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Peru is the nineteenth largest country in the world and is a diverse
land, both in terms of people and geography. It is populated by over 29.2
million people (July 2008 estimate), largely descended from Spanish settlers,
native Inca, and pre-Inca cultures. Peru has three national languages:
Spanish, Aymara, and the native Quechua, reflecting the native Indian and
Spanish roots that cultivated modern Peruvian society.
Three distinct geographical terrains - coastal, sierra and tropical
rain forest - give Peru a wide variety of both climatic and natural
variation. Traditionally the Peruvian economy was based on natural resources
such as mining, farming, fishing, and agriculture.
Pre-Inca History
Andean Peru is recognized as one of six global areas that saw the
indigenous development of civilization. The Norte Chico civilization
(also known as the Caral-Supe after a well-studied archaeological site) is
the oldest known complex society in the Americas. It flourished along the
north-central coastal area of modern-day Peru between 3000 and 1800 BCE. Several
perplexing questions surround the Norte Chico civilization:
- No
evidence of ceramics
- Settlements were
non-defensive in design with no signs of military violence
- No evidence for
existence of a cereal staple
- Very little evidence of
art (such as paintings, drawings, or sculptures)
Before the discovery of the Norte Chico, the Chavin culture was
believed to be the first civilization in South America dating from 900 BCE to
200 BCE. The Ruins of Chavín de Huántar, located in the Andean
highlands north of Lima are the most well-known archaeological evidence from
the Chavin. The Chivan began the practice of camelid husbandry in South
America through domestication of the llama.
Many additional civilizations later existed in the Andes - the Mochica
(100 CE - 750 CE) built the 41 metre stepped pyramid known as the Temple of
the Sun at Moche. Contemporary to the Mohica was the Nazca, perhaps best
known for being the creators of hundreds of large geoglyphs in the Nazca Desert
visible only from the air. The Nazca also developed an impressive underground
aqueduct system known as puquios which are still
functioning to this day.

