﻿390 
  

  

  SOUTH 
  AMERICAN 
  INDIANS 
  

  

  [B. 
  A. 
  E. 
  Bull. 
  143 
  

  

  Quechua 
  in 
  Vilcabamba 
  in 
  the 
  16th 
  century 
  would 
  have 
  been 
  unsatis- 
  

   factory 
  to 
  the 
  Christianized 
  and 
  Hispanicized 
  Indians 
  of 
  the 
  late 
  18th 
  

   century. 
  At 
  all 
  points 
  the 
  late 
  Colonial 
  Indian 
  philosophy 
  of 
  re- 
  

   bellion 
  found 
  its 
  limits 
  within 
  the 
  horizons 
  of 
  Spanish 
  institutional 
  

   culture. 
  In 
  essence, 
  the 
  Indians 
  wished 
  to 
  capture 
  Spanish 
  insti- 
  

   tutions, 
  not 
  destroy 
  or 
  displace 
  them 
  by 
  others. 
  

  

  A 
  quantitative 
  measure 
  for 
  the 
  processes 
  of 
  Colonial 
  acculturation 
  

   is 
  suggested 
  by 
  the 
  similarities 
  and 
  differences 
  between 
  the 
  rebellions 
  

   of 
  Manco 
  Inca 
  and 
  Jose 
  Gabrial 
  Tupac 
  Amaru. 
  To 
  both 
  leaders 
  

   a 
  relatively 
  stable 
  Andean 
  community 
  pattern 
  was 
  available 
  for 
  

   manipulation. 
  For 
  Tupac 
  Amaru, 
  however, 
  formal 
  government 
  

  

  DOMUiOS 
  

   DEL 
  P 
  O 
  RT 
  UGAL 
  

  

  .•••••% 
  ** 
  • 
  S 
  I 
  O 
  X* 
  K 
  $ 
  

  

  V 
  

  

  

  Figure 
  41. 
  — 
  Map 
  of 
  Peru, 
  showing 
  Intendencies 
  in 
  the 
  18th 
  century. 
  (After 
  

   Wilgus, 
  1932. 
  Reproduced 
  with 
  permission 
  from 
  Breve 
  Historia 
  de 
  America, 
  

   by 
  Carlos 
  Pereyra, 
  1930.) 
  

  

  