The Inca Empire: Engineering Genius in the Mountains — Fexingo History

The Inca Quipucamayocs: Spies, Census Takers, and Empire Builders

7 min · 7 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Inca Quipucamayocs: Spies, Census Takers, and Empire Builders

Descripción

The Incas had no written language, yet they managed a sprawling empire of 10 million people across the Andes. How? In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the hidden world of the khipu and the specialized officials who read and wove them: the quipucamayocs. From managing grain taxes to tracking mit'a labor drafts, these knot-keepers were the imperial backbone. But new research reveals they also functioned as spies, transmitting coded messages about rebellious governors and distant battles. We examine the controversial 'khipu map' theory—did these cords contain hidden geographical information? And we ask: after the Spanish conquest, when quipucamayocs were forced to testify in colonial courts, did they change the knots to protect their people? Featuring the 1567 Huarochirí manuscript, the rediscovered khipu from Laguna de los Cóndores, and the story of a quipucamayoc who refused to translate a khipu for a Spanish priest. A deep dive into the data system that kept an empire together—and its secrets that still resist decoding. #Inca #Quipu #Quipucamayoc #Khipu #Tawantinsuyu #LagunaDeLosCondores #Huarochiri #Mitmaq #Cusco #SpanishConquest #KhipuMap #DataHistory #Andes #IndigenousHistory #Decolonization #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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106 episodios

episode Inca Oracle of Catequil: Prophecy and Silver at Huamachuco artwork

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episode Inca Sundials: How Intihuatana Stones Marked Time artwork

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Ayer7 min
episode Inca Khipu: The Corded Records That Ruled an Empire artwork

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The Inca Empire had no written language — but they didn't need one. Instead, they invented khipu: knotted cords that served as both a census system and a historical archive. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how khipu worked, what they recorded, and why Spanish priests burned thousands of them. They discuss the role of khipukamayuq — the specialized record-keepers — and how a single khipu could track everything from potato harvests to military conscription. They also look at a rare surviving example from the 1500s that may encode a secret message about Inca resistance. And they touch on the modern-day efforts to decode these knotted texts before the last elders who can read them are gone. No writing, no alphabet — just wool and knots. But for the people of Tawantinsuyu, those knots held the empire together. #Inca #Khipu #Tawantinsuyu #Khipukamayuq #Andes #Quechua #WritingSystems #Census #OralHistory #SpanishColonization #Cusco #QhapaqÑan #IndigenousKnowledge #DecodingHistory #Empire #CordRecords #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18 de jun de 20267 min
episode Inca Sound Communication: Horns, Drums and the Qhapaq Ñan artwork

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When the Inca needed to send a message fast, they didn't rely on runners alone. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the acoustic side of Tawantinsuyu: the pututu conch-shell horns that echoed across valleys, the wankar drums that thundered from fortresses, and the way the Qhapaq Ñan was designed to carry sound. They trace how a relay of horns could transmit a warning from Cusco to Quito in under a day — faster than any Spanish horse. Along the way, they look at the chaski messengers who amplified these signals, the Capacocha ceremony where music marked sacrifice, and the Quechua names for instruments that survive today. It's a conversation about how an empire without a written language used the air itself to hold itself together. #Inca #AcousticArchaeology #Pututu #Wankar #QhapaqÑan #Chaski #Tawantinsuyu #Capacocha #Quechua #Communication #Andes #Horns #Drums #SoundHistory #FexingoHistory #History #PreColumbian #Archaeoacoustics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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