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The first
humans to have set foot in this new
continent and therefore ¨discovered America¨ for our
specie was not Christopher Columbus
and his buddies but Asian explorers, who came in the last
Ice Age, some 20.000 years ago by way of the land Beringia
(nowadays underwater and called Bering Strait), which connected
Asia with America at that time. Those invaders were thought to have found a way
through the Northern ice masses and then following and hunting
larger animals to have dispersed throughout the
whole Northh and South American continent. There is now
also some talk and speculation about them
having arrived much
earlier ( 30.000 BC) and also other people having
gotten here by boat haven crossed the Pacific ocean or the Atlantic from Europe, skirting
the artic belt but nobody knows for sure yet and the dispute is an
ongoing one. |
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In Ecuador, the earliest evidences of human presence date back to
12.000 BC. In a few sites, scattered around the country, animal
remains and human artifacts from those early days were found. Life at that time is
imagined as people having lived in small tribes with men having hunted with stone bolas for
llama-like animals and women and children having gathered fruits, nuts, roots and
other edible vegetables (but it could have been also the other way
around in some cases). An
important aspect of that time is the beginning of the warming of the planet, changing from the Ice Age to our now present-day
climate and its impact to our forefathers. |
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Throughout the millennia then, people changed from hunters-gatherers to more
agricultural societies with the cultivation of plants and the domestication of animals. Corn played a big part in it and converted
itself in the staple food of many people. By the way, corn and the potato are
two native American plants, which later enriched the whole world. In
those permanent agricultural settlements, people grew in numbers
and division of work and standings in the community evolved. The
use of ceramics and metals started to occur in hand with other
improvements involving the making of clothes, baskets and more
permanent housing. |
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The oldest
culture found using already those techniques is Valdivia
on
the Pacific coast at around 3500 BC, famous for the quality of their ceramics,
especially Venus figurines (it always amazing that
cultures, who never were in contact, expressed their world view in such similar
ways as is the case of the Venus cult,
convergent evolution). Later on, other cultures
emerged and distinguished themselves in the making of ceramics and metalwork's, with a special mention to the people of the La Tolita culture
in Esmeraldas, which flourished from 600 BC to 400 AD.
(click
for a display
of their famous Gold art). Apart from their mastery of pottery and
metals, those cultures also mastered the art of agriculture with
constructions of terraces and water irrigation projects and developed
sophisticated trading among themselves with established trade
routes from the
coastal plains up the Andes mountains and right into the
Amazon Lowland jungle. Those trades not only involved exchanges of goods (e.g.: seashells were used in every regions of the
country) but also precious stones were used as means of
payment. |
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Moving alone in the years, many tribes banded together peace- or
forcefully into bigger unions with varying degrees of social and
political integrations. An important characteristic of those bigger
groups were the communal use of agricultural lands with an
increase in productivity and a co-ordination of economic, social and
religious activities under an hereditary authority. Before the
time of the Inca invasions the bigger political entities were the
Cañari people of Southern Ecuador, the Shyri nation around Quito and a
confederation of tribes in the Northern Part of the Andes mountains,
including the Otavaleños, Caranquis y Cayambeños. In the coastal
regions a tribe called the Caras had the largest expansion and
influence. A very important aspect of that time is the
astronomical knowledge. Stars, sun and moon played an importatnt
role at (click for more info he |
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Conquest of Ecuadorian Indians by the Inca Empire started
under the reign of Tupac Yupanqui in the latter part of the 15th
century, fighting bitterly with the Cañari nation. After his death, his
son with a Cañari princess, Huayna Capac completed the conquest of the
rest of Ecuador, also having to fight tough battles with the northern
tribes (Yahuarcocha Lake in Imbabura means lake of blood). At its height
of dominance the Incas controlled an empire reaching from Central
Chile to South Colombia. Although Ecuador was only part of the Inca Empire from 80 years
(southern part) to 40 years (northern part) the influence of the Incas
was considerably great. Not only did they introduce a common language
among the various tribes (Quechua is still spoken today and an official
language in the country) but also their authoritarian and centralized
style of government had a lingering influence, especially as that was continued
later by
the Spaniards. To control such a big empire, methods took place like the displacement of whole tribes (e.g.: the Salasaca people near Ambato
were originally from Bolivia), removal of the ruling class from recently
conquered tribes, etc. but also positive things,
like an
efficient administration, the storage of grains for needy years, their
great building skills of roads and irrigation canals helped to keep the
many cultures under one banner. |
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In 1526 Huayna Capac died and left the Empire to two of his
sons. Atahualpa, his supposedly favorite son with a Shyri princess, got
the Northern part of the Empire with Quito as its capital and Huascar, the
oldest and therefore traditionally legitimate successor, the Southern
Part with the old Inca capital Cuzco. And as it always seems to happen
in the best families, nobody was satisfied with his share of the inheritance
and pretty soon fighting broke out between the brothers, which
eventually led to a full-blown civil war. And as the devil will have it,
that had to occur right at that point of time in history when strange,
pale-faced men in iron clothes with the power of producing lightning and
thunder and furthermore sitting atop fearsome 4-legged monsters, so
different and so much bigger than their own beloved llamas, appeared and
..... to find out what happened next,
please click on...... |
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