Title: Why Blame Smallpox? The Death of Huayna Capac
1Why Blame Smallpox?The Death of Huayna Capac
the Demographic Destruction of Tawantinsuyu
(Ancient Peru)
- Robert McCaa
- Aleta Nimlos
- Teodoro Hampe-Martínez
- www.hist.umn.edu/rmccaa/aha2004
2Why Blame Smallpox?
- I. Aleta Nimlos
- Introduction
- Ancient chronicles and modern histories
- II. Robert McCaa
- Early Quechua dictionaries
- Absence of pockmarked survivors
- New insights from eradicating smallpox
- III. Aleta Nimlos (for Dr. Hampe-Martínez)
- The Mummy of Huayna Capac
- Reflections
3Overview
- I. The historical canon blames smallpox for
- killing Huayna Capac and
- destroying much of the population of Tawantinsuyu
before Pizarros conquest - Evidence is based on a few, selected chronicles
(Table 1) and rests almost solely on the episode
of Huayna Capac - II. Recent histories (Table 2) do not give due
regard to - a broad range of evidence (or lack thereof)
- linguistic (Tables 3 and 4)
- narrative (lack of descriptions of pockmarked
survivors) - archaeological
- nor to new epidemiological findings on smallpox
- Significance of pockmarked survivors to determine
presence of the disease - Low communicability of the disease
- III. Finally, there is the mummy
- descriptions, depictions, and, perhaps, the
remains - IV. Reflections Exceedingly unlikely that
smallpox was responsible - For the death of Huayna Capac
- Or, before 1558, for the demographic destruction
of Ancient Peru - There is an alternative explanation (Assadourian
1994) decades of civil war, devastation and
destruction
4I. Ancient Chronicles and Modern Histories
5Chronicles (Table 11533-57)
Table 1. 19 Early Primary Sources Describing the Death of the Inca Huayna Capac and the Origin and Year of the Illness by Author and Year Text was Completed Table 1. 19 Early Primary Sources Describing the Death of the Inca Huayna Capac and the Origin and Year of the Illness by Author and Year Text was Completed Table 1. 19 Early Primary Sources Describing the Death of the Inca Huayna Capac and the Origin and Year of the Illness by Author and Year Text was Completed Table 1. 19 Early Primary Sources Describing the Death of the Inca Huayna Capac and the Origin and Year of the Illness by Author and Year Text was Completed Table 1. 19 Early Primary Sources Describing the Death of the Inca Huayna Capac and the Origin and Year of the Illness by Author and Year Text was Completed
Year Author Death of Inca Huayna Capac Death of Inca Huayna Capac Death of Inca Huayna Capac
Year Author Year Description (with page number)
1533 Francisco de Xerez 1524 115 Atahualpa, attributes death to aquella enfermedad
c.1539 The anonymous soldier(Miguel de Estete or Cristobal de Mena) 138 y Guaynacapa se fué en jornada a Popayán, y de vuelta que volvió murió en Quito.
1543 Pedro Sancho de la Hoz Mummy mentioned, but not cause of death.
1544 Cristóbal Vaca de Castro 22 se estaba muriendo de la pestilencia de las viruelas
1550 Pedro de Cieza de León 1527-28 200 cuentan que vino una gran pestilencia de viruelas tan contajiosa que murieron más de dozientas mill ánimas
1557 Juan de Betanzos(published 1987) 1526-28 201 An illness that took away his reason and understanding and gave him sarna y lepra.
