<P>This monograph examines the imperial spectacles and startling reversals of fortune related in <I>History of the Conquest of Mexico</I> (1843) and <I>History of the Conquest of Peru</I> (1847), and investigates how Prescott¿s histories inspired fictional adaptations by George A. Henty, H. Rider Haggard, and George Griffith. The revision of history in the Amerindian adventure entertained young transatlantic audiences, was a vehicle to attract tourism and investment in countries such as Mexico and Peru, and a way to impart British values. Such values compel the characters and narrators of novels discussed to act as cultural mediators, to acquire indigenous languages and adopt native ways of being, and, in several of the romances under consideration, to marry Mexican or Incan noblewomen. Part I, Conquest, examines George Henty¿s <I>By Right of Conquest: Or, With Cortez in Mexico</I> (1891), Rider Haggard¿s <I>Montezuma¿s Daughter </I>(1893) and George Griffith¿s <I>Virgin of the Sun: A