From centre stage to the edge of the page: how Inca queens and princesses were pushed to the margins of historical records
Anyone who has lived in or studied South America could probably name a couple of Inca emperors and possibly even some lower-level Indigenous warriors. Pachakutik, Huayna Capac, Huascar and Atahualpa are household names. But how many people know the name of Pachakutik’s empress (Anawarki)? Or any of Huayna Capac’s hundreds of daughters, the half-sisters of Huascar and Atahualpa (Quispe Sisa, Mama Sarpay, Beatriz Huaylas, Cori Duchicela and Curi Ocllo to name just a few)?
I list these women not to shame anyone for not knowing. I didn’t myself until I dived deep into the historical records. I list them to highlight an unfair imbalance.
This imbalance was what led me to write ‘Intrepid Dudettes of the Inca Empire’ and to discover what caused this dismissal of Inca women when pre-Columbian Andean societies, on the whole, allowed women to have far more power and rights than most European cultures at the time. Indeed, the overall perspective of the Incas was that women and men carried out different roles but that these roles were of equal value.
For instance, the highest position a woman could hold in the Inca Empire was that of coya (or qoya), which we translate to empress. In terms of religious power, an emperor led all his subjects in the worship of Inti, the sun god. In parallel, a coya would have led all women across the empire in worshipping Killa, the moon…