Pre-Hispanic
Ecuador
Ecuador offers little
archeological evidence of its preHispanic civilizations.
Nonetheless, its most ancient artifacts-- remnants of the
Valdivia culture found along the coast north of the modern
city of Santa Elena in Guayas Province--date from as early
as 3500 B.C. Other major coastal archaeological sites are
found in the provinces of Manabí and Esmeraldas; major
sites in the Sierra are found in Carchi and Imbabura
provinces in the north, Tungurahua and Chimborazo provinces
in the middle of the Andean highlands, and Cañar, Azuay,
and Loja provinces in the south. Nearly all of these sites
are dated in the last 2,000 years. Large parts of Ecuador,
including almost all of the Oriente, however, remain unknown
territory to archaeologists.
Knowledge of Ecuador
before the Spanish conquest is limited also by the absence
of recorded history within either the Inca or pre-Inca
cultures as well as by the lack of interest taken in Ecuador
by the Spanish chroniclers. Before the Inca conquest of the
area that comprises modern-day Ecuador, the region was
populated by a number of distinct tribes that spoke mutually
unintelligible languages and were often at war with one
another. Four culturally related Indian groups, known as the
Esmeralda, the Manta, the Huancavilca, and the Puná,
occupied the coastal lowlands in that order from north to
south. They were hunters, fishermen, agriculturalists, and
traders. Trade was especially important among different
coastal groups, who seem to have developed considerable
oceanic travel, but the lowland cultures also traded with
the peoples of the Sierra, exchanging fish for salt.
The Sierra was populated
by elements, from north to south, of the Pasto, the Cara,
the Panzaleo, the Puruhá, the Cañari, and the Palta
cultures. These people lived mostly on mountainsides and in
widely dispersed villages located in the fertile valleys
between the Cordillera Occidental (Western Chain) and the
Cordillera Oriental (Eastern Chain) of the Andes. The Sierra
natives were a sedentary, agricultural people, cultivating
maize, quinoa, beans, and many varieties of potatoes and
squashes. The use of irrigation was prevalent, especially
among the Cañari. A wide variety of fruits, including
pineapples and avocados, were grown in the lower, warmer
valleys. Historians believe that political organization
centered on local chieftains who collaborated with one
another in confederations or were subjected to
"kings." Such local chiefs had considerable
authority; they could raise armies, for example, and
administer communal lands.
The Inca expansion
northward from modern-day Peru during the late fifteenth
century met with fierce resistance by several Ecuadorian
tribes, particularly the Cañari, in the region around
modern-day Cuenca; the Cara in the Sierra north of Quito;
and the Quitu, occupants of the site of the modern capital,
after whom it was to be named. The conquest of Ecuador began
in 1463 under the leadership of the ninth Inca, the great
warrior Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui. In that year, his son Topa
took over command of the army and began his march northward
through the Sierra. After defeating the Quitu, he moved
southward along the coast, and from there he launched an
extensive ocean journey that took him, depending on the
account, to the Galapagos Islands or to the Marquesas
Islands in Polynesia. Upon his return, he tried
unsuccessfully to subdue the populations around the Gulf of
Guayaquil and the island of Puná. By 1500 Topa's son,
Huayna Capac, overcame the resistance of these populations
and that of the Cara, and thus incorporated all of
modern-day Ecuador into Tawantinsuyu, as the Inca empire was
known.
The influence of these
conquerors based in Cuzco (modern-day Peru) was limited to
about a half century, or less in some parts of Ecuador.
During that period, some aspects of life remained unchanged.
Traditional religious beliefs, for example, persisted
throughout the period of Inca rule. In other areas, however,
such as agriculture, land tenure, and social organization,
Inca rule had a profound effect despite its relatively short
duration. Farming remained the major form of subsistence,
but the Inca introduced a variety of new crops, including
yucca, sweet potatoes, coca, and peanuts. The use of llamas
and irrigation was expanded considerably. Largely in private
hands previously, land became, in theory at least, the
property of the Inca emperor. In practice, most land was
held collectively by the ayllu, an agrarian
community group headed by a curaca, that was the
basic social grouping under the Inca. Within the ayllu,
each domestic family unit was allotted a small plot of
arable land to grow food for its own consumption. The state
and the clergy also held a substantial amount of land, which
was worked by the emperor's subjects as part of their
obligatory public service.
Emperor Huayna Capac
became very fond of Quito, making it a secondary capital of
Tawantinsuyu and living out his elder years there before his
death in about 1527. He preferred to rule through local curacas
as long as they were willing to accept the divine authority
of the Inca and to pay tribute. When he met opposition, the
emperor dispersed large parts of local populations to other
areas of the empire and replaced them with colonists who
were brought from as far away as Chile. This wholesale
movement of populations helped spread Quechua, the language
of Cuzco, into Ecuador. A standing army, a large
bureaucracy, and a temporally important clergy further
enforced the rule of the emperor.
Huayna Capac's sudden
death from a strange disease, described by one Spanish
chronicler as "probably smallpox or measles,"
precipitated a bitter power struggle between Huascar, a son
borne by Huayna Capac's sister and thus the legitimate heir,
and Atahualpa, a son who, although borne by a lesser wife,
was reputedly his father's "favorite." This
struggle raged during the half-decade before the arrival of
Francisco Pizarro's conquering expedition in 1532. The key
battle of this civil war was fought on Ecuadorian soil, near
Riobamba, where Huascar's northbound troops were met and
defeated by Atahualpa's southbound troops. Atahualpa's final
victory over Huascar in the days just before the Spanish
conquerors arrived resulted in large part from the loyalty
of two of Huayna Capac's best generals, who were based in
Quito along with Atahualpa. The victory remains a source of
national pride to Ecuadorians as a rare case when
"Ecuador" forcefully bettered a "neighboring
country."
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