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  1. Juan Diez de Betanzos (b. Betanzos, Spain 1510 – d. Cusco, Peru March 1, 1576) wrote one of the most important sources [according to whom?] on the conquest of the Inca civilization, Narrative of the Incas.

  2. Fue Juan de Betanzos uno de los pocos conquistadores españoles que logró aprender el quechua general, lengua oficial del Imperio inca, lo que le sirvió para ser el intérprete y mano derecha de Pizarro.

  3. Betanzos (1510-1576) was among the early conquistadors, and served as a military leader and official. He married Cuxirimay Ocllo, the chief wife of King Atahualpa, the last Inca Emperor. He based his account on her recollections and those of other Inca soldiers and officials.

  4. Although Juan de Betanzos was born in Spain, he studied Quechua in Peru and became competent enough to undertake in the late 1540s a Spanish-Quechua manual and dictionary of beliefs and rites for priests, his Doctrina christiana, which unfortunately was lost.

  5. Oct 14, 2020 · Suma y Narración de los Incas. by. Juan de Betanzos. Publication date. 1542. Topics. Cronicas, Peru. Collection. opensource.

  6. Juan de Betanzos. (Juan Díez de Betanzos y Araos; Betanzos?, c. 1510 - Cuzco, 1576) Cronista español de Indias. Casado con una princesa incaica, hermana de Atahualpa, aprendió el idioma quechua. Escribió la Suma y narración de los Incas, obra que no fue editada hasta 1880.

  7. May 1, 1996 · De Betanzos, an interpreter who married the Inca princess Dona Angelina Yupanqui, was a little-known contemporary recorder of Peru's Incan heritage. His narrative of the Incas begins with Viracocha's peopling of the world and continues to the Spanish conquest.

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