Misplaced Pages

Paramonga

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Paramonga was an important city constructed at the border of the former Kingdom of Chimor in Peru during the late Intermediate Period (AD 1200 to 1400), whose capital was the metropolis of Chan Chan .

#853146

8-491: Paramonga is located on the Fortaleza River , close to the town of Pativilca to the north of Lima . It is said that it was an important religious settlement, similar to Pachacamac . It is named after the nearby modern town of Paramonga, as its original name is unknown. Paramonga is often called a fortress due to its staggered pyramid of four levels of enormous proportions constructed on a hill, which somewhat resembles

16-517: A European medieval castle , though it was built prior to Spanish colonization of the area. The oldest written records of Paramonga belong to Miguel de Estete , who was called the "chronicler soldier", during the conquest of the Tawantinsuyu . In 1533, Estete accompanying Hernando Pizarro and his little dispatch of 'twenty horsemen and some arquebusiers' with a few of Atahualpa's retainers acting as guides descended from Cajamarca , by orders of

24-569: A Strong House, with five blind fences, painted of elaborately on the inside and outside with its walls carved, the way it is done in Spain, with two tigers (pumas?) at the main entrance ..." Another chronicler, Pedro Cieza de León , passed Paramonga during his trip from the City of the Kings (Lima) to Trujillo in 1541. He described it by the following: "There is one thing worth seeing in this valley, which

32-597: Is a fine well-built fortress, and it is certainly very curious to see how they raised water in channels to irrigate higher levels. The buildings were very handsome, and many wild beasts and birds were painted on the walls, which are now all in ruins and undermined in many places by those who have searched for buried gold and silver. In these days the fortress only serves as a witness to that which has been." 10°39′12″S 77°50′29″W  /  10.65333°S 77.84139°W  / -10.65333; -77.84139 Fortaleza River (Peru) The Fortaleza River originates in

40-588: The Department of Ancash , Peru , in the foothills of the Cordillera Negra . It has a route of just over 100 kilometres (62 mi) and a basin of 2,300 square kilometres (890 sq mi). It presents a highly irregular regime, so much so that in the months of June to October it does not reach the Pacific Ocean . Its waters are intensely used for the cultivation of sugarcane. It crosses

48-509: The Able Ñan (dirt road) along the coast, and became the first Spaniards to have visited Paramonga along the way to Pachacamac. During the Spanish colonial period, Paramanonga would be visited by a number of chroniclers, soldiers, priests, and other literate men. Estete wrote in his account. "... and another day we went to sleep in a large town that is called Parmunga, which is next to the sea, has

56-531: The leader of the conquistador band in Peru, the brother of Hernando, Francisco Pizarro , who had settled in Cajamarca alongside a captive Atahualpa Inca since the previous year in order to wait for the completion of enormous ransom payment of gold and silver proposed by Atahualpa for his own rescue, however as time passed the supply of precious metal artifacts arriving at Cajamarca had significantly decreased over

64-606: The past months, the Spaniards were growing impatient and the tensions between the newly arrived Almagrists and the Pizarrists were beginning to escalate, in an attempt to complete the payment of his ransom Atahaulpa then proposes to the Spanish to loot Pachacamac, city where riches abounded but held by priests that sided with Huascar in the Inca civil war and thus were enemies of Atahualpa. Estete and Hernando's expedition traveled by

#853146