Uiftorie of the Indie*, lib. & 4$ r 



as we ought, thefe Indians had well applied it 3 in faying 

 they were men fent from God . It is a thing very well 

 worthy of confidcration , how thegreatneile and pro 

 vidence of God, difpofed of the entry of our men at 

 Peru, which had beene impoflible, were not the diflen- 

 tion of the two brethren and their partifans , and the 

 great opinion they hadde of chriftians , as of men fent 

 From heaven, bound (by the taking of the Indians 

 - countrey) to labour towinnefbulesvntoAlmightie 

 God. 





. 

 C H A p. 23 



'pHe reft of this fubied is handled at large by the Spa- 

 ni(h Writers in the hiftories of the Indies , and for 

 that it is not my purpofe, I will fpeake only of the fuc- 

 cefllon of the lng**s. Atahttlpa being dead in XaxawaL Jy . 

 CA , and Guafear in Cufto , and^/w^ Pizarre with his^ 

 people having fcifcd on the realme , Mtwgocapa fbnne 

 toGuAjiucapA bcfiegedthemin Cufco very ftraightly: 

 but in the end he abandoned the whole Countrey ,and 

 retired himfclfe to Vilu Bawba,wl}crc he kept himfelfe 

 inthemountaines, by reafonof the rough anddiffi- 

 cult accefle, and there the fucceffbrc/w^^r remained, 

 vntill Amtro, who was taken and executed in the mar 

 ket place of Cufs9 , to the Indians incredible griefe 

 and ibr row, feeing iuftice doone vpon him publiquely 

 whonie they heldc for their Lorde . After which time, 

 they imprifoncd others of the linage of thefe Ingua*- 1 

 haveknowneD^C^rfcgrand-childeto GtMyntcapa,' \ 

 and fon to Polo^ who was baptized, and alwaycs fav a- 

 red the Spaniards againft Mangocapa his brothef," when 

 the Mirquifc of Ctwttc governed in this Counm y , 



I i i Sarrito- 



