Capacocha
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Capacocha
La Capacocha ou Qhapaq hucha (« sacrifice solennel » ou « obligation royale », du quechua qhapaq « noble », « puissant », « royal » et de hucha « crime », « péché », « culpabilité ») est un rite sacrificiel important chez les Incas qui implique généralement le sacrifice d'enfants.
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Capacocha or Qhapaq hucha (Quechua: qhapaq noble, solemn, principal, mighty, royal, hucha crime, sin, guilt Hispanicized spellings Capac cocha, Capaccocha, Capacocha, also qhapaq ucha) was an important sacrificial rite among the Inca that typically involved the sacrifice of children. Children of both sexes were selected from across the Inca empire for sacrifice in capacocha ceremonies, which were performed at important shrines distributed across the empire, known as huacas, or wak'akuna.
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La capac cocha, capac hucha o qhapaq hucha (que podría traducirse como «obligación real») era uno de los rituales más importantes del calendario Inca. Se realizaba entre abril y julio desde, al menos, el siglo XIII y hasta comienzos del siglo XVI, en honor al dios Viracocha, en quechua Qun Tiksi Wiraqucha.
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Capac cocha
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Capacocha
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Capacocha
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9451990
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1122294654
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Capacocha or Qhapaq hucha (Quechua: qhapaq noble, solemn, principal, mighty, royal, hucha crime, sin, guilt Hispanicized spellings Capac cocha, Capaccocha, Capacocha, also qhapaq ucha) was an important sacrificial rite among the Inca that typically involved the sacrifice of children. Children of both sexes were selected from across the Inca empire for sacrifice in capacocha ceremonies, which were performed at important shrines distributed across the empire, known as huacas, or wak'akuna. Capacocha ceremonies took place under several circumstances. Some could be undertaken as the result of key events in the life of the Sapa Inca, the Inca Emperor, such as his ascension to the throne, an illness, his death, the birth of a son. At other times, Capacocha ceremonies were undertaken to stop natural disasters performed as major festivals or processions at important ceremonial sites. The rationale for this type of sacrificial rite has typically been understood as the Inca trying to ensure that humanity's best were sent to join their deities. The children chosen for sacrifice in a capacocha ceremony were typically given alcohol and coca leaves and deposited at the place of the ceremony. Sacrifice was primarily carried out through four methods: strangulation, a blow to the head, suffocation, or being buried alive while unconscious, though if the ceremony was carried out in a particularly cold place, they could die from hypothermia. Some Spanish records tell of Incas removing victims' hearts, but no evidence of this has been found in the archaeological record; it seems more likely that this practice was witnessed by the Spaniards among the Aztecs and wrongly attributed to the Incas as well.
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La capac cocha, capac hucha o qhapaq hucha (que podría traducirse como «obligación real») era uno de los rituales más importantes del calendario Inca. Se realizaba entre abril y julio desde, al menos, el siglo XIII y hasta comienzos del siglo XVI, en honor al dios Viracocha, en quechua Qun Tiksi Wiraqucha. La ceremonia incluía fiestas y ofrendas de reconocimiento y de gratitud con sacrificios humanos. Desde las cuatro direcciones del Tawantisuyu los poblados enviaban uno o más niños al Cuzco, para, luego de las ceremonias allí oficiadas, regresar y ser ofrendados a huacas locales, cuyos adoratorios se localizaban en las montañas, llamadas "Apu", en toda la extensión del Imperio inca. Cabe destacar que, muy posiblemente, no eran usuales los sacrificios humanos en el "capac cocha" debido a que solo en casos muy puntuales se han encontrado vestigios de esta ceremonia en la cima de los "Apu".
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La Capacocha ou Qhapaq hucha (« sacrifice solennel » ou « obligation royale », du quechua qhapaq « noble », « puissant », « royal » et de hucha « crime », « péché », « culpabilité ») est un rite sacrificiel important chez les Incas qui implique généralement le sacrifice d'enfants.
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34040