﻿344 
  

  

  SOUTH 
  AMERICAN 
  INDIANS 
  

  

  [B. 
  A. 
  B. 
  Bull. 
  143 
  

  

  heavily 
  upon 
  a 
  commercial 
  and 
  piratical 
  relationship 
  to 
  European 
  

   culture. 
  The 
  great 
  need 
  for 
  European 
  weapons 
  and 
  horses 
  was 
  satis- 
  

   fied 
  by 
  raiding 
  activities. 
  Other 
  commodities 
  were 
  acquired 
  by 
  a 
  

   clandestine 
  commerce 
  in 
  tobacco, 
  coca, 
  and 
  precious 
  metals. 
  Its 
  

   volume 
  is 
  difficult 
  to 
  estimate, 
  but 
  there 
  can 
  be 
  no 
  question 
  that 
  Neo- 
  

   Inca 
  resistance 
  relied 
  upon 
  copious 
  supplies 
  of 
  goods 
  acquired 
  from 
  

   Europeans 
  and 
  the 
  pacified 
  Quechua. 
  Hence, 
  acculturation 
  was 
  

   materially 
  advanced 
  by 
  the 
  very 
  fact 
  of 
  resistance. 
  

  

  The 
  religious 
  life 
  of 
  the 
  Neo-Inca 
  community 
  underwent 
  certain 
  

   deformations 
  which 
  were 
  not 
  suffered 
  by 
  the 
  pacified 
  Quechua. 
  There 
  

   is 
  evidence 
  that 
  many 
  earlier 
  political 
  accretions 
  to 
  Inca 
  religion 
  were 
  

   sloughed 
  away 
  during 
  the 
  residence 
  in 
  Vilcabamba. 
  It 
  is 
  not 
  un- 
  

  

  T 
  __ 
  J 
  

  

  J._JLL 
  h± 
  L 
  b 
  l 
  A 
  

  

  A. 
  Principal 
  room 
  in 
  Lonq 
  Polacc 
  

   B-C. 
  0. 
  Principal 
  doors- 
  in 
  Lonq 
  Palace 
  

   Z. 
  Beat 
  room 
  in 
  palace 
  compound 
  

   containinq 
  niches 
  

  

  F. 
  Courtyard 
  in 
  palace 
  compound 
  

  

  G. 
  Plaza 
  or 
  bowlinq 
  qreen 
  

  

  H. 
  Unimportant 
  outluinq 
  structure 
  

  

  Note 
  . 
  Omnq 
  to 
  the 
  ruinous 
  condition 
  of 
  momi 
  

   of 
  the 
  nulla 
  the 
  measurements 
  ore 
  approximate 
  

  

  LT3 
  

  

  PUINS 
  f 
  "rosaspata 
  

   VITCOS 
  

  

  D/WW7 
  eu 
  £. 
  t-Troteii 
  n~cm 
  

   1~4 
  photoqrophi, 
  taken 
  Acquit 
  6 
  and 
  3 
  I5il 
  

  

  Professor 
  Hiram 
  Binqtiam 
  

   Director 
  of 
  'iale 
  Peruvian 
  Expedition 
  

  

  Figure 
  34. 
  — 
  A 
  plan 
  of 
  the 
  ruins 
  of 
  Rosaspatas, 
  or 
  Viticos. 
  (After 
  Bingham, 
  

  

  1912, 
  p. 
  49.) 
  

  

  