One of the more remarkable elements of …

Years: 1396 - 1539
One of the more remarkable elements of the Inca empire is the mitmaq system.

Before the Incas conquer the area, colonies of settlers are sent out from the ayllus to climatically different Andean terrains to cultivate crops that will vary and enrich the community diet.

Anthropologist John V. Murra dubs these unique Andean island colonies ''vertical archipelagos," which the Incas adapt and apply on a large scale to carve out vast new areas of cultivation.

The Incas also expand the original Andean concept of mitmaq as a vehicle for developing complementary sources of food to craft specialization and military expansion.

In the latter instance, Inca mitmaq are used to establish permanent garrisons to maintain control and order on the expanding Inca frontier.

What "began as a means of complementing productive access to a variety of ecological tiers had become," in the words of Murra, "an onerous means of political control" under the Incas.

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