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| Machu
Picchu
Machu
Picchu is 70 kilometers northwest of Cusco, on the crest of the mountain Machu
Picchu, located about 2,350 meters above sea level. It is one of the most important
archaeological centers in South America. The
ruins of Machu Picchu, rediscovered in 1911 by Yale archaeologist Hiram Bingham,
are one of the most beautiful and enigmatic ancient sites in the world. While
the Inca people certainly used the Andean mountain top (9060 feet elevation),
erecting many hundreds of stone structures from the early 1400's, legends and
myths indicate that Machu Picchu (meaning 'Old Peak' in the Quechua language)
was revered as a sacred place from a far earlier time. Whatever its origins, the
Inca turned the site into a small (5 square miles) but extraordinary city. Invisible
from below and completely self-contained, surrounded by agricultural terraces
sufficient to feed the population, and watered by natural springs, Machu Picchu
seems to have been utilized by the Inca as a secret ceremonial city. Two thousand
feet above the rumbling Urubamba river, the cloud shrouded ruins have palaces,
baths, temples, storage rooms and some 150 houses, all in a remarkable state of
preservation. These structures, carved from the gray granite of the mountain top
are wonders of both architectural and aesthetic genius. Many of the building blocks
weigh 50 tons or more yet are so precisely sculpted and fitted together with such
exactitude that the mortarless joints will not permit the insertion of even a
thin knife blade. Little is known of the social or religious use of the site during
Inca times. The skeletal remains of ten females to one male had led to the casual
assumption that the site may have been a sanctuary for the training of priestesses
and /or brides for the Inca nobility. One
of Machu Picchu's primary functions was that of astronomical observatory. The
Intihuatana stone (meaning 'Hitching Post of the Sun') has been shown to be a
precise indicator of the date of the two equinoxes and other significant celestial
periods. The Intihuatana (also called the Saywa or Sukhanka stone) is designed
to hitch the sun at the two equinoxes, not at the solstice (as is stated in some
tourist literature and new-age books). At midday on March 21st and September 21st,
the sun stands almost directly above the pillar, creating no shadow at all. At
this precise moment the sun "sits with all his might upon the pillar"
and is for a moment "tied" to the rock. At these periods, the Incas
held ceremonies at the stone in which they "tied the sun" to halt its
northward movement in the sky. There is also an Intihuatana alignment with the
December solstice (the summer solstice of the southern hemisphere), when at sunset
the sun sinks behind Pumasillo (the Puma's claw), the most sacred mountain of
the western Vilcabamba range, but the shrine itself is primarily equinoctial. Shamanic
legends say that when sensitive persons touch their foreheads to the stone, the
Intihuatana opens one's vision to the spirit world (the author had such an experience,
which is described in detail in Chapter one of Places of Peace and Power, on the
web site, www.sacredsites.com). Intihuatana stones were the supremely sacred objects
of the Inca people and were systematically searched for and destroyed by the Spaniards.
When the Intihuatana stone was broken at an Inca shrine, the Inca believed that
the deities of the place died or departed. The Spaniards never found Machu Picchu,
even though they suspected its existence, thus the Intihuatana stone and its resident
spirits remain in their original position. The mountain top sanctuary fell into
disuse and was abandoned some forty years after the Spanish took Cuzco in 1533.
Supply lines linking the many Inca social centers were disrupted and the great
empire came to an end. Partway down the northern side of Wayna Picchu is the so-called
"Temple of the Moon" inside a cavern. |







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