How Did The Spanish Conquistadors

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Throughout the course of three centuries, South America experienced an immense and volatile transformation that consisted of subjugation, a plundering economy and shift in the empire. Beginning in the early 16th century, Spanish conquistadors were sent out on an expedition to receive foreign goods and arrived to the Andean region where they initiated a shift in sovereignty and entirely transformed the empire within the span of three centuries. The Spanish colonizers brought an end to the massive Inca empire through the conquest of the territory by incorporating the region into the Spanish empire. This economically driven transformation occurred by the subjugation of the indigenous Incas through forced labor as well as the conversion into the Christian faith. Over time, the …show more content…
Their destruction of the Andean society as native Incans once knew it was successful. Through a vast range of events from weak campaigns of early conquistadors to a prosperous and wealthy commerce in the eighteenth century, the Incan culture was ultimately demolished from the Andean region and transformed. The conquest of the Incan empire in the sixteenth century was led by the Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro who was ultimately responsible for the expansion of the Spanish dominion. In Francisco Pizarro’s domination of the territory, he used tactics similar to those used by the Incas when they initially occupied the Andean region. The Incas built upon local economic and political institutions which lead to the implementation of new communities in the empire. Native kurakas “were a part of a privileged elite, hierarchically organized, whose members enjoyed special access to the goods and resources of their society by the virtue of