Both Pizarro and Almagro had left for…
October 1533 CE
Both Pizarro and Almagro had left for Cuzco after dividing the treasure of Atahualpa, entering the city on November 15, 1533.
"The capital of the Incas...astonished the Spaniards by the beauty of its edifices, the length and regularity of its streets" The great square was surrounded by several palaces, since "each sovereign built a new palace for himself."
"The delicacy of the stone work excelled" that of the Spaniards'.
The fortress had three parapets, and was composed of "heavy masses of rock."
"Through the heart of the capital ran a river...faced with stone."
"The most sumptuous edifice in Cuzco...was undoubtedly the great temple dedicated to the Sun...studded with gold plates...surrounded by convents and dormitories for the priests."
"The palaces were numerous, and the troops lost no time in plundering them of their contents, as well as despoiling the religious edifices," including the royal mummies in the Coricancha.
(Prescott, W.H.
; A History of the Conquest of Peru (1847)) Pizarro seeks the treasures of the Coricancha seen, but not retrieved, by his lieutenants.
By this time, the gold statues in the garden and the impressive solar disc have vanished, hidden, according to persistent legend, in subterranean rooms accessible only by secret tunnels leading from central Cuzco to the fortress of Sacsahuamán.
However, Pizarro plunders the wealth of silver and gold that fills the city’s temples and palaces.
He now has the caciques acknowledge Manco as their Inca.
When Pizarro leaves for Jauja in pursuit of Quizquiz, accompanied by Almagro and de Soto, and joined by Manco Inca, he leaves his younger brothers Gonzalo and Juan as regidores, and a ninety-man garrison in the city.