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Incas - History, Religion - Native American, Native South American & Caribbean Peoples - General & Miscellaneous, Native South American & Caribbean Peoples - History, Native South American & Caribbean Peoples - Folklore
Inca Religion and Customs by Bernabé Cobo β€” book cover

Inca Religion and Customs

by BernabΓ© Cobo, Roland Hamilton
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Overview

A translation of a 1653 work, providing vast amounts of data on the religion and lifeways of the Incas and their subject peoples.

Synopsis

Completed in 1653, Father Bernabe Cobo's Historia del Nuevo Mundo is an important source of information on pre-conquest and colonial Spanish America. Though parts of the work are now lost, the remaining sections which have been translated offer valuable insights into Inca culture and Peruvian history.

Inca Religion and Customs is the second translation by Roland Hamilton from Cobo's massive work. Beginning where History of the Inca Empire left off, it provides a vast amount of data on the religion and lifeways of the Incas and their subject peoples. Despite his obvious Christian bias as a Jesuit priest, Cobo objectively and thoroughly describes many of the religious practices of the Incas. He catalogs their origin myths, beliefs about the afterlife, shrines and objects of worship, sacrifices, sins, festivals, and the roles of priests, sorcerers, and doctors.

The section on Inca customs is equally inclusive. Cobo covers such topics as language, food and shelter, marriage and childrearing, agriculture, warfare, medicine, practical crafts, games, and burial rituals.

Because the Incas apparently had no written language, such postconquest documents are an important source of information about Inca life and culture. Cobo's work, written by one who wanted to preserve something of the indigenous culture that his fellow Spaniards were fast destroying, is one of the most accurate and highly respected.

Booknews

A translation of the second and third books of Father Cobo's 1653 description of Peruvian civilization. He based his account of religion almost entirely on previous literature (his employer having eradicated his subject). His survey of customs is drawn from his own observations. The paper edition ($10.95) has the same ISBN. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

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Editorials

American Antiquity

While Cobo's Historia is not a pristine account, it is hard to imagine what our knowledge of Andean societies would be without it. Four hundred years after Cobo landed in Lima, Roland Hamilton should be congratulated on his translations of the Historia del Nuevo Mundo, which remains a monument to the breadth of vision and intellectual energy of its author.

Booknews

A translation of the second and third books of Father Cobo's 1653 description of Peruvian civilization. He based his account of religion almost entirely on previous literature (his employer having eradicated his subject). His survey of customs is drawn from his own observations. The paper edition ($10.95) has the same ISBN. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
January 1, 1990
Publisher
University of Texas Press
Pages
304
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780292738614

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