Francisco Pizarro, Diego de Almagro, and Hernando…
1528 CE to 1539 CE
They first sail south in 1524 along the Pacific Coast from Panama to confirm the legendary existence of a land of gold called "Biru."
Because the rapidly expanding Inca Empire is internally weak, the conquest is remarkably easy.
After the Inca Huayna Capac dies in 1527, his sons Huascar and Atahualpa fight over the succession.
Although Atahualpa defeats his brother, he has not yet consolidated his power when the Spaniards arrive in 1532, and he seriously misjudges their strength.
Atahualpa does not attempt to defeat Pizarro when he arrives on the coast in 1532 because the Incan ruler is convinced that those who command the mountains also control the coast.
When Pizarro forms alliances with natives who resent Inca rule, Atahualpa does not modify the Inca ceremonial approach to warfare, which includes launching attacks by the light of the full moon.
On November 16, 1532, Pizarro takes Atahualpa prisoner during their first encounter and later executes him, even after payment of a ransom equivalent to half a century of European production of gold and silver.
One year later, Cuzco falls.
Despite Pizarro 's quick victory, native rebellions soon begin and continue periodically throughout the colonial period.
In 1537 Manco Inca, whom the Spanish had established as a puppet emperor, rebels against the new rulers and restores a "neo-Inca" state.
This state will continue to challenge Spanish authority even after the Spanish suppress the revolt and behead Tupac Amaru in the public square of Cuzco in 1572.
Later revolts in the Bolivian highlands will usually be organized by the elders of the community and remain local in nature, the exception being the great rebellion of Tupac Amaru II in the eighteenth century.
During the first two decades of Spanish rule, the settlement of the Bolivian highlands—now known as Upper (Alto) Peru or Charcas—is delayed by a civil war between the forces of Pizarro and those of Almagro.
The two conquistadors had divided the Incan territory, with the north under the control of Pizarro and the south under that of Almagro.
Fighting breaks out in 1537, however, when Almagro seizes Cuzco after suppressing the Manco Inca rebellion.
Pizarro will defeats and executes Almagro in 1538 but will himself be assassinated three years later by former supporters of Almagro.