Practical Use of the QuiposThe Marquis de Nadaillac has placed on record a use to which thequiposwere put in more modern times. He says: “A great revolt against the Spaniards was organised in 1792. As was found out later, the revolt had been organised by means of messengers carrying a piece of wood in which were enclosed threads the ends of which were formed of red, black, blue, or white fringes. The black thread had four knots, which signified that the messenger had started from Vladura, the residence of the chief of the conspiracy, four days after full moon. The white thread had ten knots, which signified that the revolt would break out ten days after the arrival of the messenger.The person to whom the keeper was sent had in his turn to make a knot in the red thread if he agreed to join the confederates; in the red and blue threads, on the contrary, if he refused.” It was by means of thesequiposthat the Incas transmitted their instructions. On all the roads starting from the capital, at distances rarely exceeding five miles, rosetambos, or stations for thechasquisor couriers, who went from one post to another. The orders of the Inca thus became disseminated with great rapidity. Orders which emanated directly from the sovereign were marked with a red thread of the royalllantu(mantle), and nothing, as historians assure us, could equal the respect with which these messages were received.
Practical Use of the QuiposThe Marquis de Nadaillac has placed on record a use to which thequiposwere put in more modern times. He says: “A great revolt against the Spaniards was organised in 1792. As was found out later, the revolt had been organised by means of messengers carrying a piece of wood in which were enclosed threads the ends of which were formed of red, black, blue, or white fringes. The black thread had four knots, which signified that the messenger had started from Vladura, the residence of the chief of the conspiracy, four days after full moon. The white thread had ten knots, which signified that the revolt would break out ten days after the arrival of the messenger.The person to whom the keeper was sent had in his turn to make a knot in the red thread if he agreed to join the confederates; in the red and blue threads, on the contrary, if he refused.” It was by means of thesequiposthat the Incas transmitted their instructions. On all the roads starting from the capital, at distances rarely exceeding five miles, rosetambos, or stations for thechasquisor couriers, who went from one post to another. The orders of the Inca thus became disseminated with great rapidity. Orders which emanated directly from the sovereign were marked with a red thread of the royalllantu(mantle), and nothing, as historians assure us, could equal the respect with which these messages were received.
Practical Use of the QuiposThe Marquis de Nadaillac has placed on record a use to which thequiposwere put in more modern times. He says: “A great revolt against the Spaniards was organised in 1792. As was found out later, the revolt had been organised by means of messengers carrying a piece of wood in which were enclosed threads the ends of which were formed of red, black, blue, or white fringes. The black thread had four knots, which signified that the messenger had started from Vladura, the residence of the chief of the conspiracy, four days after full moon. The white thread had ten knots, which signified that the revolt would break out ten days after the arrival of the messenger.The person to whom the keeper was sent had in his turn to make a knot in the red thread if he agreed to join the confederates; in the red and blue threads, on the contrary, if he refused.” It was by means of thesequiposthat the Incas transmitted their instructions. On all the roads starting from the capital, at distances rarely exceeding five miles, rosetambos, or stations for thechasquisor couriers, who went from one post to another. The orders of the Inca thus became disseminated with great rapidity. Orders which emanated directly from the sovereign were marked with a red thread of the royalllantu(mantle), and nothing, as historians assure us, could equal the respect with which these messages were received.
Practical Use of the QuiposThe Marquis de Nadaillac has placed on record a use to which thequiposwere put in more modern times. He says: “A great revolt against the Spaniards was organised in 1792. As was found out later, the revolt had been organised by means of messengers carrying a piece of wood in which were enclosed threads the ends of which were formed of red, black, blue, or white fringes. The black thread had four knots, which signified that the messenger had started from Vladura, the residence of the chief of the conspiracy, four days after full moon. The white thread had ten knots, which signified that the revolt would break out ten days after the arrival of the messenger.The person to whom the keeper was sent had in his turn to make a knot in the red thread if he agreed to join the confederates; in the red and blue threads, on the contrary, if he refused.” It was by means of thesequiposthat the Incas transmitted their instructions. On all the roads starting from the capital, at distances rarely exceeding five miles, rosetambos, or stations for thechasquisor couriers, who went from one post to another. The orders of the Inca thus became disseminated with great rapidity. Orders which emanated directly from the sovereign were marked with a red thread of the royalllantu(mantle), and nothing, as historians assure us, could equal the respect with which these messages were received.
Practical Use of the Quipos
The Marquis de Nadaillac has placed on record a use to which thequiposwere put in more modern times. He says: “A great revolt against the Spaniards was organised in 1792. As was found out later, the revolt had been organised by means of messengers carrying a piece of wood in which were enclosed threads the ends of which were formed of red, black, blue, or white fringes. The black thread had four knots, which signified that the messenger had started from Vladura, the residence of the chief of the conspiracy, four days after full moon. The white thread had ten knots, which signified that the revolt would break out ten days after the arrival of the messenger.The person to whom the keeper was sent had in his turn to make a knot in the red thread if he agreed to join the confederates; in the red and blue threads, on the contrary, if he refused.” It was by means of thesequiposthat the Incas transmitted their instructions. On all the roads starting from the capital, at distances rarely exceeding five miles, rosetambos, or stations for thechasquisor couriers, who went from one post to another. The orders of the Inca thus became disseminated with great rapidity. Orders which emanated directly from the sovereign were marked with a red thread of the royalllantu(mantle), and nothing, as historians assure us, could equal the respect with which these messages were received.
The Marquis de Nadaillac has placed on record a use to which thequiposwere put in more modern times. He says: “A great revolt against the Spaniards was organised in 1792. As was found out later, the revolt had been organised by means of messengers carrying a piece of wood in which were enclosed threads the ends of which were formed of red, black, blue, or white fringes. The black thread had four knots, which signified that the messenger had started from Vladura, the residence of the chief of the conspiracy, four days after full moon. The white thread had ten knots, which signified that the revolt would break out ten days after the arrival of the messenger.The person to whom the keeper was sent had in his turn to make a knot in the red thread if he agreed to join the confederates; in the red and blue threads, on the contrary, if he refused.” It was by means of thesequiposthat the Incas transmitted their instructions. On all the roads starting from the capital, at distances rarely exceeding five miles, rosetambos, or stations for thechasquisor couriers, who went from one post to another. The orders of the Inca thus became disseminated with great rapidity. Orders which emanated directly from the sovereign were marked with a red thread of the royalllantu(mantle), and nothing, as historians assure us, could equal the respect with which these messages were received.