Weekly new civilization reveals continue for the fourth week in a row with Firaxis today revealing the Inca for Civilization VI's upcoming Gathering Storm expansion. While Canada from last week is ...
What remains of the Inca legacy is limited, as the conquistadors plundered what they could of Inca treasures and in so doing, dismantled the many structures painstakingly built by Inca craftsmen to ...
The most powerful civilization in South America before the arrival of Europeans was the mighty Inca empire, which ruled much of the continent’s Pacific coast from their home in the Peru highlands. And ...
EarlyHumans on MSN
Secrets of the lost civilization deep in Ecuador
In the mid 20th Century, Ecuadorian historian Jacinto Jijon Y Caamano set out to investigate the remains of a suspected pre-Columbian settlement close to the town of Manta, on Ecuador's Pacific ...
The Inca will make their return to Civilization with February's Gathering Storm expansion. Led once again by Pachacuti, the Inca can make use of mountains like no-one else. Their unique ability is Mit ...
Huayna Capac had a problem: He didn’t like his hometown, Cusco, in the bracing heights of southern Peru. Unfortunately, Cusco was the center of the Inca Empire, and he was the empire’s supreme ruler.
In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the Inca Empire was the largest South America had ever known. Centered in Peru, it stretched across the Andes’ mountain tops and down to the shoreline, ...
A groundbreaking discovery by archaeologists brings the latest developments regarding the Inca empire's elites, with a bathhouse seen in the Peruvian Andes region. The researchers claimed that this is ...
17don MSN
There are thousands of aligned holes in Peru. Archaeologists now think they know who made them
For years, researchers have questioned who created the “band of holes” site in Peru. A new study suggests it was an ancient marketplace.
A suspension bridge made of twisted plant fibers stretches high above the Apurimac River in Peru. Local residents, descendants of the Inca, have been making bridges like this for some 500 years.
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