Laraos District

Laraos
District

The lake Pumaqucha in the Laraos District
Country  Peru
Region Lima
Province Yauyos
Capital Laraos
Government
  Mayor Albin Laureano Brañez Huallullo
Area
  Total 403.76 km2 (155.89 sq mi)
Elevation 3,563 m (11,690 ft)
Population (2005 census)
  Total 855
  Density 2.1/km2 (5.5/sq mi)
Time zone PET (UTC-5)
UBIGEO 151018

Laraos District is one of thirty-three districts of the province Yauyos in the Lima Region in Peru.[1]

Elderly people in Laraos still speak an archaic Quechua dialect. As no more children speak the language, it is in imminent danger of extinction.[2]

The Laraos District is one of oldest of the Yauyos Province, and its history is ample and emerges from the pre-incan times. Its preceding town is Sinchimarka, cradle of forjers, but simultaneously brave and militant men, like all the tribes who conformed the Yauyos, who were tenacious resistants before being conquered by the incan leader Pachakutiq. The pre-incan towns of Laraos are: Wanllapata, Waqramarka, Wayawmarka and Callawarqui. Sinchimarka is an incan citadel.

In 1586, being viceroy Don Fernando de Torres of Portugal, the first mayor of Yauyos, Don Diego Dávila Briceño, made the territorial demaracation and formed four parishes or curatos with more than four towns each one, entrusted at the service of the Dominican priests. These were: Santo Domingo de Yauyos, Santo Domingo de Laraos, San Cristóbal de Huánec and Santa Maria de Pampas.

It is to say that with the Spanish conquest, the natives of Sinchimarka were forced to become transferred to the present location of the district. Thus this one acquires the denomination of Santo Domingo de Cocha Laraos, being one of the most important towns and then they contributed in the process of cristanization of the inhabitants of Yauyos.

Its name comes from a derivative of the word Jaqi or Jaqaru Larawpukyu (laraw paved street, pukyu spring, "spring in the paved street", hispanicized Laraupugio). With the Andean transculturization it is transformed into Laraus (plural), so it means paved streets, and with the castellanization it is pronounced Laraos.

The farming community of Laraos was recognized the 2 of September 1938. Their annexes are San Juan de Langaico and Lanca. Its populated centers are Llapay and Tintin. The town is divided into ten main streets: Callhuapampa, Ansaya, Larpa, Callampa, Súniqui, Cancayllu, Achallanca, Warcaña, Caracara and Chunchillo.

See also

References

  1. (Spanish) Instituto Nacional de Estadística e Informática. Banco de Información Distrital. Retrieved April 11, 2008.
  2. http://books.google.com/books?id=ofY-6rDjCWUC&pg=RA1-PA457&dq=Quechua+extinction&lr=&as_brr=3&ei=GXEgSpuHHofSNILAldoP&client=firefox-a, The Cambridge history of the native peoples of the Americas, Bruce G. Trigger, Wilcomb E. Washburn, Frank Salomon, Richard E. W. Adams, Stuart B. Schwartz, Murdo J. MacLeod, 2000, p.457.

External links

Coordinates: 12°20′48″S 75°47′08″W / 12.3468°S 75.7856°W