A group of Oriental people crossed the Pacific
as early as the year 1100 AD and became the
Royal Incas of Peru. Manco Capac
and his sister-wife, the founding Incas, were not Aymara natives. They spoke
a language of their own that was not Queshua. Queshua was the language of the
Aymara natives of Lake Titicaca, and the Royal Incas chose to force Quechua on
all other subjugated peoples in the Inca Empire. Thus began the Queshua
People of today. When they arrived, the Royal Incas already had a well
populated continent to conquer.
Had the Royal Incas arrived 10,000 years earlier,
they may have populated the Americas, but they were too late. The Americas had
already been populated via the Bering Land Bridge.
At the right: Honorary Sapa Inca being
carried by his subjects in modern day Inti Raymi ceromony.