Los Luceros de tus Ojos – Pachacuti – Pachamama esta Despertando

Micehelium G Vibes
Micehelium G Vibes
Los Luceros de tus Ojos – Pachacuti – Pachamama esta Despertando
Loading
/

This is a very popular folkloric Andean region song.

It talks about the prophecy of Pachacutec is coming and that the Earth is Awakenning.

Lyrics

Am
Los luceros de tus ojos
C Am
Son un cielo azul de paz

Am C
La luna llena alumbrando
Am
Los luceritos brillando
C
La Pachamama cantando
E E7 Am
Y las cholitas bailando
E E7 Am
Y los papachos cantando

El cóndor con el jilguero,
El fiero puma con el manso cordero
En coro cantarán

Los Andes nos protegieron,
Las espinas de los cactus nos envolvieron
La cascada despertó

Akuchiwarmicha
Pachakuti está llegando
Akuchiwarmicha
Inca(La Tierra/Pachamama) está despertando

History and Prophecy

Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui (1438–1471 ), also called Pachacútec was the ninth Sapa Inca of the Chiefdom of Cusco. He was the enabler that transformed the Inca Empire and build Machu Picchu/

In Quechua, the cosmogonical concept of Pachakutiy means ‘the turn of the world and Yupanki could mean ‘honorable lord’. During his reign, Cusco grew from a hamlet into an empire that could compete with, and eventually overtake, the Chimú empire on the northern coast. He began an era of conquest that, within three generations, expanded the Inca dominion from the valley of Cusco to a sizeable part of western South America. According to the Inca chronicler Garcilaso de la Vega, Pachacuti created the Inti Raymi to celebrate the new year in the Andes of the Southern Hemisphere.

During the Pachacuti reign, the faith for the God, Taita Inti Sun was practice, by dancing, creating fires ad reading the stars, which they say were created by Father Sun, as imprint of the water itself.

Accessing power following the Chanka–Inca War, Pachacuti conquered territories around Lake Titicaca and Lake Poopó in the south, parts of the eastern slopes of the Andes Mountains near the Amazon rainforest in the east, lands up to the Quito basin in the north, and lands from Tumbes to possibly the coastal regions from Nazca and Camaná to Tarapacá. These conquests were achieved with the help of many military commanders, and they initiated Inca imperial expansion in the Andes.