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Yawarkucha

Coordinates: 0°22′19.31″N 78°6′2.30″W / 0.3720306°N 78.1006389°W / 0.3720306; -78.1006389
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Yawarkucha
Yawarkucha
Location of Yawarkucha in Ecuador.
Location of Yawarkucha in Ecuador.
Yawarkucha
LocationEcuador
Imbabura Province
Coordinates0°22′19.31″N 78°6′2.30″W / 0.3720306°N 78.1006389°W / 0.3720306; -78.1006389
Surface area257 hectares (640 acres)
Max. depth8 metres (26 ft)

Yawarkucha or Yawar Kucha (Kichwa yawar blood, kucha lake, "blood lake"), hispanicized spellings Yaguarcocha, Yahuarcocha) is a lake in Ecuador located in the eastern outskirts of the city of Ibarra in Imbabura Province, Ibarra Canton. The lake is about 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) long and wide and has an elevation of 2,190 metres (7,190 ft) above sea level.[1] The lake was formed from glacial meltwater about 10,000 BCE.[2]

The scenic lake is a popular tourist attraction.[3]

Yawarkucha acquired its name as a result of a battle and massacre which allegedly took place here during the conquest of the area by the Inca Empire in the late 15th or early 16th century. The local chiefdom called the Caranqui fiercely resisted the Inca invasion of their territory. The Inca Emperor, Huayna Capac (ruled c. 1493-1525) finally achieved victory near the present-day city of Ibarra. According to Spanish chronicler Miguel Cabello de Balboa, Huayna Capac ordered the massacre of the male population of Caranqui in retribution for its resistance. The massacre of thousands of men took place on the shores of a lake, known thereafter as Yawarkucha or "Blood Lake."[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Google Earth
  2. ^ "Lake of blood: The dark history of Laguna Yahuarcocha, Ecuador," http://www.ancient-origins.net/ancient-places-americas/lake-blood-dark-history-laguna-yahuarcocha-ecuador-003415, accessed 27 Apr 2017
  3. ^ "Laguna de Yahuarcocha" http://turismoaccesible.ec/site/en/destination/region-sierra/imbabura/ciudad-de-ibarra/laguna-de-yahuarcocha/, accessed 27 Apr 2017
  4. ^ Bray, Tamara L. and Echeverría Almeida, José (2014), "The Late Imperial Site of Inca-Caranqui, Northern highland Ecuador at the End of Empire", Nampo Pacha, journal of Andean Archaeology, Vol. 34, No. 2, p. 179-181