Paititi

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Paititi refers to the legendary lost city said to lie east of the Andes, hidden somewhere within the remote rain forests of southeast Peru, northern Bolivia, and southwest Brazil. In Peru the Paititi legend revolves around the story of the culture-hero Inkarrí, who, after he founded Q'ero and Cuzco, retreated toward the jungles of Pantiacolla, to live out the rest of his days at his refuge city of Paititi. Other variants of the legend see Paititi as an Incan refuge in the border area between Bolivia and Brazil.

Recent findings

In 2001 the Italian archaeologist Mario Polia discovered the report of the missionary Andrea Lopez in the archives of the Jesuits in Rome. In the document, which originates from the time around 1600, Lopez describes a large city rich in gold, silver and jewels, located in the middle of the tropical jungle near a waterfall and called Paititi by the natives. Lopez informed the Pope about its discovery. Conspiracy theories maintain that the exact location of Paititi has been kept secret by the Vatican.

The most serious and extensive investigation into the non-Peruvian origin of the name "Paititi" and its original locale, has been made by Vera Tyuleneva, archivist at the Qorikancha in Cusco, who has made expeditions to northern Bolivia, and provided extensive and detailed written reports of her findings.

Within Peru the most serious and extensive investigations into lost sites within the mountains and jungles associated with Paititi have been carried out by the Peruvian medical doctor/explorer, Carlos Neuenschwander Landa; Argentinian Salesian priest/explorer, Juan Carlos Polentini Wester; and, into the present day (2008), by psychologist/explorer, Gregory Deyermenjian (United States), and by frontiersman/cartographer/explorer Paulino Mamani (Peru).

On December 29, 2007, a local community near Kimbiri, Peru, found large stone structures resembling high walls, covering an area of 40,000 square meters; they named it Manco Pata fortress[1][2]. However researchers from the Peruvian government's Cusco-based National Institute of Culture (INC) disputed suggestions by the local mayor that it could be part of the lost city of Paititi[3]. Their report identified the stone structures as naturally formed sandstone.

Expeditions to seek Paititi

References

es:Paititi fr:Païtiti pt:Paititi qu:Paytiti ru:Пайтити vi:Paititi

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