/ / / /
- The historical canon blames smallpox for
- killing Huayna Capac and
- destroying much of the population of Tawantinsuyu
before Pizarro - Evidence is based on a few, selected chronicles
and refers solely to the episode of Huayna Capac
(Table 1) - Recent histories (Table 2) do not take into
account - a broad range of evidence (or lack thereof)
- linguistic (Tables 3 and 4)
- narrative (lack of descriptions of pockmarked
survivors) - archaeological
- nor new epidemiological findings on smallpox
- Low communicability of the disease
- Significance of pockmarked survivors to determine
presence of the disease - Finally, there is the mummy
- descriptions, depictions, and, perhaps, de remains
6Discussion of chronicles(see table 1)
- The death of Huayna Capac was central to the
Christian conquest, because Pizarro took
advantage of the war of succession between
Atahualpa and Huascar to defeat the divided
empire. - Table 1 summarizes key texts of 19 chronicles
- 3 accounts based on best native testimony do not
indicate smallpox - Francisco de Xerez (1533) aquella enfermedad
- Juan de Betanzos (1557) una sarna y una lepra
- Garcilaso de la Vega (1613) enfermedad de
calenturas - Accounts are contradictory
- Of 19 most frequently cited/important chronicles,
6 state solely smallpox - 13 others, various causes perlesia,
pestilencia/lepra incurable, mortales calenturas,
epidemia de romadizo, sarampion, melancolia,
bubas - Cieza de Leon (1550) conditions the smallpox
story with cuentan que - Martin de Murua (1590) unos dicende calenturas,
y otros dicende viruelas - Garcilaso discounts smallpox aunque otros
dicen de virguelas y sarampion
7Modern Histories(see table 2)
- Table 2 classifies principal modern histories by
sources cited. - The more skeptical histories note that evidence
is scanty and contradictory - Polo (1913)
- Lastres (1951, 1954, 1957) inclined toward
smallpox - Hemming (1970), Assadourian (1987/94), Guerra
(1999) - The Virgin Soil School explains away
contradictions and writes as though a virgin soil
epidemic engulfed the Andean peoples before 1531 - Dobyns (1963), Crosby (1972), Cook (1998), Alchon
(2003) - Assadourians well-documented counter-argument
(1987/94) is ignored - Meta-narratives blame smallpox, without
equivocation - McNeill (1976) Plagues and Peoples
- Diamond (1997) Guns, Germs and Steel
- Oldstone (1998) Viruses, Plagues and History
- Tucker (2001) Scourge The Once and Future Threat
of Smallpox
8Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication) Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication) Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication) Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication) Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication) Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication) Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication) Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication) Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication) Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication) Table 2. Inferring Cause of Death of the Inca Huayna CapacPrimary Source Cited (ordered by year of composition) by Secondary Source (with year of publication)
Author Cause POLO13 LASTRES54 DOBYNS63 HEMMING70 CROSBY72 ASSADURIAN8794 COOK98 GUERRA 99 ALCHON03
Total sources cited Total sources cited 6 11 7 10 9 10 6 12 7
Smallpox sources cited Smallpox sources cited 3 5 3 3 4 5 3 4 3
Vaca de Castro Viruelas X Yes . . . Yes . . .
Cieza de León Viruelas Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Betanzos Sarna y lepra X X X X X X Yes Yes .
Borregan Perlesía X Yes . . . . . . .
Pizarro Viruelas Yes Yes . . Yes Yes Yes Yes .
Sarmiento de Gamboa Fevers Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
9II. New Evidence plus New Insights from the
Eradication of Smallpox
10New Evidenceand lack thereof
- Linguistic evidence from early Quechua
dictionaries (Table 3) - Santo Domingo (1560)compiled in 1540s, no
Quechua term for smallpox - Ricardo (1586)muru oncoy, Quechua term for
smallpox, also for measles (Ricardo was the
publisher author Padre Alonso de Barzana) - Gonzalez Holguin (1608)distinguished smallpox
(huchuy muru vncuy) from measles (hatun muru
vncuy) and recorded 3 literal descriptors - Analysis by historians
- Lastres (1954) lack of smallpox term in Santo
Domingo proved the disease did not exist in Peru
before 1492 (to counter contrary thesis by a
contemporary) - Might the lack of a term also signal the absence
of smallpox before 1557? - Cook (1998) uses Ricardo dictionary to interpret
Betanzos sarna y lepra (77 symptoms of
severe skin rash and inflammations) - The terms may also refer to any of a number of
other diseases.
