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Machu
Picchu...Lost City of the Incas
Extracts from "The Lost City of the Incas" by Hiram Bingham
© Labyrinthina.com
Machu Picchu Peru 100 Years Discovery
Program |
Duration |
Highlights |
New Pisaq & Machupicchu 4 Days |
4 Days and 3 Nights |
Cusco, Ruins of Pisac,
Urubamba Valley, Ollantaytambo, Maras, Moray ruins,
Machu Picchu, Aguas Calientes |
New Pisaq & Machupicchu 5 Days |
5 Days and 4 Nights |
Cusco, Ruins of Pisac,
Sacred Valley of the Inkas, Ollantaytambo, Maras, Machu
Picchu, Sacred Valley of Urubamba, Aguas Calientes, |
Cusco Soft Adventure 5 Days |
5 Days and 4 NightS |
Short Inca Trail to Machu
Picchu (2 days), Cusco, Sacred Valley |
Machu Picchu Total Excursion 6 Days |
6 Days and 5 Nights |
Cusco, Moray, Maras,
Salinas, Aguas Calientes, Mandor, Putukusi, Wayna Picchu,
Intipunku, Machu Picchu |
It's
remarkable that Machu Picchu was first brought to the attention of the world in
1911. The Spanish invaders at the time of the Conquest and during certuries of
colonial rule, never discovered the city, and nobody ever led them there,
suggesting that the site had long since been abondoned and forgotten.
In the nineteenth century explorers like Eugenie de Sartiges, George Ephraim
Squire, Antonio Raimondi and Castelnau never reached Machu Picchu, although most
of them crossed the Andes to the almost inaccessible ruins of Choquekirau, built
high above the Apurimac river. In fact, the outside world simply stumbled upon
Machu Picchu, for it had never been lost to those who lived around it. Those
same people eventually led the American explorer, Hiram Bingham, and his team to
the site in 1911. Hiram Bingham, now world-famous as the discoverer of Machu
Picchu, did not initially travel to South America to explore the land of the
Incas. In fact, the Hawaiian-born Yale and Harvard educated historian first
journeyed south from the United States to complete his study of the great
nineteenth century liberator, Simon Bolivar.
In December 1908, Bingham attended the First Panamerican Scientific Congress in
Santiago, Chile. It was there that he decided to follow the old Spanish trade
route from Buenos Aires to Lima, and it was to that end that he traveled to Lima
and hence to Cusco.
In Cusco Bingham made the acquaintance of one J.J. Nunez, then prefect of the
Apurimac region, who invited him on the arduous trip to the ruins of Choquekirau,
thought at the time to be the site of Vilcabamba, the much sought "last resting
place of the Incas."
On his return to the USA, Bingham decided to organize another expedition to
Peru. He arrived in Lima in June 1911 where he began to study the
seventeenth-century chronicles of Antonio de la Calancha and Fernando de
Montesinos. The writings of these two men first inspired Bingham to seek the
last two capitals of the Inca, Vilcabamba and Vitcos. Leaving Lima in July,
Bingham returned to Cusco from where he journeyed on foot and by mule through
the Urubamba Valley, past Ollantaytambo, and on into the Urubamba gorge.
On July 23, Bingham and his party camped by the river at a place called Mandor
Pampa, where they aroused the curiosity of Melchor Arteaga, a local farmer who
leased the land there. Through Sergeant Carrasco, the policeman who was his
guide and interpreter, Bingham learned from Arteaga that there were extensive
ruins on top of the ridge opposite the camp, which Arteaga, in his native
Quechua, called Machu Picchu, or "old mountain".
According to Bingham, "The morning of July 24th dawned in a cold drizzle.
Arteaga shivered and seemed inclined to stay in his hut. I offered to pay him
well if he showed me the ruins. He demurred and said it was too hard a climb for
such a wet day. But when he found I was willing to pay him a sol, three or four
times the ordinary daily wage, he finally agreed to go. When asked just where
the ruins were, he pointed straight up to the top of the mountain. No one
supposed that they would be particularly interesting, and no one cared to go
with me."
Accompanied only by Seargeant Carrasco and Arteaga, Bingham left the camp around
10 am. After a short while the party crossed a bridge so unnerving that the
intrepid explorer was reduced to crawling across it on his hands and knees. From
the river they climbed a precipitous slope until they reached the ridge at
around midday.
Here Bingham rested at a small hut where they enjoyed the hospitality of a group
of campesinos. They told him that they had been living there for about four
years and explained that they had found an extensive system of terraces on whose
fertile soil they had decided to grow their crops. Bingham was then told that
the ruins he sought were close by and he was given a guide, the 11-year old
Pablito Alvarez, to lead him there.
Almost immediately, he was greeted by the sight of a broad sweep of ancient
terraces. They numbered more than a hundred and had recently been cleared of
forest and reactivated. Led by the boy, he re-entered the forest beyond the
terraces. Here young Pablito began to reveal to Bingham a series of white
granite walls which the historian immediately judged to be the finest examples
of masonry that he had ever seen. They were in fact, the remains of what we call
today the Royal Tomb, the Main Temple, and the Temple of the Three Windows.
The best packages to the
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As evidenced by his writings, Hiram Bingham was genuinely inspired by the beauty
of the region he was exploring.
According to Bingham, "I had entered the marvellous canyon of the Urubamba below
the Inca fortress. Here the river escapes from the cold plateau by tearing its
way through gigantic mountains of granite. The road runs through a land of
matchless charm. It has the majestic grandeur of the Canadian Rockies, as well
as the startling beauty of the Nuuanu Pali near Honolulu, and the enchanting
vistas of the Koolau Ditch Trail on Maui, in my native land. In the variety of
its charms the power of its spell, I know of no place in the world which can
compare with it. Not only had it great snow peaks looming above the clouds more
than two miles overhead; gigantic precipices of many-coloured granite rising
sheer for thousands of feet above the foaming, glistening, roaring rapids, it
has also, in striking contrast, orchids and tree ferns, the delectable beauty of
luxurious vegetation and the mysterious witchery of the jungle. One is drawn
irrisistibly onwards by ever-recurring surprises through a deep, winding gorge,
turing and twistng past overhanging cliffs of incredible height
Above all, there is the fascination of finding here and there under swaying
vines, or perched on top of a beetling crag, the rugged masonry of a bygone
race; and of trying to understand the bewildering romance of the ancient
builders who, ages ago, sought refuge in a region which appears to have been
expressly designed by nature as a sanctuary for the oppressed, a place where
they might fearlessly and patiently give expression to their passion for walls
of enduring beauty."
Other people saw and even lived at Machu Picchu before Hiram Bingham even set
foot in Peru, but had neither the means nor the opportunity to bring the "lost
city" to the attention of the outside world. Bingham himself found two families
living at the ruins and was led to the main plaza by a young boy. As early as
1894, a local farmer called Agustin Lizarraga led one Luis Bejar Ugarte to the
ancient city. This same Lizarraga took his friends Gabino Sanchez and Enrique
Palma on a treasure-seeking trip to the ruins on July 14, 1901, visiting all the
accessible parts of the then uncleared site. When Bingham arrived at the ruins
he found the rock that the three friends had signed with their names and the
date of their visit. In his later writings, however, he downplayed this
discovery.
The three treasure hunters met Anacleto Alvarez (whom Bingham later encountered)
who told them that he had been living among the ruins for 8 years, where he grew
his crops of corn, yucca, sweet potatos and sugar cane on the fertile soil that
the Incas had carried up from the river valley to build Machu Picchu's
magnificent 300 meter high series of terraces!
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