Nazca geoglyph known as 'the Monkey' located in south-western Peru,
55m in length
The Wari Empire (500 CE - 900 CE) of south-central coastal Peru
expanded through military means instead of religious and artistic influence
as did previous cultures of the region. The Wari developed terraced
agriculture and initiated major roadwork projects.
The Rise of the Inca
In 1197, the Quechua speaking Incas establish their capital in Cuzco
under Manco Capác. The area had been previously
occupied by the Killke culture responsible for building the megalithic
structure of Sacsayhuamán during the 12th
century. The first ruler of the Inca
established a code of laws and possibly abolished the practice of human
sacrifice.
After leading a successful defence against the Inca's traditional
tribal enemy, the Chankas, the ninth ruler of the Incas, Pachacuti Inca
Yupanqui (1438-1471) began the transformation of the Kingdom of Cuzco into
what would become within three generations Tahuantinsuyu
- the Empire of the Incas.
It was traditional for the son of the ruler to lead the army. In 1463,
Túpac Inca Yupanqui was appointed to lead the Inca army into
neighbouring Chimor, a moon-worshipping culture descended from the Mochica.
The Chimor were defeated in 1470. The conquest of their nearest rival
solidified Inca dominance in the region.
Túpac Inca Yupanqui became ruler in 1471 upon his father's
death. His son Huayna Capac led successful campaigns in the south adding
significant territory to the Empire. In 1493, Huayna Capac inherited the
throne and began a series of campaigns to expand the northern frontier.
At the height of its existence the Inca Empire was the largest
indigenous civilization of the New World stretching some 4,000 kilometres
along the high mountainous Andean range from Colombia to Chile, and extending
from the western coast to the headwaters of the Amazon. It is estimated that
at its height, the Inca Empire exceeded six million people from many
different Andean cultures.
The Inca expanded upon the existing roads creating a network measuring
over 22,000 kilometres. One road ran nearly the entire length of the South
American coast. However, all travel was conducted by foot as the wheel had
not been invented.
Like all previous Andean societies, Inca society was
also based on agriculture, using developed techniques such as irrigation and
terracing. Among the crops cultivated were maize, potato, squash, lima beans,
chilli peppers, peanuts, cassava and quinoa. Camelid husbandry (llamas,
alpacas and vicuña) and fishing were also vitally important.
While the Inca developed a basic system of counting using bundled
knotted strings known as quipu and an elaborate
calendar, they did not use writing. Historical events were passed along
through oral tradition.
The Incas did not use money, instead they developed upon the system of
barter whereby all citizens were required to labour for a set number of days
per year known as mita. Gold ('Sweat of the Sun')
and silver ('Tears of the Moon') were used only for aesthetical purposes to
adorn temples and create artwork.
Demise of the Inca Empire
In 1507, Spanish settlers on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola (shared
by modern-day Haiti and the Dominican Republic) introduced small pox to the
New World. By 1520, it had spread to the mainland. The disease devastated the
native Amerindian populations. In 1527, small pox killed Huayna Capac, his
successor, and most other Inca leaders. His death split the empire
between two sons, Atahualpa who had control of the armies in the north, and
his legitimate heir, Huáscar who was crowned in the Inca capital of
Cuzco.
Tensions escalated into civil war as the brothers fought for control
of the Inca throne. From 1531 through 1532, their armies participated in
numerous battles. Atahualpa defeated Huáscar's forces, but his victory
was short-lived with the advent of Spanish conquistadors, led by Francisco
Pizarro.
Francisco Pizarro and the Spanish
Conquistadors
In 1513, Francisco Pizarro accompanied Vasco Núñez de
Balboa in crossing the Isthmus of Panama to become the first Europeans to
view the Pacific coast of the New World. Pizarro launched several expeditions
southward from Panama in search of a great land to the south rich with gold
(thought to be the legendary El Dorado) known as
"Pirú".
In July 1529, Queen Isabel of Spain signed a charter allowing Pizarro
to establish a viceroyalty in the region. Pizarro established San Miguel de
Piura in July 1532 as the first Spanish settlement in Peru. Pizarro then led
a small force of less than 200 men into Cajamarca to intercept the Inca ruler
Atahualpa who had just defeated his brother and had been resting in the
thermal baths in the Sierra of northern Peru known today as Baños del
Inca.

The capture of Atahualpa at Cajamarca published between 1760 and 1810
by Pierre Duflos
On November 16, 1532 Pizarro and his men captured the new Inca ruler
and charged him with twelve crimes, the most important being attempting to
revolt against the Spanish, practicing idolatry and murdering Huascar, his
own brother. The Inca ruler attempted to buy his freedom by filling one room
(7 meters by 5 meters to arm height) with an estimated eight tons of gold and
another two similar rooms with silver. However, instead of satiating the
Spaniards appetite for treasure, this tremendous act only confirmed the
wealth of the Inca Empire.

The so-called ransom room located in Cajamarca, Peru considered by
most Peruvian historians to be the place where the Inca Empire came to an end
Atahualpa was executed on July 26, 1533. Spanish forces continued
onwards and captured the Inca capital of Cuzco on November 15, 1533. On
January 18, 1535 Pizarro founded the city of La Ciudad de
los Reyes ("The City of Kings"), known today as Lima to
serve as the Spanish capital of Peru.
Against the Spanish steel swords, cannons and armoured mounted
Conquistadores, the Inca clubs, bronze tipped spears and serrated wooden
short swords were out-matched. Some parts of the Inca Empire revolted and
joined the small number of Spanish forces thinking they would soon regain
their freedom, not foreseeing the massive waves of Spanish immigrants that
would soon be arriving.
The Inca attempted on many occasions to regain their empire -
including an unsuccessful ten month siege of Cuzco. For nearly four decades,
successors to the Inca throne continued raids against the Spaniards and
incited revolts. However, in 1572, the final Inca stronghold of Vilcabamba
was discovered, and the last ruler, Túpac Amaru, was captured and
executed, bringing the Inca Empire to an end.
In addition to the military conflicts, epidemics continued to ravage
the remains of the Inca Empire, including measles, pneumonic plague, typhus,
influenza and diphtheria. In 1546, as much as two-thirds of the vitally
important llamas and alpacas begin dying from carache (llama mange). These
diseases further demoralized the Inca causing them to reject their gods and
traditions as the recent European settlers showed relative immunity.
Relatively few golden artifacts from the Inca Empire exist today as
most were melted down and shipped back to Spain. Perhaps the most familiar
symbol of the Inca Empire is Machu Picchu. The "Lost City of the
Incas" was built around 1460 and later abandoned due to devastation of
the populace from small pox a hundred years later.

