
By Meghan A. Porter
Updated April 8, 2008
Machu Picchu is a city located high in the Andes Mountains in modern Peru. It lies 43 miles northwest of Cuzco at the top of a ridge, hiding it from the Urabamba gorge below. The ridge is between a block of highland and the massive Huaynac Picchu, around which the Urubamba River takes a sharp bend. The surrounding area is covered in dense bush, some of it covering Pre-Colombian cultivation terraces.
Machu Picchu (which means
"Old Peak") was most likely a royal estate and religious retreat. It was
built between 1460 and 1470 AD by Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui, an Incan ruler. The
city has an altitude of 8,000 feet, and is high above the Urubamba River canyon
cloud forest, so it likely did not have any administrative, military or
commercial use. After Pachacutis death, Machu Picchu became the property
of his allus, or kinship group, which was responsible for its
maintenance, administration, and any new construction.
Machu Picchu is comprised of
approximately 200 buildings, most being residences, although there are temples,
storage structures and other public buildings. It has polygonal masonry,
characteristic of the late Inca period.
About 1,200 people lived in and around Machu Picchu, most of them
women, children, and priests. The buildings are thought to have been planned
and built under the supervision of professional Inca architects. Most of the
structures are built of granite blocks cut with bronze or stone tools, and
smoothed with sand. The blocks fit together perfectly without mortar, although
none of the blocks are the same size and have many faces; some
have as many as 30 corners. The joints are so tight that even
the thinnest of knife blades can't be forced between the stones. Another unique
thing about Machu Picchu is the integration of the architecture into the
landscape. Existing stone formations were used in the construction of
structures, sculptures are carved into the rock, water flows through cisterns
and stone channels, and temples hang on steep precipices.
The houses had steep thatched roofs and trapezoidal doors; windows were unusual. Some of the houses were two stories tall; the second story was probably reached by ladder, which likely was made of rope since there werent many trees at Machu Picchus altitude. The houses, in groups of up to ten gathered around a communal courtyard, or aligned on narrow terraces, were connected by narrow alleys. At the center were large open squares; livestock enclosures and terraces for growing maize stretched around the edge of the city.
The Incas planted crops such as potatoes and maize at Machu Picchu. To get the highest yield possible, they used advanced terracing and irrigation methods to reduce erosion and increase the area available for cultivation. However, it probably did not produce a large enough surplus to export agricultural products to Cuzco, the Incan capital.
One of the most important things found at Machu Picchu is the intihuatana, which is a column of stone rising from a block of stone the size of a grand piano. Intihuatana literally means for tying the sun", although it is usually translated as "hitching post of the sun". As the winter solstice approached, when the sun seemed to disappear more each day, a priest would hold a ceremony to tie the sun to the stone to prevent the sun from disappearing altogether. The other intihuatanas were destroyed by the Spanish conquistadors, but because the Spanish never found Machu Picchu, it remained intact. Mummies have also been found there; most of the mummies were women.
Few people outside the Incas closest retainers were actually aware of Machu Picchus existence. Before the Spanish conquistadors arrived, the smallpox spread ahead of them. Fifty percent of the population had been killed by the disease by 1527. The government began to fail, part of the empire seceded and it fell into civil war. So by the time Pizarro, the Incas conquerer, arrived in Cuzco in 1532, Machu Picchu was already forgotten.
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View of the Machu Picchu ruins and Huaynu Picchu, the peak on the right, from the agricultural terraces. The small center peak is the location of the Intihuatani. The plaza area is in its foreground.1998 Photo Courtesy of James Q. Jacobs. Former Link, http://www.geocities.com/archaeogeo/machu.html (February 2006) |
Machu Picchu was rediscovered in 1911 by Hiram Bingham, a professor from Yale. Bingham was searching for Vilcabamba, which was the undiscovered last stronghold of the Incan empire. When he stumbled upon Machu Picchu, he thought he had found it, although now most scholars believe that Machu Picchu is not Vilcabamba. Machu Picchu was never completely forgotten, as a few people still lived in the area, where they were "free from undesirable visitors, officials looking for army volunteers or collecting taxes", as they told Bingham.
Bibliography
Bernard, Carmen
1994 The Incas: People of the Sun. Paul Bahn, trans.
Times Mirror Company
Morris, Craig and Adriana von Hagen
1993 The Inka Empire. New York: Abbeville Press.
2008 Machu Picchu: The Ruins on the Incan Trail to Machu Picchu. Images courtesy of http://www.projects.ex.ac.uk/RDavies/inca/ruins4.html.
Sullivan, William
1996
The Secret of the Incas: Myth, Astronomy, and
the War Against Time. New York: Crown Publishers.
Ziegler, Gary
February 2006 Machu Picchu: How They Kept the Secret. Former Link,
www.gorp.com/gorp/location/latamer/peru/mach.
Additional Information on Machu Picchu is located at http://www.rediscovermachupicchu.com.
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