Aguas Calientes, Peru

Machupicchu
Machu Pikchu
Machupicchu Pueblo
Town
Statue of Pachacutec
Machupicchu
Coordinates: 13°9′17″S 72°31′31″W / 13.15472°S 72.52528°W / -13.15472; -72.52528Coordinates: 13°9′17″S 72°31′31″W / 13.15472°S 72.52528°W / -13.15472; -72.52528
Country Peru
Region Cusco
Province Urubamba
District Machupicchu
Settled 1901
District Capital 1 October 1941
Government
  Mayor Edgar D. Miranda Quiñones
Elevation 2,040 m (6,690 ft)
Population
  Total 1,600
Time zone UTC-5 (PET)

Machupicchu or Machupicchu Pueblo, also known as Aguas Calientes, is a location in Peru situated in the Cusco Region, Urubamba Province.[1] It is the seat of the Machupicchu District. Machupicchu lies at the Vilcanota River. It is the closest access point to the historical site of Machu Picchu which is 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) away or about a 1.5 hours walk. There are many hotels and restaurants for tourists, as well as natural hot baths which gave the town its colloquial Spanish name. The baths were destroyed by floods several years ago, but have been rebuilt.

Name

The official name[2] comes from Quechua Machu Pikchu from machu old, old person, pikchu pyramid; mountain; or prominence with a broad base that ends in sharp peaks.[3] The addition of "pueblo" comes from the Spanish word for town. [4] It was formerly called Aguas Calientes meaning "hot waters" or "hot springs".

History

Settled by a few farm families in 1901, the settlement was transformed into a busy railway worker's camp called Maquinachayoq (possibly from Quechua makina (a borrowing from Spanish máquina) machine / locomotive, train,[5] -cha, -yuq suffixes, "the one with a little machine, locomotive or train", Makinachayuq)[6] during the construction of the railroad through there in the late 1920s. The town was the central hub for worker lodging and their equipment until the railway was completed in 1931.[7]

Transport

Machupicchu serves as a terminal for the PeruRail and Inca Rail passenger train service from Cusco. Trains serve locals and tourists arriving from Cusco and Ollantaytambo to visit Machu Picchu. A sheltered souvenir market is adjacent to the train station. Avenue Pachacutec is the main and only thoroughfare of the town, connecting the baths to the town's main square.

Industry

The Central Machupicchu Hydroelectric Plant (Hidroelectrica) is nearby at the Urubamba River. It generates about 90 MW for the regions of Cusco, Puno, and Apurímac . It was first constructed between 1958 and 1965 and expanded between 1981 and 1985. The plant was damaged by a landslide on 28 February 1998 and ceased operations until 13 July 2001.[8]

Twin towns

See also

References

  1. escale.minedu.gob.pe – UGEL map of the Urubamba Province (Cusco Region)
  2. spij.minjus.gob.pe Ley 9396 (Law 9396 1 October 1941) (in Spanish): "... El nuevo distrito que se crea por la presente ley se denominará Machupicchu y tendrá por capital la población de este nombre que se ha formado alrededor de la actual Estación de Machupicchu. ..."
  3. Teofilo Laime Acopa, Diccionario Bilingüe, Iskay simipi yuyay k'ancha, Quechua – Castellano, Castellano – Quechua (Quechua-Spanish dictionary): machuadj. y s. m. Viejo. Hombre de mucha edad (Úsase también para animales).machus. m. Anciano. Viejo. pikchus. Pirámide. Sólido puntiagudo de varias caras. machu pikchus. La gran ciudadela pétrea que fue quizá uno de los más grandes monumentos religiosos del incanato, entre el valle del Cusco y la selva virgen (JAL). || Monumento arqueológico situado en el departamento actual del Cusco, junto al río Urubamba, en una cumbre casi inaccesible (JL).
  4. Municipalidad distrital de Machupicchu, Plan de desarrollo concertado del Distrito de Machupicchu 2011–2020 (in Spanish), p. 12: "... Machupicchu Pueblo mal llamado Aguas Calientes ..." (meaning "... Machupicchu Village, misnamed Aguas Calientes ...")
  5. babylon.com
  6. whc.unesco.org/download.cfm?id_document=100776 Report on the reactive monitoring mission to the historic sanctuary of Machu Picchu (Peru), 22 April to 30 April 2007
  7. "Aguas Calientes History". Archived from the original on 10 July 2013. Retrieved 23 January 2009.
  8. (in Spanish) Central Hidroeléctrica Machupicchu Archived 26 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Empresa de Generación Eléctrica Machupicchu S.A.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.