The Choquequilla Inca Huaca [View all]
Image Credit: Greg Willis - CC BY-SA 4.0
Choquequilla, also called Ñaupa Iglesia, is an Inca huaca shrine, constructed within a cave opening near the present-day village of Pachar in the Sacred Valley of Peru.
In Inca society, a huaca or waka, was a sacred monument built along a processional ceremonial line or route. Inca emperors felt it their right to improve upon nature by sculpting in situ outcrops that often became huacas.
The Inca also believed that natural caves connected them with the underworld and their ancestors, serving as conduits to reach the gods, or were associated with Inca origin myths and ritual emergence.
cave niche wall carved boulder at naupa iglesia
Image Credit: Greg Willis CC BY-SA 4.0
The Choquequilla huaca was constructed where two relatively flat stone faces form an inverted V in the cave roof, that during the December solstice sunrise illuminates the cave interior.
An intricately carved shrine made from black granite faces inward toward the cave, that closely resembles the Baño de la Ñusta (meaning Bath of the Princess) at nearby Ollantaytambo (although the Choquequilla altar has been badly damaged by looters).
Image Credit: Greg Willis CC BY-SA 4.0
More:
https://www.heritagedaily.com/2021/08/the-choquequilla-inca-huaca/141171