![]() A full day to visit and explore the capital of the Tiwanacu Empire and surroundings. |
Around 2000BC there were three lines of inhabitants in the Bolivian high plateau: the Chiripa, the Wancarani, and the Tiwanacu. These groups, generically called Aymaras, developed the central Andes thanks to the domestication of Llamas and Alpacas, and the intensive agriculture based in Potatoes and grains. Among them the Tiwanacu developed a unique and extremely efficient system of agriculture called the Sucacollus. This allowed them to produce much more their basic needs and therefore create surplus that was used to pay "non producers" like: soldiers, priests, scientist, and an elite of intellectuals. Around late Eleventh century the Tiwanacu Empire collapsed, by then their domain covered a huge area extended from Ecuador to the north, part of the Amazon basin to the east, the north of Chile and Argentina to the South, and the Pacific coast to the West. During more than two millennium, the Tiwanacu created a extremely developed culture which domain sciences like natural medicine, physics including hydraulic, acoustic, astronomy, and got very skillful on architecture and other crafts. They lived a very peaceful and well-organized existence; with no kings or individual leaders but a group of priests and old wise men, some people called that: “the perfect socialism”. After the Tiwanacu Empire collapsed, the whole region was divided in small familiar groups called “señorios” They will become later the villages of this days. The Incas appear like a hundred years later at the most sacred place of the Aymaras, and the Spaniards only after the fifteenth century. If you are particularly interested in archeology or you want to turn your visit into an real and teaching experience, we strongly suggest you to take the SSTITSUR tour otherwise this full-day tour to Tiwanacu will really worth your time and money. Besides visiting the two museums in Tiwanacu with calm and making a deet
analisis of the expose objects, we will take you through the most important
archeological sites in the area including: Kalasasaya, Kantatallita, Akapana,
Kerikala, Putuni and Pumapunku. Later we will make a short visit to the
town and other archeological sites near Tiwanacu like. |