Cuxirimay Ocllo

Cuxirimay Ocllo (Classical Quechua: Kuši Rimay Uqllu) (born before 1532–d.

She played a discreet but important political role in the environment of the Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire, first as wife of Atahualpa and later by becoming a concubine to Francisco Pizarro.

Historian Néstor Taboada describes her as "mysterious, seductive, impudent, deceptive, tough and independent" and compared her role to that of La Malinche during the conquest of the Aztec Empire.

During this time period, the Spaniards abducted and raped many women in Cuzco, including princesses, noblewomen, priestesses, and the aclla, many of which they kept as concubines and later baptized and married.

Juan de Betanzos learned Quechua, and wrote the Narrative of the Incas with her as a source.