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Machu Picchu The
Final Destination of the Inca Trail. |
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Built as a “royal estate” for the Inca emperor Pachacuti, Machu Picchu is an astounding and perennially mysterious climax to one of the world's most famous journeys: the Inca Trail. Perched high above a sinuous bend in the Urubamba River, Machu Picchu has lured explorers, poets and pilgrims to its mist-wreathed ridgetop ever since its discovery by the American explorer Hiram Bingham in July, 1911.
No one lived here before the Incas. Those mighty empire builders
from Cusco discovered this extraordinary place, finding it rich
in natural features sacred to their religion. Both inspired and
humbled by its dramatic natural beauty, their answer was to create
on a vast scale one of the planet's most sensitive and harmonious
works of art. The aesthetic genius of its layout and architecture
coupled with the durability of its brilliant planning and engineering
have given us today this finest of jewels among the UNESCO world
heritage sites.
Scholars still argue about the meaning of Machu Picchu: why it
was built and what purpose it served, who lived there and when they
departed. Most agree that its main intent was spiritual and ceremonial.
But clearly its creator, Pachacuti, intended the journey to his
sacred city to be a powerful experience in its own right, a pilgrimage
whose effort is stunningly rewarded time and again as one follows
its winding way among peaks, forests, deep gorges and fairytale
ruins. Perhaps if one is to experience the spirit that inspired
the builders of Machu Picchu, one truly must walk the length of
Pachacuti's white granite highway -- today's Inca Trail.
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