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

The Inca Chasqui: Running an Empire on Foot

7 min · 6 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Inca Chasqui: Running an Empire on Foot

Descripción

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Inca chasqui runners—the elite messengers who sprinted across the Qhapaq Ñan, the vast Andean road network, to relay information across the empire in hours. They discuss how chasquis were selected as boys, trained in relay stations called tambos, and memorized oral messages encoded on khipus. The hosts unpack the engineering behind the road system, the runners' stamina and diet, and the logistical challenges of governing Tawantinsuyu without writing. They also touch on controversies: did chasquis really carry quipus, or were the knots too fragile? And how much of this system was adopted by Spanish conquistadors like Pizarro? The conversation ends with the legacy of the chasquis in modern Andean culture and the Quechua word chaski still used today. Specifics include the road from Cusco to Quito, the chasquis' distinctive dress, and the story of a runner who supposedly carried fresh fish from the Pacific to the Sapa Inca in under two days. #Inca #Chasqui #QhapaqÑan #Tawantinsuyu #IncaRunners #IncaMessengers #Andes #IncaRoads #Khipu #Tambos #SapaInca #IncaCommunication #IncaEmpire #Quechua #AncientMessengers #History #FexingoHistory #AndeanCivilization Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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83 episodios

episode Inti Raymi: The Inca Festival of the Sun artwork

Inti Raymi: The Inca Festival of the Sun

Every June, the Inca Empire held its most sacred festival: Inti Raymi, the Festival of the Sun. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the religious, astronomical, and political dimensions of this grand celebration. They discuss how the Sapa Inca himself led the ceremony in Cusco's main plaza, the role of the aclla and priests, and the symbolic sacrifice of a black llama. Lucas explains the connection to the ceque system and how Inti Raymi reinforced the divine status of the Inca ruler. They also touch on the colonial suppression of the festival and its modern revival as a major tourist attraction in Cusco. Specific details include the use of chicha, the importance of the huaca Huanacauri, and the alignment of the Coricancha with the solstice sun. #IntiRaymi #Inca #FestivalOfTheSun #Cusco #SapaInca #Coricancha #CequeSystem #Solstice #Aclla #Huaca #Chicha #LlamaSacrifice #Tawantinsuyu #Andes #ColonialSuppression #ModernRevival #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

8 de jun de 20265 min
episode The Inca Quipucamayocs: Spies, Census Takers, and Empire Builders artwork

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

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]

Ayer7 min
episode The Inca Mita: Labor Tax That Built an Empire artwork

The Inca Mita: Labor Tax That Built an Empire

In this episode of the Fexingo History podcast, Lucas and Luna dive into the mita — the Inca labor tax system that underpinned the vast infrastructure of Tawantinsuyu. From building the Qhapaq Ñan and terraces at Moray to cloth production and mining, the mita was a rotating public service obligation that every able-bodied adult male fulfilled. But it wasn't just forced labor: it came with state-provided food, coca, and chicha, and was embedded in a reciprocal worldview where the Sapa Inca owed his subjects sustenance in return. Lucas unpacks how the mita differed from slavery, how it was organized via the decimal system and khipus, and how the Spanish later twisted it into the brutal mit'a that enslaved millions in Potosí's silver mines. He also explores the mitmaq — resettlement as imperial strategy — and the ethical debates among Spanish clergy like Domingo de Santo Tomás. A nuanced look at how an empire without wheels or iron moved mountains through mutual obligation. #IncaEmpire #Mita #Tawantinsuyu #SapaInca #QhapaqÑan #Khipu #Mitmaq #Potosí #Andes #IncaLabor #DomingoDeSantoTomás #Colonialism #Moray #Chicha #Coca #IncaEngineering #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
episode Inca Capacocha: The Child Sacrifice Ritual That Shocked an Empire artwork

Inca Capacocha: The Child Sacrifice Ritual That Shocked an Empire

When the Inca needed to speak directly to their gods, they sent the most precious offering imaginable: their own children. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the capacocha — the ritual child sacrifice that the Inca believed maintained the cosmic balance of Tawantinsuyu. They discuss the most famous examples, including the frozen mummies of Llullaillaco, Mount Ampato's Juanita, and the children of Cerro El Plomo and Nevado de Chuscha. Lucas explains the spiritual logic behind the practice: capacocha wasn't an act of desperation but a solemn, state-sponsored ceremony meant to honor Inti the sun god, Pachamama the earth mother, and the apus — the mountain spirits. He also addresses the ethical questions modern listeners bring to the ritual, and how the Inca themselves understood sacrifice and reciprocity. Along the way, they touch on how the Spanish chroniclers recorded (and misunderstood) the practice, and what archaeology has revealed about the children's lives before their deaths. The episode ends with a quiet reflection on what it means to try to understand a worldview so different from our own. #Capacocha #Inca #ChildSacrifice #Llullaillaco #Juanita #CerroElPlomo #NevadoDeChuscha #Inti #Pachamama #Apus #Tawantinsuyu #Mummies #Andes #Archaeology #MountainSacrifice #History #FexingoHistory #Ritual Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

6 de jun de 202611 min
episode The Inca Chasqui: Running an Empire on Foot artwork

The Inca Chasqui: Running an Empire on Foot

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Inca chasqui runners—the elite messengers who sprinted across the Qhapaq Ñan, the vast Andean road network, to relay information across the empire in hours. They discuss how chasquis were selected as boys, trained in relay stations called tambos, and memorized oral messages encoded on khipus. The hosts unpack the engineering behind the road system, the runners' stamina and diet, and the logistical challenges of governing Tawantinsuyu without writing. They also touch on controversies: did chasquis really carry quipus, or were the knots too fragile? And how much of this system was adopted by Spanish conquistadors like Pizarro? The conversation ends with the legacy of the chasquis in modern Andean culture and the Quechua word chaski still used today. Specifics include the road from Cusco to Quito, the chasquis' distinctive dress, and the story of a runner who supposedly carried fresh fish from the Pacific to the Sapa Inca in under two days. #Inca #Chasqui #QhapaqÑan #Tawantinsuyu #IncaRunners #IncaMessengers #Andes #IncaRoads #Khipu #Tambos #SapaInca #IncaCommunication #IncaEmpire #Quechua #AncientMessengers #History #FexingoHistory #AndeanCivilization Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

6 de jun de 20267 min