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In the Footsteps of the Inca: Machu Picchu and the Inca Trail

By Fernando Minnicelli

The picturesque town of Ollantaytambo lies at 9160 feet above sea level, about 40 miles northeast of the former Inca capital of Cuzco. This place is the stepping-off point for travelers that have come to undertake the Inca Trail. Inhabitants of its narrow streets, where the ancient stonemasonry of the Inca is still very much in evidence, remain fiercely proud of this city's past.

I see a man hauling wood, and I ask him about the history of the road upon which I am about to embark. Simón was his name and he told me much more than I expected to hear:

 

From about 1300 to 1532, a major part of South America prospered under the enormous empire of the Incas. The Incas occupied a vast territory from Ecuador to northern Chile and Argentina.

A large part of the Inca's success was due to  their excellent communications system, made possible by an extensive and stunningly well developed road network.

The Spanish conquerors were astonished with the perfection and finish of the Inca roads. Several chronicles give testimony to the beauty of these roads. Hernando Pizarro, brother to conquistador leader Francisco Pizarro and one of the first conquerors to arrive in Cuzco, wrote: "The road through the mountain range is something to see, because truthfully in earth so rough, nowhere in Christendom have been seen such beautiful roads. All the streams have wood or stone bridges. Spanning one large and dangerous river, that we crossed twice, there were even bridges made of net, which are incredible to see."

The 43-kilometer Camino del Inca (Inca Trail) in the Peruvian Andes embodies geography and jungle, the history of a race, the roots of American civilization. The trail starts at Kilometer 88 of the Cuzco-Machu Picchu railway and continues all the way to the sacred city of Machu Picchu itself, the objective of thousands of travelers who have prepared their spirit for an encounter with the ruins. A four-day trek on the Inca trail is not the only way to get to Machu Picchu-the tourist train can get a person there much more quickly and easily-but it certainly is the most beautiful and spiritually satisfying way to make the journey.

The Spanish discovered neither the Inca Trail nor the ruins of Machu Picchu when they conquered this part of America. Instead, American Explorer Hiram Bingham rediscovered the Inca Trail in 1911 after it had lain abandoned for nearly 400 years.

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