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The Pizarro brothers, Juan and Gonzalo, relentlessly humiliated Emperor Manco by abducting and abusing his wife and sister. This personal cruelty, driven by lust and arrogance, directly sabotaged their fragile alliance and incited the devastating siege of Cusco.
The Pizarro brothers' extreme degradation of Manco—urinating on him while chained—was intended to break him. Instead, it became an unforgivable act of psychological warfare that backfired, destroying any chance of a puppet regime and fueling an all-out war of resistance.
The small Spanish force could not have survived the siege of Cusco or conquered the empire alone. They relied critically on thousands of native auxiliaries from rival ethnic groups, as well as Inca nobles who opposed Emperor Manco, turning the conflict into a multi-sided civil war.
The Spanish didn't defeat the Inca Empire at its height. They arrived after a smallpox epidemic killed the emperor and a subsequent brutal civil war between his sons shattered the empire. This left the civilization politically fractured and militarily exhausted, making it ripe for conquest by a small force.
Francisco Pizarro's initial success was built on a partnership with Diego de Almagro. By negotiating a vastly superior royal deal for himself, he sowed the seeds of a bitter rivalry. This internal feud between the co-founders would fester and ultimately prove fatal to their entire enterprise and their lives.
To escape Cusco and launch his rebellion, Manco exploited his captor Hernando Pizarro's insatiable greed. He claimed he needed to leave the city to retrieve a massive golden statue of his father. Pizarro, blinded by the prospect of treasure, readily believed the lie and let him go.
In a surreal display of dominance, Francisco Pizarro held a formal dinner with Atahualpa just hours after slaughtering thousands of his followers. He then had a mattress prepared for the Inca emperor to sleep beside him, a bizarre and intimate assertion of absolute control.
The conflict was defined by three fracture lines: Spanish-Inca, intra-Inca, and intra-Spanish. The vicious rivalry between the Pizarro and Almagro factions created a power vacuum and chaos that both fueled and complicated the Inca uprising, making it the most dangerous factor.
High-status Inca women were not passive victims. Through marriages to conquistadors like Pizarro, they acted as shrewd political brokers, influencing policy, securing alliances, and even founding powerful new family dynasties that shaped Peru's future.
The arrival of a new Spanish faction under Diego Almagro created a power struggle. Almagro's men, who had no relationship with Atahualpa and wanted to seize Cusco's gold for themselves, successfully pressured a reluctant Pizarro to kill the emperor to advance their own agenda.
Contrary to the "black legend" of monolithic Spanish cruelty, King Charles V and contemporary Spanish chroniclers condemned the killing of Atahualpa. They viewed it as an "infamous disservice to God" and an "outstanding evil," not a justified act of conquest.