centres of South America, ranging from Quito to Chile on the Pacific coast and to Buenos Aires on the Atlantic. Under the Spanish system the bulk of legitimate trade to and from these areas had to pass through merchants in Lima.

  5. The Spanish-led conquest of Peru after 1532 was made possible by the Incas’ conquests and consolidations over the centuries prior. What Europeans came to call the Inca “empire” its rulers called Tawantinsuyu—the “Four Parts Together,” each radiating out from the Incas’ home in Cusco, in the southern Andes.

  6. Mar 11, 2015 · Spanish Arrival. Despite these advances, the arrival of Spanish explorers in the 1500s soon set into motion the events that would lead to the collapse of the Inca Empire.

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  8. Sep 8, 2024 · The rapid incorporation of so many mountain and coastal desert polities before 1532 calls for explanation. It is tempting to view such expansion in the context of the instantaneous breakup in 1532, when some of the same forces were likely to have been at work: dispersed territories, interlocked with some belonging to other powers in the region ...

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