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for the afterlife. The Museum of
Florida opened in 2010 in the neighborhood to hold artifacts and interpretive material related to Quitu culture, including figures of a man and a woman dressed in traditional Quitu clothing. This however does not indicate a united political entity in the region and the site is considered a Quitu site. The local ceramics do not show unity among the different regions supposedly ruled by the shyris.
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In the early 21st century, there was a major find of sophisticated tombs, dating to 800 CE, in the
Florida neighborhood of Quito. They are 20 meters deep, and each holds the remains of a total of 10 individuals in three levels, accompanied by grave goods of textiles, carved pieces, and food and drink
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In 1534 the
Caranqui culture were conquered by the Spanish. They became extinct as a tribe chiefly from exposure to new European infectious diseases, which took a heavy toll in fatalities. In addition, the Spanish conquerors married Cara women. Their descendants continued to intermarry, producing the
258:, and set up a kingdom. The combined Quitu-Cara culture which was, according to de Velasco, known as the Shyris or Scyris civilization, would have thrived from 800 CE to the 1470s. De Velasco used as his source a lost work by
220:. They led a revolt against Huayna Capac along with the Cayambi. After the capture of their capital, they fled to a lake. The battle that followed was so brutal that the lake was renamed Yahuarcocha (blood lake).
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have questioned the existence of such a
Kingdom and suggested that it was a legendary pre-Hispanic account. No archeological evidence of the kingdom of Quito has been found.
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population of the region who gradually became disconnected from their indigenous heritage.
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420:"El pensamiento simbĂłlico de los habitantes de La Florida (Quito-Ecuador)"
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The
Caranqui and their allies were defeated in battle along with the
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201:. They were often at war with the neighboring Cayambi people.
469:. Translated by Iceland, Harry B. Cambridge University Press.
480:"Ecuador Culture & Human History of the Northern Andes."
637:
580:
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Molestina
Zaldumbide, MarĂa del Carmen (2006-12-01).
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Historia del Reino de Quito en la América
Meridional
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Cevallos
Alfredo Tinajero and Amparo Barba González
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517:"Entre mitos y fábulas: El Ecuador Precolombino."
301:is preserved in place names, such as the city of
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388:"Chronology of a Brief History of Ecuador".
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703:South American ethnic group stubs
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698:South American history stubs
405:Historia General del Ecuador
362:Rostworowski, MarĂa (2008).
628:This article related to an
403:González Suárez, Federico.
344:Cabello de Balboa, Miguel.
269:Several historians such as
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539:Porras Barrenechea, RaĂşl.
275:Alfredo Pareja Diezcanseco
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467:History of the Inca Realm
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287:Federico González Suárez
529:(retrieved 30 Sep 2012)
305:, and the martial term
283:RaĂşl Porras Barrenechea
271:Jacinto Jijón y Caamaño
44:Around 1000–Around 1470
693:Pre-Columbian cultures
632:in South America is a
575:-related article is a
573:South American history
541:Los cronistas del PerĂş
492:(retrieved 3 May 2011)
177:flourished in coastal
93:• Disestablished
683:Prehistory of Ecuador
490:Ecuador Travel Guide.
485:May 13, 2011, at the
465:Rostworowski, MarĂa.
27:Pre-Columbian culture
688:Andean civilizations
346:Miscelánea antártica
83:• Established
437:10.4000/bifea.3931
279:MarĂa Rostworowski
134:Cotocollao culture
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116:Succeeded by
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147:Inca empire
111:Preceded by
97:Around 1470
87:Around 1000
72:Integration
677:Categories
451:2022-02-06
313:References
214:TĂşpac Inca
446:0303-7495
331:Les Incas
218:Pachacuti
34:Caranquis
520:Archived
483:Archived
390:No date.
199:Caranqui
543:. Lima.
230:mestizo
189:History
179:Ecuador
58:Capital
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293:Legacy
285:, and
264:shyris
210:Cañari
208:, the
571:This
307:Shyri
303:Carán
256:Quito
206:Quitu
634:stub
577:stub
442:ISSN
368:ISBN
297:The
171:Cara
169:The
37:Kara
432:doi
173:or
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395:^
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