Machu Picchu, the "Lost City of the Incas"
There is no evidence that the Spanish conquistadores ever visited the
remote city. Machu Picchu was 'rediscovered' on July 24, 1911 by Hiram
Bingham, an American historian.
Peru Independence
In the 18th Century, the area of the
Viceroyalty of Peru was reduced from the creation of two new jurisdictions -
New Granada (founded on May 27, 1717 consisting of much of north-western
South America and parts of Central America) and Rio de La Plata (founded in
April 1776 comprising of the area east of the Andes in southern South
America).
Amidst the Napoleonic Wars in Europe, presence of Spanish forces in
overseas colonies diminished and lead to growing movements for independence
in the South American viceroyalties. A declaration for Peruvian Independence
was made on July 28, 1821. Less than four years later, victorious
Peru-Bolivian forces under Simón Bolívar's lieutenant, Antonio
José de Sucre, defeated Royalist forces at the Battle of Ayacucho on
December 9, 1824 thus establishing their independence from the Spanish.
The newly freed nations of South America quickly turned on one another
over numerous territorial disputes. Peruvian forces fought against Gran
Colombia over border lands from 1828-9. The Chilean-Confederation
War (1836-1839) between the Peru-Bolivian Confederation against the forces of
Chile, Argentina, and Northern Peru ended with a Confederate defeat and the
creation of Peru.
The discovery of using guano as a high-nitrate source for explosives
and fertilizer during the 1840's resulted in two wars - the Chincha Islands
War against Spain (1864-1866) and the War of the Pacific (1879-1883).
First Fiat Currency - The Peruvian Soles de
Oro
In 1863, Peru introduced the Soles de Oro
(PEH) replacing the circulating Bolivian Peso at a
rate of 1 PEH to 1.25 Bolivian Pesos. In 1930, Peru left the gold standard
and established an official rate of 2.5 PEH = 1 USD which lasted until 1946.
Over the next fifty-five years, the PEH was repeatedly pegged to the USD with
a lower valuation. After 1975, multiple official exchange rates were often
established within a single year.

Beginning in 1979, larger demoninations of banknotes were issued by
the Central Reserve Bank of Peru. These notes included the 10,000 Soles de
Oro banknote, released in 1979, the 50,000 Soles de Oro banknote in 1982, and
the 100,000 Soles de Oro banknote in 1985. By this time the exchange rate to
the USD was 5,965.98 to 1.

Second highest denominated Soles de Oro (PEH) note first issued in
1982
Second Fiat Currency - The Peruvian Intis
The chronic inflation of the PEH resulted in its replacement with the Peruvian
Inti (PEI) named after the Inca sun god. On
February 1, 1985 old soles notes could be exchanged for new inti banknotes at
a rate of 1000 PEH to 1 PEI. The initial value of the new currency was 11.65
PEI to 1 USD. Coins denominated in the new currency were put into circulation
starting in May 1985 and banknotes followed in June of that year.
In 1986, the highest denomination was 1,000 intis. However in
September 1988, amidst excessive printing of the currency by the government
to fund expenditures (a practice known as seigniorage) monthly inflation
soared to 132%. In August 1990, monthly inflation was 397%. At the end of
that year, it took 516,989 PEI to purchase 1 USD. The highest
denomination was 5,000,000 intis, released in 1991.

