The Promaucae are the first inhabitants of the Rancagua Valley of whom there is a historical account. The Mapuche included them in the group that they knew as the Picunche. The Promaucae, as has already been mentioned, constituted a distinct cultural unit separate from those Picunche who lived to the north of the Maipo river, named , and to the south of the Maule river, designated maules and cauquenes. The Inca invaders noted the great military capacity and will to fight of the Promucae.
They were farmers and constructed some earthworks for irrigation. They left ceramic vestiges.
The history of this period is based on what was written in later chronicles. These chronicles indicate that the Promaucaes, informed about the coming of the Incas, allied themselves with the Antalli, Pincu and Cauqui subgroups, forming an army of 20,000 men. The Incas sent emissaries to persuade the locals into accepting Túpac Inca Yupanqui as sovereign, but the Purumaucas decided to face the Inca forces in the so-called Battle of the Maule.Named by Francis Goicovich Videla and Osvaldo Silva Galdames in the article and the analysis on Sofia Filo, "The "Battle of the Maule: Stopped the expansion Inca towards the south of Chile?" , University of Chile During the confrontation, both sides suffered many fatalities and neither army won a clear advantage.
On the fourth day, neither side left their own camp, both of which had been fortified, as they hoped to defend them if their opponents attacked. The fifth and sixth days were passed in the same manner but by the seventh, the Purumauca and their allies retired and returned home claiming victory. The Inca later considered chasing them, on which some chiefs agreed; but they decided to secure only what they had already conquered, with which Túpac Inca Yupanqui agreed.
Due to their proximity to the Inca Empire, the Promaucae learned the new technology that the Inca displayed in their new domains.
Among the peoples the Spanish called the Promaucae, adopting the term from the Inca, were particularly the people of the Rapel River valley.Juan Ignacio Molina, Compendio de la historia civil del reyno de Chile, pg. 9. Those of the Mataquito River valley were called the Cure, for which the province of Curico is named. The people in the Maule River valley and to the south were distinguished as Maule. Those to the south of the Maule and north of the Itata River were known as Cauqui by the Inca Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, Comentarios reales, 2da_VII_20 20 or Cauquene. The Spanish named the Cauquenes River after them.
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