Page:The Incas of Peru.djvu/460

418 * Ayar Auca, 49; death, 54
 * Ayar Cachi, 49; plot against, 51; murder, 52
 * Ayar Manco, 49; the leader: his Huauqui, 50; plan to get rid of his brothers, 51; hurled his golden staff, 53; his date, 55; established at Cuzco, 54, 55; four wives of the Ayars,—49 Occlo, Huaco, Ipacura, Rava
 * Ayar Uchu, 49 ; turned into the Huanacauri idol, 52, 128
 * Ayar march to Cuzco. For stopping stations see Huanacancha, Tampuquiru, Pallata, Hais Quisru, Quirirmanta, Matahua, Huanay-pata
 * Ayar ayllus or tribes, 49, 50, 55, 65, 125
 * Ayllus or lineages : tribes of the Ayars, 49, 50; each had its founder or ancestor, 104, 113; as runners at the Situa festival, 126; records of events kept by, 140; akin to village communities, 159; system, 160, 161; mountaineers, 175; on the coast, 235, 236; of the Incas, 290
 * Aymara colonists, 164; a branch of the Quichuas, 175, 192; settled at Juli, 192; Spanish priests gave the name to the language of the Collas, 192; never used for the language until long after the conquest, 313; error explained, 314; never used for the people of the Collas by any early writer, 315
 * Aymuray, May–June, 119, 135
 * Ayrihua, April–May, 119, 135; dance, 168


 * Baccharis Incarum or Tola, 22
 * Baccharis Molina—Chilca, 80
 * Baccharis Eupatorium—Chilca, 80
 * Bachicao, Hernando: hanged by Carbajal, 269
 * Balboa: translated and indexed by the author, xi n.; his work, 9, 10; his names of stars, 117; Paccari-tampu myth told by, 140; account of the Inca voyage to the Galapagos Islands, 184; tradition of the arrival of strangers at Lambayeque, 221; on the Inca invasion of the coast, 223
 * Barco, Pedro del: three sons, schoolfellows of the Inca Garcilasso, 265; hanged by Carbajal, 269; kindness of Garcilasso de la Vega to his sons, 273
 * Beatriz, Ñusta, Inca Princess, 260: asked to negotiate with Sayri Tupac, 273; her son received by the Inca, 273; Sayri Tupac her guest at Cuzco, 274. See Leguisamo
 * Beatriz, Ñusta, Inca Princess. See Mustincia and Hernandez
 * Belaunde, Victor Andres: his review of writings of sociologists on the ayllu system of Peru, 170, 171
 * Beni river, 193, 198
 * Bertonio, Ludovico: his Aymara dictionary, 192, 315
 * Betanzos: his 'Suma y Narracion' translated by the author, xi n.; Gregorio de Garcia in possession of his manuscript, 4; edited by Jimenez de la Espada, 5; work copied for Prescott, 4; a Quichua scholar and interpreter, 5; married to a daughter of Atahualpa, 5, 260; on the origin of the people, 32; occurrence of the word Con in connection with the deity, 103 n.; his names for the months, 118 n.; Paccari-tampu myth told by, 140; sent to negotiate with Sayri Tupac, 273; unsuccessful embassy to Titu Cusi Yupanqui, 285
 * Blasco Nuñez de Vela, viceroy: correspondence with the Inca Manco, 258; driven out by Gonzalo Pizarro, 269