Part
3 - Triumph of Pizarro; his Assassination
There was nothing now to
hinder the victorious march of the Spaniards to Cuzco, the
Peruvian capital. They now numbered nearly five hundred,
having been reinforced by the arrival of Almagro from
Panama.
In Cuzco they found great
quantities of treasure, with the natural result that the
prices of ordinary commodities rose enormously as the value
of gold and silver declined, so that it was only those few
who returned with their present gains to their native
country who could be called wealthy.
All power was now in the
hands of the Spaniards. Pizarro indeed placed upon the
throne of the Incas the legitimate heir, Manco, but it was
only in order that he might be the puppet of his own
purposes. His next step was to found a new capital, which
should be near enough to the seacoast to meet the need of a
commercial people. He determined upon the site of Lima on
the festival of Epiphany, 1535, and named it "Ciudad de
los Reyes," or City of the Kings, in honor of the day.
But this name was before long superseded by that of Lima,
which arose from the corruption of a Peruvian name.
Meanwhile Hernando Pizarro,
the brother of Francisco, had sailed to Spain to report
their success. He returned with royal letters confirming the
previous grants to Francisco and his associates, and
bestowing upon Almagro a jurisdiction over a given tract of
country, beginning from the southern limit of Pizarro's
government. This grant became a fruitful source of
dissension between Almagro and the Pizarros, each claiming
as within his jurisdiction the rich city of Cuzco, a
question that the uncertain knowledge of distances in the
newly explored country made it difficult to decide.
But the Spaniards had now for
a time other occupations than the pursuit of their own
quarrels. The Inca Manco, escaping from the captivity in
which he had lain for a time, put himself at the head of a
host of Indians, said to number two hundred thousand, and
laid siege to Cuzco early in February 1536. The siege was
memorable as calling out the most heroic displays of Indian
and European valor, and bringing the two races into deadlier
conflict with each other than had yet occurred in the
conquest of Peru. The Spaniards were hard pressed, for by
means of burning arrows the Indians set the city on fire,
and only their encampment in the midst of an open space
enabled the Spaniards to endure the conflagration around.
They suffered severely, too, from famine. The relief from
Lima for which they looked did not come, as Pizarro was in
no position to send help, and from this they feared the
worst as to the fate of their companions. Only the firm
resolution of the Pizarro, brothers and the other leaders
within the city kept the army from attempting to force a way
out, which would have meant the abandoning of the city. At
last they were rewarded by the sight of the great host
around them melting away. Seedtime had come, and the Inca
knew it would be fatal for his people to neglect their
fields, and thus prepare starvation for themselves in the
following year. Thus, though bodies of the enemy remained to
watch the city, the siege was virtually raised, and the most
pressing danger past.
While these events were
passing, Almagro was engaged upon a memorable expedition to
Chili. His troops suffered great privations, and hearing no
good tidings of the country further south, he was prevailed
upon to return to Cuzco. Here, claiming the governorship, he
captured Hernando and Gonzalo Pizarro, though refusing the
counsel of his lieutenant that they should be put to death.
Then, proceeding to the coast, he met Francisco Pizarro, and
a treaty was concluded between them by which Almagro,
pending instructions from Spain, was to retain Cuzco, and
Hernando Pizarro was to be set free, on condition of sailing
for Spain. But Francisco broke the treaty as soon as made,
and sent Hernando with an army against Almagro, warning the
latter that unless he gave up Cuzco the responsibility of
the consequences would be on his own head. The two armies
met at Las Salinas, and Almagro was defeated and imprisoned
in Cuzco. Before long Hernando brought him to trial and to
death, thus ill requiting Almagro's treatment of him
personally. Hernando, on his return to Spain, suffered
twenty years' imprisonment for this deed, which outraged
both public sentiment and sense of justice.
Francisco Pizarro, though
affecting to be shocked at the death of Almagro, cannot be
acquitted of all shares in it. So, indeed, the followers of
Almagro thought, and they were goaded to still further
hatred of the Pizarros by the poverty and contempt in which
they now lived, as the survivors of a discredited party. The
house of Almagro's son in Lima formed a center of
disaffection, to whose menace Pizarro showed remarkable
blindness. He paid dearly for this excessive confidence, for
on Sunday, the 26th of June 1541, he was attacked while
sitting in his own house among his friends, and killed.
|