Inca Apocalypse
The Spanish Conquest and the Transformation of the Andean World
R. Alan Covey
Reviews and Awards
Finalist for a 2021 PROSE Award
"Alan Covey has vividly and painstakingly traced Inca history from Mama Ocllo to the 'last coya', always with an eye to cosmic consciousness." -- Kris Lane, Bulletin of Spanish Studies
"A compelling, readable history of the Spanish conquest of the Incas." -- CHOICE
"The latter part of Covey's fascinating book deals with the four decades it took Spain to subdue rogue invaders and independent Incas. Especially good is his discussion of crown policy towards the free state of Vilcabamba, ruled by Manco and his sons until 1572." -- Times Literary Supplement
"Overall, congratulations are in order. This is a masterful (if lengthy) synthesis of the encounter era written in a smooth, engaging, and easy style. It surpasses and complements other works, such as John Hemming'sÂThe Conquest of the Incas, published over fifty years ago, that narrate the history of the same era but without the wider geographical context and religious focus. Graduate students, archaeologists, historians, and others will benefit mightily from Covey's nuanced perspective." -- Susan Ramirez, H-Net Reviews
"Inca Apocalypse is an outstanding overview of the fall of the Inca Empire written by a world class scholar."--Brian S. Bauer, University of Illinois at Chicago
"Inca Apocalypse is a magnificent book. Alan Covey draws on his own archaeological fieldwork to portray the rapid hegemony of the Inca Empire, stressing the role of powerful women. He then deploys massive research to give a detailed narrative of Pizarro's expeditions and conquest, decades of civil wars between the unscrupulous victors, and the Spanish Crown's and Catholic Church's strategies to control the Andean realm and its subject peoples."--John Hemming, author of The Conquest of the Incas
"Alan Covey has transformed the image of the Spanish occupation of the vast scattered domains of the Inca Empire, from a simple triumph of European technologies (and diseases), into a prolonged, and multi-faceted series of conquests that were not only military but also political, ecological, and, above all, religious. His book could well help to provide a model for a more nuanced account of European conquests in other parts of the globe."--Anthony Pagden, author of The Burdens of Empire: 1539 to the Present