Page:The Incas of Peru.djvu/277

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THE SOUTHERN VALLEYS
239

the Incas, and their own hereditary chiefs were confirmed as governors under the Inca system. When Hernando Pizarro arrived at Pachacamac, in January 1533, most of these hereditary governors seem to have sent in their submission.[1]

South of Nasca the valleys do not appear to have had either an early history or a dense population. There was an aboriginal race of fishermen called Changos, and the Atacamas far to the south, of whose language a vocabulary has been preserved. These fishing tribes used balsas of inflated seal-skins. The southern valleys were eventually peopled by mitimaes, or colonists, chiefly from the Collas. Acari,[2] the next valley to Nasca, is mentioned by several early writers, and may, perhaps, be included in the Chincha confederacy. Next came Atequipa,[3] Atico,[4] Ocoña,[5] Camana,[6] and Majes. Arequipa, Moquegua, and Tacna, with its port of Arica, were occupied by Colla colonists, but not, apparently, in great numbers or at a very early date.

  1. Astete mentions the following chiefs who came to Pachacamac or sent in their submission:
    Chief of Mala—Lincoto; Guanchapaichu;
    Pachacamac—Taurichumbi; Colixa—Aci;
    Poax—Alincai; Sallicai-marca—Yspilo;
    Huarcu (Cañete)—Guarili; and others.
    Chincha—Tamviambea;
  2. Cieza de Leon, 28, 265; G. de la Vega, i. 244, 267; Balboa, 109; Molina, 62.
  3. G. de la Vega, i. 267; ii. 12.
  4. G. de la Vega, ibid.; Acosta, 167.
  5. Cieza de Leon, 29, 263; G. de la Vega, i. 267; Balboa, 111.
  6. Cieza de Leon, 29, 265; G. de la Vega, i 267.