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Yanakuna were originally individuals in the Inca Empire who left the ayllu system and worked full-time at a variety of tasks for the Inca, the ''quya'' (Inca queen), or the religious establishment. A few members of this serving class enjoyed high social status and were appointed officials by the
Sapa Inca The Sapa Inca (from Quechua ''Sapa Inka'' "the only Inca") was the monarch of the Inca Empire (''Tawantinsuyu''), as well as ruler of the earlier Kingdom of Cusco and the later Neo-Inca State. While the origins of the position are mythical and o ...
. They could own property and sometimes had their own farms, before and after the conquest. The Spanish continued the yanakuna tradition developing it further as yanakuna entered Spanish service as Indian auxiliaries or encomienda Indians.


Etymology and spelling

The word ''yana'' in Quechua, the main Inca language, means black, servant, and is possibly derived from the verb ''yanapa'' to help, Qosqo Quechua, ''yana'', black, servant, partner, spouse, and paramour. The ''-kuna''
suffix In linguistics, a suffix is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns, adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. Suffixes can carry ...
in yanakuna indicates the plural, thus if ''yana'' is translated as "servant" yanakuna is "servants" or "slaves". Hispanicized spellings of yanakuna are ''yanacona'' and ''yanaconas''.


Inca Empire

In the Inca Empire ''yanakuna'' was the name of the servants to the Inca elites. The word servant, however, is misleading about the identity and function of the ''yanakuna''. It is important to note that they were not forced to work as slaves. Some were born into the category of ''yanakuna'' (like many other professions, it was a hereditary one), some chose to leave '' ayllus'' to work, and some were selected by nobles. They were to care for the herds of the nobles, do fishing, and were dedicated to other work, like the making of pottery, construction, and domestic service. ''Yanakuna'' were sometimes given high positions in the Inca government. '' Mitma'' is a term commonly associated with ''yanakuna'', but its meaning is different, as the ''mitmaqkuna'' were used as labor for large projects. ''Yanakuna'' were specifically not a part of an ''ayllu'' and were relocated individually instead of in large labor groups. An example of the differences of the classes is that ''mitmaqkuna'' were labor that built
Machu Picchu Machu Picchu is a 15th-century Inca citadel located in the Eastern Cordillera of southern Peru on a mountain range.UNESCO World Heritage Centre. It is located in the Machupicchu District within Urubamba Province above the Sacred Valley, which ...
, but ''yanakuna'' lived and served the Inca there. In ''Chile'', the ''mapuche'' used this word to refer to alleged "traitors of their race". The concept of traitor was unknown to them, so when asked to translate the word from Spanish they referred to the Spanish native auxiliaries.


Spanish Empire

When the Spanish
conquistador Conquistadors (, ) or conquistadores (, ; meaning 'conquerors') were the explorer-soldiers of the Spanish and Portuguese Empires of the 15th and 16th centuries. During the Age of Discovery, conquistadors sailed beyond Europe to the Americas, O ...
s arrived in modern-day Peru, the ''yanakuna'' assisted the Spaniards to take control of the empire. These people, who the Spaniards, during the Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire, began to use the name for the indigenous people they had in servitude, in encomiendas, or in military forces as
indios auxiliares Indian auxiliaries were those indigenous peoples of the Americas who allied with Spain and fought alongside the conquistadors during the Spanish colonization of the Americas. These auxiliaries acted as guides, translators and porters, and in the ...
( Indian auxiliaries). After the conquest, as craftworkers and laborers, the ''yanakuna'' played a significant role in a variety of both rural and urban production sectors in Peru's colonial economy.


First Decades of Colonization

The Spanish initially exacted tribute from the indigenous peoples of Peru through the ''ayllu''-based encomienda system, by which native subjects were forced to contribute labor and goods (increasingly in the form of silver money) in service of the Spanish crown. ''Yanakuna'', however, were separate from this system of obligation, and often performed different tasks. While the ''indios de encomienda'' fulfilled the most menial jobs in the Potosi silver mines, for example, ''yanakuna'' served as skilled artisans. Some ''yanakuna'' did work in the mines themselves from their beginnings in the 1540s, but unlike the ''indios de encomienda'', they worked as free wage laborers.


''Yanakuna'' in Mining and the ''Mita''

Under the reforms imposed by Viceroy Francisco de Toledo (1569-1581), a system of draft labor known as the ''mita'' came to replace the encomienda system, by which villages within a several-hundred mile radius around Potosi had to send around one seventh of their male tribute-age population (from ages 18 to 50) each year to work in the mines. This change in labor organization occurred for a number of reasons: the Crown's explicitly stated preference for Peru to emphasize silver export and advances in mining technology increase the demand for labor; at the same time, the imposition of the ''mita'' allowed the Crown to push against the power of the ''encomenderos'' (Spanish recipients of ''encomienda'' grants), and offer native labor to non-''encomenderos'' in Peru. With this shift, ''yanakuna'' retained their place within the colonial economy of labor, and even grew in importance. As ''indios de encomienda'' decreased in number at Potosi, ''yanakuna'' increased. And, though ''mitayos'' (''mita'' labor draftees) filled an important role in completing tasks undesirable to free laborers, they did not constitute a majority of laborers at Potosi— in 1603, for example, only 5,100 Indians out of 58,800 working at Potosi were ''mitayos''. The proportion of ''mitayos'' continued to decrease through the seventeenth century, as the proportion of ''yanakuna'' increased: in the latter half of the sixteenth century, ''yanakuna'' constituted less than 10% of tribute paying subjects, while they constituted about 40% of this population in the latter half of the seventeenth century. A 1601 order from the Crown stated a preference for voluntary labor; indeed, though the ''yanakuna'' may have been bound as servants, historian Raquel Gil Montero suggests that after the Toledo reforms, the tribute-paying ''yanakuna'' at Potosi could be considered "free laborers." It was to the natives' advantage to work for market-rate wages as a free laborer (as opposed to the below market-rate wages of the ''mitayos''), considering the expectation of tribute in money form.


