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Sacsahuaman
If the city of Cuzco is considered to be in the shape of a puma, then the mighty fortress of Sacsahuaman would be located at the head, and its sharply zig-zagged outer walls could represent the fierce teeth of the animal. Sacsahuaman figured prominently during the Spanish Conquest, with a fierce battle taking place there between conquistadors and natives during the Great Rebellion of 1536.
The fortress-temple of Sacsahuaman (meaning
"satisfied falcon") lies immediately above Cuzco
and was primarily protected by three massive terraced walls,
rising over sixty feet and built in a zig-zag fashion in order
to break up attacking forces. Within the terraced walls were
three huge towers, the largest of which had a rectangular base
sixty-five feet long and rising up five storeys. It could comfortably
house over 5,000 soldiers and was described by later Spanish
historians as having "too many rooms and towers for one
person to visit them all". Sacsahuaman was built as more than a military fortress - the entire population of the unwalled city of Cuzco could have retreated within it during times of war.
Modern-day
Sacsahuaman is a poor comparison, with only a portion of the
defending outer walls and the foundations of the three main towers
remaining. The conquistadors deliberately destroyed most of the
fortress by 1560, though eyewitnesses before that time claimed
that it would have ranked as one of the wonders of the world.
One great stone remaining in the outer wall is 8.5 metres high
and estimated to weigh over 360 tons.
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