In the mythology of the Incas, Manco Capac was the founder of the Inca nation and a culture hero who set the Incas on the road to glory. He was the son of the sun god Inti (pronounced IN-tee) and the supreme teacher of the ways of civilization. There are several versions of Manco Capac’s story. The best-known source, The Royal Commentaries of the Inca by El Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, relates that the sun god was distressed because the people of earth did not live in a civilized way. As he crossed the sky each day, he saw that they wore only leaves and animal skins for clothing, lived in caves, and gathered wild plants and berries for food. So the sun god decided to send his son, Manco Capac, and daughter, Mama Ocllo (pronounced MAH-muh oh-KEE-oh), to teach the people how to improve their way of life. He gave his children a golden rod and told them to push it into the ground wherever they stopped to rest. When they reached a spot where the rod sank completely into the ground with a single push, they should build a sacred city of the sun, to be named Cuzco (pronounced KOOZ-koh).
Setting out from Lake Titicaca (pronounced tee-tee-KAH-kah), Manco Capac and Mama Ocllo wandered across the land and finally came to a valley where the golden rod sank easily into the soil. There they gathered all the people from near and far and taught them how to build homes, weave cloth, make tools, and grow crops. They also taught
Manco Capac was the son of the Incan sun god, who came to earth to teach the people how to live better. THE ART ARCHIVE/MUSEO PEDRO DE OSMA LIMA/MIREILLE VAU-TIER. REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION.
The people how to use weapons so that they could defend themselves and defeat others.
Another version of the myth says that Manco Capac was one of six siblings who emerged from a cave near Cuzco. The siblings gained control over the people of the earth, and Manco Capac became the first ruler of the Incas. Still another tale says that Manco Capac deceived people into believing that he was the son of the sun god. He did this by standing on a mountain wearing gold plaques that shone in the sun and made him look like a god.