At the time of Columbus’ landfall on the New World, the greatest empire
on earth was that of the Inca. Called Tawantinsuyu or ‘Land of the Four
Quarters,’ it spanned more than 4300 miles along the mountains and
coastal deserts of central South America. The vast empire stretched from
central Chile to present Ecuador-Colombia border and included most of
Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, northern Chile and northwestern Argentina (this
is a land area equal to the entire portion of the United States from
Maine to Florida east of the Appalachians). It exceeded in size any
medieval or contemporary European nation and equaled the longitudinal
expanse of the Roman Empire. Yet for all its greatness, Tawantinsuyu
existed for barely a century.
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