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Home > Cusco Tourist Information > Places of Interest > Chinchero
Related Pages:
The Historic City Centre / Qorikancha (Temple of the Sun) / Cusco Museums
Nearby Inca Ruins: / Sacsayhuaman / Q'enko, Puca Pucara & Tambomachay
Sacred Valley of the Incas / Pisac / Calca & Urubamaba / Ollantaytambo
Chinchero
(3762m)
Chinchero is a small Andean Indian village located high up on the windswept plains of Anta at 3762m. There are beautiful views overlooking the Sacred Valley of the Incas, with the Cordillera Vilcabamba and the snowcapped peak of Salkantay dominating the western horizon. Chinchero is believed to be the mythical birthplace of the rainbow. Its major claim to tourism is its colorful Sunday market which is much less tourist-orientated than the market at Pisac.
The village mainly comprises mud brick (adobe) houses, and locals still go about their business in traditional dress.
The village may have been an important town in Inca times. The most striking remnant of this period is the massive stone wall in the main plaza which has ten trapezoidal niches. The construction of the wall and many other ruins and agricultural terraces (which are still in use) are attributed to Inca Tupac Yupanqui who possibly used Chinchero as a kind of country resort. Entrance to the main plaza and ruins requires a 'boleto turistico'.
In the main plaza an adobe colonial church, dating from the early seventeenth century, has been built upon the foundations of an Inca temple or palace. The ceiling and walls are covered in beautiful floral and religious designs. The church is open on Sundays for mass.
Half an hour's walk from the village brings you to Lake Piuri which once fed Cusco with water. It takes about 3 hours to walk around the lake passing through small picturesque villages.
Information used with the kind permission of Andean Travel Web Guide to Peru
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Andean Travel Web Guide to Peru 2000-2003
Web Site © Peru Tourist Information (Peru) 2003