596 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 102 



Princess Royal. Marques Don Francisco Pizarro had a daughter by 

 her, who was called after his name Dona Francisca Pizarro ; she 

 married her uncle Hernando Pizarro, and they have left descendants. 

 (Marg. : Ancestors of Don Francisco Pizarro, who married the 

 sister of the Conde de Puno en Rostro ; their son is Don Juan 

 Pizarro, who petitions for remuneration for such great services. 

 The noble knight Fernando Pizarro had previously married, in 

 Medina del Campo, a noble lady of that city, who married Hernando 

 de Orellana ; their son is Don Fernando Pizarro, Knight of the Order 

 of Calatrava, of the Council of Ordes. He is beneficiary of the suc- 

 cession (Mayorazgo) and all the services of Marques Don Francisco 

 Pizarro and his grandfather Hernando Pizarro, who was of such 

 service in those Kingdoms in their conquests, in company with the 

 Marques his brother ; he suffered great hardships with remarkable 

 courage and aided [the Marques his brother] in supporting the 

 burden of such great cares in the administration, expansion, and 

 preservation of such great realms as those conquered and won with 

 such courage at the expense of his own resources and those of his 

 friends.) They left successors; after Hernando Pizarro's death, this 

 lady married a gentleman named Martin de Ampuero, a resident of 

 Lima, by whom she had many children. Marques Don Francisco 

 Pizarro had a son whom he called after his own name, by a daughter of 

 Atahualpa who took the name of Dona Angelina after her conversion 

 to Christianity. They took him and a son of Gonzalo Pizarro named 

 Don Hernando Pizarro, to Spain, but both died soon afterward. 



1596. Mango Capac, besides his son Say re Tupac, who was 

 christened Don Diego Sayre Tupac after his conversion, and was 

 the grandfather of the Marquesa de Oropesa, left a second son, 

 Prince Inga Tupac Amaru. After the death of his brother, who died 

 3 years after his baptism, in the year 1561, he had retired to the 

 rough mountains of Los Antis, which the Spaniards call Andes. 

 The Viceroy, Don Francisco de Toledo, imitating the Marques de 

 Caiiete, tried to lure him out with promises he made him, just as 

 his brother Don Diego Sayre Tupac had come out ; but Prince Tupac 

 Amaru declined for various reasons which influenced him and the 

 members of his council, considering what slight retribution his 

 brother had received, and also how short a time he had lived with 

 the Spaniards ; so he decided not to come out. 



1597. When the Viceroy who had so desired to lure this prince 

 out of the mountains and bring him to Cuzco, saw that he was not 

 accomplishing his purpose, he sent Martin Garcia de Loyola with 

 soldiers to make war upon him and bring him in by force. And 



