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  2. Quechua people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quechua_people

    Quechua woman and child in the Sacred Valley Quechua person playing siku panpipe and caja drum in Sucre. Despite their ethnic diversity and linguistic distinctions, the various Quechua ethnic groups have numerous cultural characteristics in common. They also share many of these with the Aymara or other Indigenous peoples of the central Andes.

  3. Quechuan languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quechuan_languages

    ñawi-i-wan- mi eye- 1P -with- DIR lika-la-a see- PST - 1 ñawi-i-wan- mi lika-la-a eye-1P-with-DIR see-PST-1 I saw them with my own eyes. -chr(a): Inference and attenuation In Quechuan languages, not specified by the source, the inference morpheme appears as -ch(i), -ch(a), -chr(a). The -chr(a) evidential indicates that the utterance is an inference or form of conjecture. That inference ...

  4. Indigenous peoples of Peru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_Peru

    The Indigenous peoples of Peru or Native Peruvians (Spanish: Peruanos Nativos) comprise a large number of ethnic groups who inhabit territory in present-day Peru. Indigenous cultures developed here for thousands of years before the arrival of the Spanish in 1532. In 2017, 5,500,000 Peruvians identified themselves as indigenous peoples and ...

  5. Southern Quechua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Quechua

    The term Southern Quechua refers to the Quechuan varieties spoken in regions of the Andes south of a line roughly east–west between the cities of Huancayo and Huancavelica in central Peru. It includes the Quechua varieties spoken in the regions of Ayacucho, Cusco and Puno in Peru, in much of Bolivia and parts of north-west Argentina.

  6. Kingdom of Cusco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Cusco

    e. The Kingdom of Cusco (sometimes spelled Cuzco and in Quechua Qosqo or Qusqu), also called the Cusco confederation, [2] was a small kingdom based in the Andean city of Cusco that began as a small city-state founded by the Incas around the start of 13th century. In time, through warfare or peaceful assimilation, it began to grow into the Inca ...

  7. Government of the Inca Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_of_the_Inca_Empire

    The Tawantinsuyu (Quechua: "land of the four quarters") or Inca Empire was a centralized bureaucracy. It drew upon the administrative forms and practices of previous Andean civilizations such as the Wari Empire and Tiwanaku, and had in common certain practices with its contemporary rivals, notably the Chimor.

  8. History of the Incas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Incas

    Before the Quechua spelling reform it was written in Spanish as Tahuantinsuyo. [3] Tawantin is a group of four things (tawa "four" with the suffix -ntin which names a group); suyu means "region" or "province". [note 1] The empire was divided into four suyus, whose corners met at the capital, Cuzco (Qosqo)

  9. Classical Quechua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Quechua

    Besides its clerical use, Standard Colonial Quechua was the primary native vehicle of written communication, seen in personal letters and, to some extent, in legal and administrative contexts such as the writing of petitions and titles to land and office. [61]