Machu Picchu: The Lost City of the Inca Explained — Fexingo History

The Inca's Chaski Relay: How Runners Outpaced Empires

6 min · 11 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Inca's Chaski Relay: How Runners Outpaced Empires

Descripción

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the chaski system—the Inca Empire’s network of runners who carried messages across the Andes faster than any horse. We follow a message from Cusco to Quito, examine how chaskis memorized quipu readings, and discuss the relay stations (tampus) that kept them fed with coca and chuño. Learn about the rigorous training, the near-superhuman endurance, and what happened when a chaski failed. We also touch on how the Spanish later used and dismantled this system, and what modern long-distance runners can learn from the Inca’s couriers. A focused look at one of history’s most remarkable communication networks. #Chaski #Inca #Tawantinsuyu #QhapaqÑan #Quipu #Cusco #Andes #RelayRunners #PreColumbian #MessengerSystem #IncaEmpire #IncaRoads #Tambos #Coca #Chuño #History #FexingoHistory #AndeanCivilization Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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164 episodios

episode Machu Picchu's Abandonment: Why the Inca Left Their Sacred City artwork

Machu Picchu's Abandonment: Why the Inca Left Their Sacred City

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the mystery of Machu Picchu's abandonment, building on previous discussions of the Inca civil war and Spanish conquest. They focus on the role of the last Inca rulers—Manco Inca, Sayri Tupac, Titu Cusi Yupanqui, and Tupac Amaru—who used Vilcabamba as a refuge. The conversation examines how Machu Picchu, designed as a royal estate with sacred water channels and terraces, was gradually depopulated after Pachacuti's death. The hosts discuss the "lost city" narrative versus archaeological evidence showing it was never truly lost to locals. They also touch on the impact of Spanish diseases like smallpox, which devastated the population before the conquistadors ever arrived. This episode offers a nuanced look at abandonment, blending history, archaeology, and the lasting legacy of Tawantinsuyu. #MachuPicchu #IncaEmpire #Tawantinsuyu #Vilcabamba #MancoInca #SayriTupac #TituCusiYupanqui #TupacAmaru #SpanishConquest #IncaAbandonment #AndeanHistory #Pachacuti #Smallpox #QhapaqÑan #SacredValley #Archaeology #SouthAmerica #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19 de jul de 20267 min
episode Machu Picchu's Water System: Inca Engineering Mastery artwork

Machu Picchu's Water System: Inca Engineering Mastery

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the sophisticated water management system of Machu Picchu. They discuss how Inca engineers channeled a natural spring through a stone-lined canal to supply fountains and baths throughout the royal estate, serving both practical and ceremonial purposes. Lucas explains the precise gradient of the main channel, the distribution network of 16 fountains descending from the sacred sector, and the ingenious drainage systems that prevented erosion on the steep terraces. The conversation touches on the religious significance of water in Inca cosmology, linking it to Inti and Pachamama. They also address the mystery of the site’s abandonment and how the water system remained functional for centuries after. Listeners will come away with a concrete understanding of one of the Inca’s greatest engineering feats, revealed through archaeological work by scholars like Kenneth Wright and Alfredo Valencia. #MachuPicchu #IncaEngineering #IncaWaterSystem #IncaHydraulics #Inti #Pachamama #Tawantinsuyu #Pachacuti #IncaFountains #IncaTerracing #AndeanArchaeology #KennethWright #AlfredoValencia #IncaTechnology #HydraulicEngineering #IncaEmpire #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19 de jul de 20264 min
episode Machu Picchu's Abandonment: Why the Inca Left Their Sacred City artwork

Machu Picchu's Abandonment: Why the Inca Left Their Sacred City

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the mystery of Machu Picchu's abandonment after the Spanish conquest. While earlier episodes covered the city's construction, purpose, and rediscovery, this one asks: why was it deserted? They examine the role of the Spanish invasion, the collapse of the Inca road network, the smallpox epidemic that swept through the Andes in the 1520s, and the flight of the last Inca rulers to Vilcabamba. Lucas explains how documentary evidence and archaeology suggest the site was never found by the Spanish, but was simply abandoned as the empire crumbled. He discusses the lack of Spanish artifacts at Machu Picchu, the overgrown jungle that reclaimed it, and the Quechua term 'llaqta' for a sacred place. The conversation also touches on the devastating impact of Old World diseases on the indigenous population, and how the city's remote location in the Urubamba Valley contributed to its isolation. By the end, listeners will understand that Machu Picchu wasn't 'lost' in a dramatic sense—it was quietly left behind as the Inca world collapsed. #MachuPicchu #Inca #SpanishConquest #Smallpox #Vilcabamba #UrubambaValley #Llaqta #Andes #Archaeology #History #FexingoHistory #ColonialEra #Epidemic #Abandonment #Quechua #HiramBingham #Tawantinsuyu #LostCity Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer9 min
episode Machu Picchu Discovery: Hiram Bingham and the Lost City artwork

Machu Picchu Discovery: Hiram Bingham and the Lost City

In this episode, Lucas and Luna delve into the dramatic rediscovery of Machu Picchu in 1911 by American explorer Hiram Bingham. They explore Bingham's motivations, his expedition backed by Yale University and the National Geographic Society, and the local guides like Melchor Arteaga who led him to the site. The conversation also covers the controversy over whether Bingham truly 'discovered' Machu Picchu, given that locals like Agustín Lizárraga had visited years earlier. They discuss the initial misinterpretation of the site as Vilcabamba, the last Inca refuge, and how later research corrected that. The episode also touches on the ongoing repatriation dispute between Yale and Peru over the artifacts Bingham removed, and the legacy of his expeditions in shaping our understanding of Inca civilization. #HiramBingham #MachuPicchu #Inca #Discovery #1911 #YaleUniversity #NationalGeographic #MelchorArteaga #AgustínLizárraga #Vilcabamba #Cusco #Urubamba #Quechua #Intihuatana #TempleOfTheSun #Peru #Archaeology #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
episode The Inca Discovery That Rewrote History: Bingham and the Lost City artwork

The Inca Discovery That Rewrote History: Bingham and the Lost City

In 1911, Hiram Bingham III walked into the Andes and stumbled upon Machu Picchu—or did he? This episode peels back the legend of the 'lost city's discovery' to reveal a far more complicated story. Bingham was actually hunting for Vilcabamba, the final Inca refuge, and he wasn't the first outsider to see Machu Picchu. We follow Bingham's expedition from Cusco along the Urubamba River, his encounter with local farmer Melchor Arteaga, and the overlooked presence of other explorers like Charles Wiener and Agustín Lizárraga, who had inscribed his name on the Temple of the Sun years before Bingham's 'discovery.' The conversation unpacks the role of Yale University, the Peruvian government, and the ongoing repatriation of thousands of artifacts. We also consider Machu Picchu's own name—likely not its original—and the Quechua word 'Picchu' meaning 'mountain peak.' A nuanced look at how a modern myth was built on an ancient city that was never truly lost. #HiramBingham #MachuPicchu #LostCity #Inca #Archaeology #YaleUniversity #Vilcabamba #Cusco #UrubambaRiver #MelchorArteaga #AgustínLizárraga #CharlesWiener #Quechua #Andes #History #FexingoHistory #Exploration #Repatriation Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17 de jul de 20268 min