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Los Baños del Inca District

Coordinates: 7°04′35″S 78°28′50″W / 7.07639°S 78.48056°W / -7.07639; -78.48056
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Los Baños del Inca
Thermal springs in the town of Los Baños del Inca
Thermal springs in the town of Los Baños del Inca
Flag of Los Baños del Inca
Los Baños del Inca is located in Peru
Los Baños del Inca
Los Baños del Inca
Location within Peru's Cajamarca Province
Los Baños del Inca is located in South America
Los Baños del Inca
Los Baños del Inca
Location within South America
Coordinates: 7°04′35″S 78°28′50″W / 7.07639°S 78.48056°W / -7.07639; -78.48056
Country Peru
RegionCajamarca
ProvinceCajamarca
FoundedSeptember 7, 1959
CapitalLos Baños del Inca
Government
 • MayorSantos Julio Davila Silva
Area
 • Total276.4 km2 (106.7 sq mi)
Elevation
2,667 m (8,750 ft)
Population
 • Total31,764
 • Density110/km2 (300/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC-5 (PET)
UBIGEO060108

Los Baños del Inca District is one of twelve districts of the province Cajamarca in Peru.[1] It is centred on a spa which uses the water from thermal springs

The town is said to have been the favorite resort town of the Lord Inca Atawallpa.

Baños del Inca was known as Pultumarka during the Inca era, in the Spanish Conquest the hot springs resort of Pultumarka was the place where Atawallpa spent time bathing while Francisco Pizarro planned the conquest of the Tawantinsuyu, Pizarro sent some of his representatives to invite the Inca to a dinner. Atawallpa accepted the invitation for the following day. The capture of the Inca king took place in the city of Kashamarka (modern-day Cajamarca).

Pre-Columbian Pultumarka shows occupation since the Cajamarca culture and subsequently of the Inca culture.

Near Cajamarca (Caxamalca), "at a distance of about a league farther, across the valley, might be seen columns of vapor rising up towards the heavens, indicating the place of the famous baths, much frequented by the Peruvian princes."[2]: 166, 168–169 

"Then having arrived at the place where Atahualpa was, he being in a small house which was kept for the Lord, together with other rooms, for his use when he went thither to rest and to bathe, and there was a great tank which they had built, very well made of hewn stone, and to the tank came two pipes of water, one hot and the other cold, and there the one was tempered by the other whenever the Lord or his wives wished to bathe, and no other person dared to enter the water, under penalty of death."[3]: 29 

References

[edit]
  1. ^ (in Spanish) Instituto Nacional de Estadística e Informática. Banco de Información Distrital Archived 2008-04-23 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved April 11, 2008.
  2. ^ Prescott, W.H., 2011, The History of the Conquest of Peru, Digireads.com Publishing, ISBN 9781420941142
  3. ^ Pizzaro, P., 1571, Relation of the Discovery and Conquest of the Kingdoms of Peru, Vol. 1-2, New York: Cortes Society, RareBooksClub.com, ISBN 9781235937859