Largest denominated Intis (PEI) banknote issued in August 1990
Third Fiat Currency - The Peruvian Nuevo Sol
After only six years of circulation, the Peruvian Intis was abolished.
In the July 1, 1991 currency reform, 1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol
(PEN) replaced 1,000,000 intis. Coins denominated in the new currency were
introduced on October 1, 1991 and the first banknotes appeared on November
13, 1991.
Overall Effect of Currency Revaluations
Since leaving the gold standard in 1930, Peru is now on its third
paper currency. The overall hyperinflation has been a one billionfold
revaluation of the original Soles de Oro:
1 Nuevo Sol =
1,000,000 Inti = 1,000,000,000 Soles de Oro
The Peruvian Nuevo Sol has been the most stable and reliable currency
of the Latin-American region in recent years. 
Notes
The other five areas are: Ancient
Egypt, Mesopotamia, Indus Valley, Yellow River and Mesoamerica.
The typical progression of human
group formation going beyond that of kin relationship is for mutual
protection of scarce resources. There is little evidence to support that this
was the reason behind the formation of relatively large Norte Chico settlements.
Cuzco is sometimes referred to by
its Quechua name Qosqo.
The Inca people were most probably
a tribe within the Killke culture.
The Quechua name for the Inca
Empire was Tahuantinsuyu, meaning 'Four [United]
Regions' named after the political divisions which met together at Qosqo - Chinchaysuyu (NW), Antisuyu
(NE), Kuntisuyu (SW) and Quillasuyu
(SE).
The introduction of potato and
maize greatly altered European farming production. Prior to the discovery of
the New World, wheat was the main crop used to make flour and bread. At best,
an acre produced ten bushels of wheat. After taxes, rent, and seed for next
year's crop, only some three bushels would be left over. A person requires
about eleven bushels per year to eat, thus nearly four acres are required to
provide enough sustenance for one person. Maize was much more productive,
yielding twenty to thirty bushels per acre, creating enough surplus to feed
some chickens and pigs. However, a single acre of land can produce up to
25,000 pounds of potatoes, enough to feed an entire family and some
livestock.
It is estimated that the first
wave of small pox wiped out between 60-90% of the Inca population who had no previous
exposure, and thus no immunity, to the disease.
Machu Picchu was well-known
locally. It may also have been plundered in 1867 by a German businessman,
Augusto Berns and there is substantial evidence from maps showing references
to Machu Picchu, that two missionaries, Thomas Payne and Stuart E. McNairn
visited the site in 1906.
The final remaining Spanish forces
in South America were defeated shortly thereafter at Tumusla, located in
Upper Peru (modern-day Bolivia) on April 1, 1825.
Disputes over the ownership of
these lands continued until 1998 and were responsible for numerous military
conflicts including three in the 20th century (1941, 1981, and 1995) between
Peru and Ecuador.
References
Orlow, Elizabeth: Silent Killers of the New World
Ventura, Jaime Pedro: Money Demand and Inflation in Peru, 1979-91; Reserve Bank of Cleveland, December 2000
Mike Hewitt
DollarDaze.org
Mike Hewitt is the editor of DollarDaze.org, a website pertaining to commentary on the
instability of the global fiat monetary system and investment strategies on
mining companies.
Information contained
herein is obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but its accuracy
cannot be guaranteed. It is not intended to constitute individual investment
advice and is not designed to meet your personal financial situation. The
opinions expressed herein are those of the author
and are subject to change without notice. The information herein may become
outdated and there is no obligation to update any such information. The author, 24hGold, entities in which they have an
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