11New Evidenceand lack thereofIndeed there is no
term for smallpox in Santo Tomas vs. later
dictionaries (Table 3abridged)
Table 3. Quechua Terms Related to Illness in Three Early Dictionaries Table 3. Quechua Terms Related to Illness in Three Early Dictionaries Table 3. Quechua Terms Related to Illness in Three Early Dictionaries Table 3. Quechua Terms Related to Illness in Three Early Dictionaries
Spanish Santo Tomas (1560) Ricardo (1586) Gonzalez Holguín (1608)
Berruga (peca de la cara) Moro, ticti Ticti Ticti hacerse verruga - tictiyan
Bubas . Huanti, huantictam onconi Tener Huantictam vnconi huanti vncoytam
Enfermedad de mancha . Muru onccoy
Lepra Caracha Caracha llecte Lluttasca llekte o lluttascca ccaracha
Mal de viruelas o sarampion Muru vncoy
Mancha redondeada Muru Cundir la mancha visuin Mapam mmizmirin mirarccun
Peca de la cara Moro Mirca Mirca
Pegar (enfermedad) . . Vnccoytam rantiycupuni
Pestilencia . Pahuac oncoy P. mal pegajoso ppahuak vncoy o rantiy rantiy, o ranticuk vnccoy
Sarampion . Muru oncoy Hatun muru vncuy
Viruelas . Muru oncoy Huchuy muru vncuy
12Table 3 (abridged). Huncuy Viruelas Table 3 (abridged). Huncuy Viruelas Table 3 (abridged). Huncuy Viruelas Table 3 (abridged). Huncuy Viruelas
Spanish Santo Tomas (1560) Ricardo (1586) Gonzalez Holguín (1608)
Berruga (peca de la cara) Moro, ticti Ticti Ticti hacerse verruga - tictiyan
Bubas . Huanti, huantictam onconi Tener Huantictam vnconi huanti vncoytam
Calenturas Rupay huncuy con frío chucchu Rupay oncoy con frío chucchu Rupay vncuy tener - Rupaytam vnconi o rupay vncoytam vnconi
Contagion Pahuac oncoy Dolencia Ppahuak vnccoy ranticuk vnccuy
Cundir mancha Mizmini, gui Miranvisuin Mapa mirarin o mirarccun mizmirccun mizmirin
Dolencia Huncuy Oncoy nanay Vnccuy nanacuy nanay
Enfermar de calentura y frio . chucchuni Chuchuni chucchuhuanmichucchum
Enfermedad de mancha . Muru onccoy
Fluxo de sangre . Vsputay yahuarapay Cencca yahuar hamupayay sutuy vnccoy
Inficionar a otro . Inficionar rantini Huchantam vnccoynintam rantiycun pahuachin
Lepra Caracha Caracha llecte Lluttasca llekte o lluttascca ccaracha
Mal de viruelas o sarampion Muru vncoy
Mancha redondeada Muru Cundir la mancha visuin Mapam mmizmirin mirarccun
Peca de la cara Moro Mirca Mirca
Pegar (enfermedad) . . Vnccoytam rantiycupuni
Perlesía . Chiriayoncoy Chirirayay vnccoy o çuçunca çuçunca vnccoy
Pestilencia . Pahuac oncoy P. mal pegajoso ppahuak vncoy o rantiy rantiy, o ranticuk vnccoy
Romadizo Chulli Chulli Chulli
Sarampion . Muru oncoy Hatun muru vncuy
Sarna çulpuyani . gui.o Caracha Caracha llecte caracha
Viruelas . Muru oncoy Huchuy muru vncuy
30
103
61
Huncuy vs. Viruelas(noted by Cook 1998)
13Descriptions and depictions of pockmarked
individuals
- Será hombre como de cuarenta años, de mediana
estatura, moderno y con unas pecas de viruelas
en la caradescription of Inca Titu Cusi
Yupanquiby Oidor Lic. Don Juan de Matienzo
(1565)
- Tawantinsuyu, before 1558 no descriptions of
any pock-marked survivors in the Andes - Tenochtitlan, 1520 No Spaniard witnessed the
epidemic, yet decades later they were still
writing about pockmarked survivors
14Tenochtitlan this illustration depicting
pockmarked individuals from 1520 epidemic is
widely reproduced
Less well known are texts on Mexico written
decades after the epidemic that continued to
remark on ugly, pockmarked faces
- Motolinía writing in the 1530s noted
- hoy día en algunos que de aquella enfermedad
escaparon, parece bien la fortaleza de la
enfermedad, que todo el rostro les quedo lleno de
hoyos - López de Gomara completed History of the
Conquests of Cortes in 1552. He too remarked on
pockmarked faces - los que quedaban vivos quedaron de tal suerte
feos por haberse rascado, que espantaban á los
otros con los muchos y grandes hoyos que se les
hicieron en las caras, manos y cuerpo.
15Insights from Global Eradication of Smallpox
pockmarks
- Descriptions of pockmarked survivors is an
effective means of establishing the presence or
absence of smallpox - Used by WHO to authenticate the eradication of
smallpox in areas with poor record keeping - Historians have also used such evidence to date
the occurrence of epidemics (e.g., Fenn, Pox
Americana) - Until there is evidence of pockmarked individuals
in the Andes should we not discount the presence
of smallpox prior to 1558?
