The Inca Empire: Engineering Genius in the Mountains — Fexingo History
No alphabet. No written numbers. Yet the Inca Empire stretched 4,000 kilometres across the Andes, managed millions of subjects, tracked harvests, troops, and taxes — all with bundles of knotted string. This episode dives into the quipu (khipu), the Andean recording device that baffled Spanish chroniclers and still challenges researchers today. Lucas and Luna explore how quipucamayocs — specialist knot-keepers — encoded census data, tribute tallies, and even narrative histories in coloured cords and precise knot placements. They discuss what we know from early colonial accounts like those of Pedro Cieza de León and Garcilaso de la Vega, the ongoing debate over whether quipus contain a phonetic or logographic writing system, and the discovery at Caral of a 4,600-year-old quipu precursor. Along the way, they touch on the quipus' destruction during the Spanish extirpation of idolatries, the few surviving examples, and the collaborative work of modern researchers like Gary Urton and Manny Medrano to decode these threads. A conversation about information technology, empire, and the fragility of knowledge — all tied up in knots. #Quipu #Khipu #Inca #Tawantinsuyu #Quipucamayoc #Andes #PreColumbian #GaryUrton #Caral #PedroCiezaDeLeon #GarcilasoDeLaVega #StringRecord #WritingSystems #Archaeology #IncaEmpire #History #FexingoHistory #Ep135 Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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