474- ^v *jhaitiratt- and Morall 



honoured : and for this caufe they fhouldinftru<5t all 

 nien.lt is a ftrange thing, the ground they give to their 

 cuftomes and ceremonies. There were in Cvfto above 

 foure hundred Oratories, as in a holy land, and all pla 

 ces were filled with their my ft erics. As they continued 

 in the conquefts of Provinces, fo they brought in the 

 like ceremonies and cuftomes. In all this realmc the 

 chiefc ulolls they did worfhip, \wertracocha, Pachay- 

 AcbtchiC) which fignifies the Creator of the vvorld,and 

 after him,the Sunne. And therefore they faid, that the 

 Sunnc received hisvertue and being from the Grea-. 

 tor,as the other idolls do, and that they were interceC 

 {brstohim. 



Ofthcfrft Ingua, W# Succejjors. | 

 CHAP. 20. 



THefirftman which the Indians report to be the 

 beginning and fir ft of the Iwgitas, was Mangocapa, 

 whom they imagine, after the deluge, to have ifTued 

 forth of the cave ofTam&0, which is from Cufco about 

 _five or fix.leagues. They fay. that he gave beginning to 

 two principall races or families of the luguas, the one 

 was called Hanancttfio, and the other rrtycufco : of the 

 firft came the Lords which fubdued and governed 

 this Province , and the firft whom they make the head 

 andftcame of this family, \vascalled Ingarocd, who 

 founded a family or Aiffo^s they call them^named Pi- 

 faquiquirao. This although he were no great Lord, was 

 ferved notwithstanding in veflell of gold andhlver. 

 And dying, he appointed that all his treafurefliouldbe 

 Imployedfor the ferviceofhisbody, and for the fee 

 ding of his family. Hisfucceffbrdid the like : and this 



grew 



