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PUNO – TITICACA LAKE
Travel
Information Peru. Puno was the
territory of the
Tiahuanacos (800 A.D. –
1200 A.D.)who were the
highest cultural
expression of the Aymara
people that established
themselves in what is
today Peru and Bolivia.
The Incas took over
these lands in the
fifteenth century, and
the Spanish, attracted
by the mining industry
developed there, left an
important Colonial
legacy throughout the
entire area.
Today, the city of Puno
(3,287 masl), which lies
on the shores of Lake
Titicaca, the highest
navigable lake in the
world, is the folklore
capital of Peru and the
site of the Feast of the
Virgen de la Candelaria.
In the outskirts, you
can visit the
spectacular Chullpas de
Sillustani, a complex of
impressive burial towers
built by the Kollas,
Juli, famous for its
beautiful Colonial
churches, Lampa with its
vice royal church built
between 1675 and 1685,
Llachón, a community
that still maintains its
centuries old customs
and cultural expressions,
and Pucará, known for
its pre-Inca pottery and
for the “toritos de
Pucará” that the
artisans of today create
from clay.
The lake contains
numerous islands whose
inhabitants continue to
live as their ancestors
have in custom and
tradition. The Uros an
example of this; this
people group lives on
“floating islands” that
they have artificially
made entirely of totora
reeds, and they navigate
in their traditional
boats also made out of
totora reeds. Taquile,
Suasi, and Amantaní are
knows for their kindness
of their residents,
their ancestral skill in
weaving, their pre-Columbian
constructions, and
lovely countryside. The
Titicaca National
Reserve (36,180 hectares)
protects extensive
stretches of totora
reeds and various
species of plants and
animals. |