Pizarro: Conqueror of the Inca

Amazon.com Price: $1.99 (as of 10/11/2019 21:06 PST- Details)

Description

Francisco Pizarro is perhaps one of the vital best known but least understood figures of world history. In 1530, on the age of fifty-four, he set out on his successful and bloody conquest of Peru, thus changing the way forward for a continent and its peoples ceaselessly. It was once a long way from his humble beginnings as an illiterate, illegitimate pig-herder. Within these pages Stuart Stirling tells the story of adversity and tragedy which was once the life of Francisco Pizarro.

By the standards of the time, Pizarro was once an elderly man when he conquered Peru. He had served as a foot soldier in Spain’s Italian wars and later earned a living as an Indian fighter and slaver. Audacious, ruthless and cruel, Pizarro had a surprising and almost fatalistic belief in the Indies as an escape from his illegitimacy. Luck also played a major part in his invasion of Peru – Pizarro’s 200 men must not have been ready to defeat the indigenous army of more than 30,000, but they did. On the other hand, the Spanish conquest saw few happy endings, even for Pizarro, who was once now wealthy beyond his wildest dreams. Eleven years after the conquest, he was once assassinated by his one-time Spanish allies.

Stuart Stirling’s researches in the Archives of the Indies in Seville enable him to present an accurate portrait of Pizarro as a man of his time, and to place even his most infamous act – the killing of the Inca king Atahualpa – within context. This book brings the man to life against a turbulent background of exploration, discovery, empire building and a clash of cultures.

Home » Shop » Books » Subjects » Arts and Photography » History and Criticism » History » Ancient Civilizations » Incan » Pizarro: Conqueror of the Inca

Recent Products