Thursday, February 24, 2011

Wari artifacts to go on display at Casa Garcilazo

Cusco, Feb. 24 (ANDINA). The Wari artifacts discovered near the Andean district of Vilcabamba in Cusco will be exhibited for fifteen days at the city's Museo Casa Garcilaso.
Casa Gacilaso is one of the most visited museums in Cusco and is located in the same house where Inca Garcilaso de la Vega used to live, two blocks away from the main square.

Furthermore, Garcia announced that he will request the help from national and international scientific community to continue with the archaeological researches, as the discovery of the Lord of Wari would be as important as that of the Lord of Sipan.

In turn, Deputy Culture Minister Bernardo Roca Rey noted that they will take extreme security measures in the discovery site to prevent the stealing of the artifacts found in the tomb.

Some of the discovered artifacts include a silver breastplate, a silver mask, two golden bracelets, two wooden sceptres covered with silver, an ornament made with 234 silver sheets and three necklaces made with beautiful stones among others.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Cusco to celebrate Machu Picchu discovery anniversary year-round


Cusco, Feb. 15 (ANDINA). Peruvian authorities in the southeastern Cusco region are preparing a varied calendar of activities to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the scientific discovery of Machu Picchu throughout the year.
Regional trade and tourism director Carlos Zúñiga said tourism-related organizations will soon meet to finalise and announce the schedule for the year-long celebrations.

The official told Andina that the Centennial events will include fairs, a film festival, conferences, the launch of a commemorative postage stamp and an international photography competition.

These events will be held in addition to other major activities scheduled for July 2011 in Lima.

The pre-Columbian Inca site of Machu Picchu, the legendary Lost City of the Incas, is one of the most famous historical sites in the world.

Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site visited by thousands each day, Machu Picchu was first revealed to the world when American explorer Hiram Bingham discovered the site in 1911.

Cusco to celebrate Machu Picchu discovery anniversary year-round





Cusco, Feb. 15 (ANDINA). Peruvian authorities in the southeastern Cusco region are preparing a varied calendar of activities to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the scientific discovery of Machu Picchu throughout the year.
Regional trade and tourism director Carlos Zúñiga said tourism-related organizations will soon meet to finalise and announce the schedule for the year-long celebrations.

The official told Andina that the Centennial events will include fairs, a film festival, conferences, the launch of a commemorative postage stamp and an international photography competition.

These events will be held in addition to other major activities scheduled for July 2011 in Lima.

The pre-Columbian Inca site of Machu Picchu, the legendary Lost City of the Incas, is one of the most famous historical sites in the world.

Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site visited by thousands each day, Machu Picchu was first revealed to the world when American explorer Hiram Bingham discovered the site in 1911.

Chiclayo archaeological complex to house site museum

Chiclayo, Feb. 16 (ANDINA). Local authorities are planning to build a site museum in the Ventarron archeological complex located in the district of Pomalca, Chiclayo, as a way to attract tourists to this religious sanctuary that is considered to be the cradle of northern Peru civilization.
Naylamp-Lambayeque project director Celso Sialer said specialists are preparing a technical file for the construction of this site museum.

“The construction process is expected to begin this year in collaboration with international organizations interested in investing in the complex, which will help show people in this country and around the world how magnificent our ancestors were,” Sialer highlighted.

Ventarron hosts remains of fabulous architecture that may have marked the beginning of this civilization in northern Lambayeque.

According to Sialer, the archaeological site contains the oldest example of a painted mural in the Americas dating from 4,000 years ago.

Chiclayo Peru

Peru adds new food documentary to Unesco bid

Lima, Feb. 19 (ANDINA). Peru's Culture Ministry has announced that a new documentary entitled, De Ollas y Sueños, or Cooking Up Dreams, will support Peruvian cuisine's bid to be declared World Intangible Cultural Heritage by Unesco.
The announcement was made after renowned Peruvian director Ernesto Cabellos and Guarango, a Lima-based production company, donated the film to the ministry.

"With this gesture, we want to emphasize the contribution that Peruvian documentary cinema can make to our country’s development objectives," Cabellos said.

In his documentary, Cabellos presents his country's spectacular cuisine and asks himself: Can an entire nation be represented by its cuisine? This documentary journeys to the kitchens of Peru’s coast, highlands and jungle, as well as Peruvian expat communities in Paris, London, Amsterdam and New York for answers.

From the most humble family kitchens to the poshest restaurants, from stories of pioneering Peruvian chefs abroad to those who preserve ancient recipes at home, we find that Peru’s cuisine is deliciously integrating for its people, who have historically been divided by ethnic and economic differences.

This documentary isn't just about food. This documentary is about integration, challenges, culture, poverty and wealth. We’ll discover the origin of Peru's ubiquitous national dish – cebiche – the anticuchos of beef hearts or the annual meal mourners share at the graves of their dead relatives.

Famed chefs such as Spain's Ferran Adrià, as well as Peru's Gastón Acurio share their views and experiences with Peru’s cuisine alongside the thousands of unsung chefs, who also dream of Peru’s cuisine as a motor of development.