- The
Sinchis (from the
Quechua word
sinchi, 'strong, brave'), also
known as the
Sinchis de
Mazamari after their training location, are a
police tactical...
- Look up
Sinchi,
Sinchis, or
sinchi in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Sinchi or
Sinchis may
refer to:
Sinchis, a
police battalion during the 1981 internal...
-
Sinchi Roca (c. 1230 – c. 1260), also
known as
Sinchi Rocca,
Cinchi Roca (in
Hispanicized spellings),
Sinchi Ruq'a and
Sinchi Ruq'a Inka (Quechua for...
-
Antonio Sinchi Roca Inka (17th century), was a
Quechua painter from Peru and part of the
Cuzco School. His
exact years of
birth and
death are not known...
-
Before this, it was most
likely that Cusco's
rulers simply had the
title of
sinchis or curacas, like
almost every chiefdom at the time. Due to the political...
-
Sinchi Football Club (Chinese: 新麒足球俱乐部) was a
professional ****ociation
football club from
China based in
Taman Jurong,
Singapore which pla**** as a foreign...
- Anti-Drug Directorate,
Sinchis and
National Anti-Drug directorate. HK33A2
variant used by
National Police Anti-Drug
Directorate and
Sinchis. HK33A3
variant used...
- the city of
Cusco with. In some variations, she also had a son with him,
Sinchi Roca,
though all
Incan rulers after Manco Cápac were
believed to be their...
- Quechua: "These
sinchis are thieves,
yesterday they ate the
community beef. They are abusive, one day we will
throw them away...". The
sinchis, who were also...
-
Before they arrived, Mama
Ocllo had
already borne Ayar
Manco a child,
Sinchi Roca. The
people who were
already living in
Cusco fought hard to keep their...