''Yanakuna'' in Other Economic Sectors and Labor Arrangements

As Spanish settlers brought European agriculture to Peru, ''yanakuna'' labor supplemented that of ''mita'' draftees on farms. In this context, "''yanakuna''" referred to laborers who permanently resided at their place of employment. As an alternative to ''mita'' draftees, Spaniards preferred ''yanakuna'' were to African slaves, as the former were familiar with both indigenous and European methods, and did not need to be purchased. As in the mines, ''yanakuna'' labor in some areas represented a significant proportion of the labor force. The historian Steve J. Stern has written that Spanish colonials in the Huamanga region of Peru increasingly depended on contracted ''yanakuna'' labor as the ''mita'' labor draft became less reliable, especially for less politically influential settlers (in part due to resistance and evasion from within ''ayllus'', as well as indigenous population decline). This was the case not only in farming and mining, but also in ranching and manufactures. In these contract relationships, a ''yanakuna'' promised labor services to a master in exchange for subsistence, as well as land and credit. Labor arrangements mimicking this ''yanakuna'' form— separate from the natives' ''ayllus—'' proliferated through the early seventeenth century, as Spanish employers sought to secure a labor force. In some cases, factory owners brought laborers from their ''ayllus'' to reside ''in situ'' like ''yanakuna''; in others, contracts with free wage laborers came to resemble ''yanakuna'' contracts in their duration and reciprocal guarantees. What Stern calls "yanacona-like" relationships developed as a way for Indian workers to repay debts to a Spanish employer. And, due to labor demand, Spaniard's sometimes sought to convince Indians to voluntarily enter ''yanakuna'' contracts on farms with attractive wage offers. The need for coercion to secure labor indeed decreased, as the monetization of tribute, the associated integration of a commercial economy, and the burdens of the ''mita'' made ''ayllus'' less self-sufficient, and induced Indian members to seek subsistence beyond. Though separate from their ''ayllus'', ''yanakuna'' were not completely dislocated from community. Many still owned land, and some of those working on farms lived their with families. In general, like other colonial-era migrants, ''yanakuna'' moved with their families and spouses. In urban areas, ''yanakuna'' owned and passed down real estate. Unlike many other urban Indian laborers bound in servitude, often in domestic work, urban ''yanakuna'' maintained a more privileged status working as skilled craftspeople. Here, they were also distinguished by their comparably greater degree of acculturation to Spanish custom and language. Some scholars argue that this integration into urban colonial society by ''yanakuna'' actually represented an extension into a new context of older Andean practices of migration meant to fulfill different ecological niches. The term ''yanakuna'' also was used during the conquest of Chile and other areas of South America, like the
New Kingdom of Granada The New Kingdom of Granada ( es, Nuevo Reino de Granada), or Kingdom of the New Granada, was the name given to a group of 16th-century Spanish colonial provinces in northern South America governed by the president of the Royal Audience of Santa ...
.


Modern use

In modern times people in Chile use "yanacona" as an insult for Mapuches considered to have betrayed their people. Use of the word "yanacona" to describe people in the press have led to legal action in Chile. Héctor Llaitul, leader of the militant organization Coordinadora Arauco-Malleco, has declared that those Mapuche who work for forestry companies are "yanaconas".


See also

* Indios reyunos *
Indios amigos Indian auxiliaries were those indigenous peoples of the Americas who allied with Spain and fought alongside the conquistadors during the Spanish colonization of the Americas. These auxiliaries acted as guides, translators and porters, and in the ...
* Yanacona language


References


Sources

* Ann M. Wightman, Indigenous Migration and Social Change: The Forasteros of Cuzco, 1570–1720, Duke University Press, 1990, . Pg. 16-18 * Translation of Spanish Wikipedia Page * The Inca and Aztec States 1400–1800. Anthropology and History by George A. Collier; Renato I. Rosaldo; John D. Wirth. * Childress, D. (2000). Who's who in Inca society. Calliope, 10(7), 14. * Malpass, M. A. (1996). Daily life in the inca empire. (pp. 55). Greenwood Publishing Group. * Bethany L. Turner, George D. Kamenov, John D. Kingston, George J. Armelagos, Insights into immigration and social class at Machu Picchu, Peru based on oxygen, strontium, and lead isotopic analysis, Journal of Archaeological Science, Volume 36, Issue 2, February 2009, Pages 317–332, , . * Stern, S. J. (1982). Peru's Indian peoples and the challenge of Spanish conquest. (pp. 30–55). Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press. * Stern, S.J. (1982). Peru's Indian peoples and the challenge of Spanish conquest. (pp. 155). Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press. {{authority control History of Peru Social history of Chile History of labour relations in Chile Indigenous peoples in Chile Pre-Columbian cultures Class-related slurs Inca Viceroyalty of Peru Arauco War Quechua words and phrases Ethnic and religious slurs