16Insights from Global Eradication of Smallpox
low communicability
- Smallpox was eradicated precisely because of its
fairly low communicability - Historians have wildly exaggerated the
communicability of smallpox - Scabs readily lose their potency in high heat,
humidity or sunlight - As a bioterror weapon least suitable because
it is not readily transmitted from one person to
another (Behbehani 1988183) - Wholly improbable that smallpox leaped ahead of
Europeans through the Darien or Amazon Basin - Difficulties of travel by land, sea or streams
- Little evidence of trans-isthmian contact even
over the millennia - Native settlements in the region were
linguistic islands - According to the WHO, corpses were heavily
contaminated and posed a serious occupational
hazard - Preparation of the mummy of Ramses V (1157 BC)
interrupted due to the death of his embalmers? - Huayna Capacs mummy was prepared without notable
incident - Atahualpa kept a bit of flesh as a talisman, yet
suffered no harm - The mummy was worshipped on the road to Cuzco and
remained on display for yearsno one ever
remarked that people died from viewing it
17III. The mummy of Huayna Capac Descriptions,
depictions, and de remains --drawings from
Guaman Poma, El primer Nueva Corónica y buen
gobiernohttp//www.kb.dk/elib/mss/poma/index-en.h
tm
18Tawantinsuyu the best known drawing of Huayna
Capacs mummy does not depict pockmarks (Guaman
Poma)
Why did no Andean cronista remark on what would
have been an agreeable anecdote?
- Eye-witness descriptions of Huayna Capacs mummy,
but neither mentions pockmarks - Sancho de la Hoz (1543) referred to the mummy of
Huayna Capac as being intact, envuelta en
suntuosas ropas y que le faltaba nada más que la
punta de la nariz... - Garcilaso de la Vega (1613) Acuérdome que
llegué a tocar un dedo de la mano de Huayna
Capac parecía que era de una estatua de palo,
según estaba duro y fuerte (vol 1274).
19379 The mummy of Huayna Capac enroute to Cuzco
- Guaman Pomas depictionno signs of pockmarks
- Yet, GP often depicts facial features
20379 The mummy of Huayna Capac enroute to Cuzco
- 558 Note stigmata on Christs face/torso
- And absence of marks on HCs face.
21Guaman Poma, El primer Nueva Corónica y buen
gobiernohttp//www.kb.dk/elib/mss/poma/index-en.
htm
- p. 453 The execution of Tupac Amaru Inka by
order of the Viceroy Toledo, as distraught Andean
nobles lament the killing of their innocent lord - Note depiction of tears.
22Guaman Poma, El primer Nueva Corónica y buen
gobiernohttp//www.kb.dk/elib/mss/poma/index-en.
htm
- p. 659 Wrathful, arrogant Dominicans force
native women to weave for them. - Note the stubble on his unshaven face and the
tears flowing from the weavers eyes.
23Mummified remains reveal tell-tale pockmarks
Naples, 16th century
Mexico, 19th century
24History
Real Hospital de San Andreslocating the mummy
of Huayna Capac
- Ground penetrating radar illuminates the most
promising spots grade 1 anomalies
25No pockmarked mummies have been found anywhere in
Peru.As more remains are studied
- Will it be possible to identify Huayna Capac?
- Will there be sufficient tissue to identify
smallpox? - Will any mummies be found with pockmarks?
- Will a DNA test be developed to ascertain
smallpox even where no tissue samples have
survived?
26Reflections Why Blame Smallpox?
- Too many
- Contradictions and contingencies in the
chronicles - Silences in the historical record
- No mentions of pockmarked survivors
- No mention of smallpox in the earliest dictionary
- Improbables
- That the disease would leap ahead of the
Spaniardsthrough one of the most impenetrable
regions on the planet - That Huayna Capac would die, but not his
embalmers or his son Atahualpa who kept some of
his fathers flesh
- There is a convincing, alternative explanation
for the destruction of Tawantinsuyu - decades of war, marauding bands and wanton rapine
(Assadourian) - The issue is the demographic catastrophe, not
Huayna Capac - Until there is more persuasive evidence (texts or
remains) - the smallpox/virgin soil hypothesis should be
discounted for the Andean regionbefore 1558
27Why Blame Smallpox?The Death of Huayna Capac
and the Demographic Destruction of Tawantinsuyu
(Ancient Peru)
Thank you
- Robert McCaa
- Aleta Nimlos
- Teodoro Hampe-Martínez
- http/www.hist.umn.edu/rmccaa/aha2004
28Guaman Poma, El primer Nueva Corónica y buen
gobiernohttp//www.kb.dk/elib/mss/poma/index-en.
htm
- p. 310 The Inka's punishments in Anta Caca of
youthful fornicators, thaskikuna waqllispa
huchallikuqkuna - Tears drawn on cheeks demonstrate Guaman Pomas
concern with details.