Manco Inca Yupanqui

[2] When Atahualpa's troops took the city under the command of General Quizquiz, they killed the descendants of Huayna Capac, the Huascar supporters, and anyone who could try to take the place of the Inca.Manco then gathered an army of 200,000 Inca warriors and laid siege to Cusco in early 1536, taking advantage of Diego de Almagro's absence.Abandoning Ollantaytambo (and effectively giving up the highlands of the empire), Manco Inca retreated to Vitcos and finally to the remote jungles of Vilcabamba,[6]: 131  where he founded the Neo-Inca State which lasted until the death of Túpac Amaru in 1572.[5]: 9  The Spanish succeeded in capturing Manco's sister-wife, Cura Ocllo, who was raped by Gonzalo Pizarro and kept by him at Pizzaro's Palace in Casana;[7] the Spaniards had her brutally murdered in 1539.[5]: 10  Manco Inca had several sons, including Sayri Tupaq, Titu Cusi, and Túpac Amaru.
Ruins of Vitcos in Vilcabamba
Another view of the ruins
Guaman PomaSapa IncaNeo-Inca StateCoronationSayri TupaqInca EmpireInstallationTúpac HuallpaAtahualpaPaullu IncaVilcabambaCura OclloSayri TúpacTitu CusiTúpac AmaruCusi HuarcayQuechuaDynastyHuayna CapacpuppetHuascarQuizquizconquistadorFrancisco Pizarropuppet rulerDiego de AlmagroCajamarcaHernando de SotoGonzalo PizarroJuan Pizarroregidoressiege of CuzcoOllantaytambobattle of OllantaytamboAlonso de AlvaradoAbancayRodrigo OrgóñezBattle of AbancayVitcosWankasHistory of CuscoSpanish conquest of PeruAngles Vargas, Víctor