
More than 500  artists will perform Thursday the ancient Inti Raymi or Festival of the  Sun in the Andean city of Cusco in southeastern Peru. Before the colonial Spaniards banned the ceremonial events occurring  each Winter Solstice in Cusco, the native residents gathered to honor  the Sun God, sacrifice an animal to ensure good crops and to pay homage  to the Inca, as the first born Son of the Sun.
The Inti Raymi, one of the largest and most colorful festivals in Latin America, takes place at the winter solstice, when the sun is farthest from the earth. The centerpiece of the festival is the all-day celebrations on June 24, the actual day of Inti Raymi.
On this day, the ceremonial events begin with an invocation by the Sapa Inca in the Qorikancha, also spelled Koricancha square in front of the Santo Domingo church, built over the ancient Temple of the Sun.
Here, the Sapa Inca calls on the blessings from the sun. Following  the oration, Sapa Inca is carried on a golden throne, a replica of the  original which weighed about 60 kilos, in a procession to the ancient  fortress of Sacsayhuamán, in the hills above Cuzco.
With the Sapa Inca come the high priests, garbed in ceremonial robes, then officials of the court, nobles and others, all elaborately costumed according to their rank, with silver and gold ornaments.
They walk along flower-bedecked streets, to music and prayers and  dancing. Women sweep the streets to clear them of evil spirits. At  Sacsayhuamán , where huge crowds await the arrival of the procession,  Sapa Inca climbs to the sacred altar where all can see him. 
 
Once all the celebrants are in place in the grand square of the  fortress, there are speeches by Sapa Inca, the priests and  representatives of the Suyos: the Snake for the world below, the Puma  for life on earth, and the Condor for the upper world of the gods, as  chronicled by about.com.  
 
A white llama is sacrificed (now in a very realistic stage act) and  the high priest holds aloft the bloody heart in honor of Pachamama. This  is done to ensure the fertility of the earth which in combination with  light and warmth from the sun provides a bountiful crop. The priests  read the blood stains to see the future for the Inca. 
 
As the sun begins to set, stacks of straw are set on fire and the  celebrants dance around them to honor Tawantinsuty or the Empire of the  Four Wind Directions. In ancient times, no fire was allowed that day  until the evening fires. 
 
The ceremony of Inti Raymi ends with a procession back to Cuzco. Sapa  Inca and Mama Occla are carried on their thrones, the high priests and  representatives of the Supas pronounce blessings on the people. Once  again, a new year has begun.
 
 
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