Sacred Valley
The Sacred Valley of the Incas or Urubamba Valley is a valley in the Andes of Peru, close to the Inca capital of Cusco and below the ancient sacred city of Machu Picchu. It is located in the modern Peruvian region of Cusco. In colonial documents it is referred to as the "Valley of Yucay", according to recent researches it encompasses the heartland of the Inca Empire.[1] The valley is generally understood to include everything between Calca and Lamay, Písac, and Ollantaytambo, it has been formed by the Urubamba River, also known as Vilcanota River or Wilcamayu. The latter, in Quechua (the still spoken lingua franca of the Inca Empire), means the Sacred river. It is fed by numerous rivers which descend through adjoining valleys and gorges, and contains numerous archaeological remains and villages. The valley was appreciated by the Incas due to its special geographical and climatic qualities. It was one of the empire's main points for the extraction of natural wealth, and one of the most important areas for maize production in Peru northwards from Pisac. The early Incas may have come from Wimpillay as their mummies had been discovered there.[2] Large scale maize production started around 1400 as Inca urban agriculture[3] based on varieties bred in Moray, either a governmental crop lab[4] or a seedling nursery of the Incas.[5]
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References
- ^ Bauer, Brian S. and L. Alan Covey 2002 “Pocesses of state Formation in the Inca Heartland (Cusco – Peru)” Américan Anthropologist 104(3):846-864.
- ^ Covey, R.A. (2003) “A processual study of Inka state formation” Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 22(4)S. 333-357.
- ^ Protzen, Jean Pierre. 1993 Inca architecture and construction at Ollantaytambo. Oxford University Press, New York.
- ^ Earls, John (1989) Planificación agrícola andina. Bases para un manejo cibernético de sistemas de andenes, Lima : Univ. del Pacífico y COFIDE
- ^ Plachetka, Uwe Christian, Pietsch, Stephan.A. (2009) „El centro Vaviloviano en el Perú. Un conjunto socio-ecológico frente a riesgos extremos” Tikpa Pachapaq 1(1) – Huancayo, Peru:9-16