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Inca Trail History

500 Years of History Under Your Feet

Every stone you step on was placed by Inca hands five centuries ago. This is the story of how it was built, who walked it, and how it reached us.

More Than a Trekking Trail

When you walk the Inca Trail, you’re not simply trekking. You’re traveling a sacred pilgrimage route built more than 500 years ago by one of the most extraordinary civilizations in human history.

Every stone step, every retaining wall, every tunnel carved in rock was deliberately placed by Inca engineers and workers. And most amazing: after five centuries, earthquakes, tropical rain and millions of footsteps, the path is still there.

This is not just the story of a trekking route. It’s the story of an empire, an engineering feat, and a spiritual connection between man and mountain that has endured half a millennium.

What You’ll Learn in This Article

The Inca Empire and its road network Why and how the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu was built Who walked this route and for what purpose The archaeological sites of the route and their meaning The fall of the empire and abandonment of the trail The modern rediscovery The history of tourism and current protection

The Inca Empire: Historical Context

To understand the Inca Trail, we must first understand the empire that created it.

 

Tahuantinsuyo: The Empire of the Four Quarters

Aspect

Detail

Name

Tahuantinsuyo (“The Four Regions Together”)

Period

Approximately 1438-1533 AD

Maximum extent

~2 million km² (from Colombia to Chile)

Population

10-12 million people

Capital

Cusco (Qosqo = “Navel of the World”)

Language

Quechua (still spoken by 8+ million today)

Ruler

Sapa Inca (“Only Inca”)

Timeline of the Inca Empire

Date

Event

~1200 AD

The Incas settle in Cusco valley as small tribe

1438

Pachacútec defeats the Chancas and begins imperial expansion

1438-1471

Reign of Pachacútec — construction of Machu Picchu and Inca Trail

1471-1493

Reign of Túpac Inca Yupanqui — maximum territorial expansion

1493-1527

Reign of Huayna Cápac — empire’s peak

1527-1532

Civil war between Huáscar and Atahualpa

1532

Arrival of Francisco Pizarro and Spanish conquistadors

1533

Capture and execution of Atahualpa — empire collapse

1572

Fall of Vilcabamba, last Inca stronghold

The Inca Trail to Machu Picchu was built during Pachacútec’s reign, approximately between 1450 and 1470 AD.

 

Pachacútec: The Empire Builder

The ninth Sapa Inca, Pachacútec Inca Yupanqui (1438-1471), is considered the true founder of the empire and architect of its greatness.

His achievements include:

Achievement

Significance

Transformation of Cusco

Redesigned capital in shape of puma

Road system

Expanded road network to imperial scale

Machu Picchu

Ordered its construction as his royal estate

The Inca Trail

Created sacred pilgrimage route

Empire organization

Established Inca administrative system

Military conquests

Expanded empire from Ecuador to Bolivia

The name “Pachacútec” means “He who transforms the world” or “Earth shaker.” And did he ever.

 

The Qhapaq Ñan: The Inca Road Network

The Inca Trail to Machu Picchu is just a small part of something much larger.

 

The Largest Network in the Ancient World

The Incas built the most extensive road network of any ancient civilization, surpassing even the Romans in proportion to their existence time.

Aspect

Detail

Name

Qhapaq Ñan (“Royal Road” or “Road of the Powerful”)

Total extent

More than 30,000 km

Current countries it crosses

Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Argentina

Recognition

UNESCO World Heritage Site (2014)

Average width

1-4 meters (up to 8 meters in main sections)

Construction time

Less than 100 years

Comparison with Other Civilizations

Civilization

Road Network

Construction Time

Roman Empire

~80,000 km

~500 years

Inca Empire

~30,000 km

~100 years

Persian Empire

~2,500 km

~200 years

The Incas built their road network approximately 5 times faster than the Romans proportionally.

 

Structure of the Qhapaq Ñan

The network had two main routes:

  1. Coastal Road (Desert Route)
  • Ran along Pacific coast
  • Crossed deserts
  • Connected coastal valleys
  • Approximately 4,000 km

 

  1. Highland Road (Mountain Route)
  • Ran through Andes
  • Crossed mountains over 5,000 m
  • Connected Cusco with entire empire
  • Approximately 5,200 km

 

The Inca Trail to Machu Picchu is a secondary route branching from the main highland road, designed specifically to access Pachacútec’s royal estate.

Engineering of Inca Roads

The Incas had no wheel or pack animals (only llamas for light loads). However, they built roads that have lasted 500 years.

Construction techniques:

Technique

Application

Stone steps

On steep slopes, carved into rock

Retaining walls

To stabilize hillsides and prevent landslides

Drainage

Channels to divert rainwater

Suspension bridges

Of plant fibers, crossed rivers and ravines

Tunnels

Carved in rock when easier than going around

Raised causeways

In swampy or floodable areas

Stone paving

In main and ceremonial sections

The Chasquis: Empire Messengers

Inca roads weren’t just for walking. They were the empire’s communication network.

Aspect

Detail

Who they were

Professional messengers trained from youth

How they worked

Relay system every 6-9 km

Speed

A message could travel 240 km in one day

What they carried

Quipus (knotted strings = information), oral messages, small objects

Cusco to Quito

~2,000 km in 5-7 days

Fascinating fact: The chasqui system was so efficient that the Sapa Inca in Cusco could eat fresh fish from the Pacific (300+ km away) brought by chasqui relays in less than 24 hours.

The Construction of the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu

Now let’s enter the specific history of the route you’ll walk.

Why Was It Built?

Machu Picchu wasn’t a common city. It was Pachacútec’s royal estate (llaqta), a combination of:

Function

Description

Retreat palace

Sapa Inca’s rest residence

Ceremonial center

Place for rituals and astronomical observations

Agricultural center

Experimental terraces for crops

Symbol of power

Demonstration of Inca capacity to dominate nature

Sacred place

Connection point between earthly and spiritual world

The Inca Trail was built as the ceremonial access route to this sacred place. It wasn’t simply the most practical road — it was a designed pilgrimage experience.

Intentional Route Design

Inca architects designed the path to create a progressive spiritual experience:

Stage

Experience

Purpose

Start (Valley)

Leave daily world behind

Transition

Climb to Warmiwañusca

Extreme effort, “symbolic death”

Purification

Descent and ascent

Pass through minor ceremonial sites

Spiritual preparation

Cloud forest

Mystical environment, mist, nature

Liminality

Intipunku (Sun Gate)

First view of Machu Picchu

Revelation

Arrival

Entry to sacred precinct

Rebirth

Warmiwañusca pass (4,215 m) has a name meaning “Dead Woman” or “Dead Woman’s Pass.” Some historians believe it represented symbolic death of the pilgrim before being “reborn” at Machu Picchu.

 

How Was It Built?

Labor:

Aspect

Detail

Work system

Mit’a (obligatory rotating work for state)

Workers

Thousands of men from different empire regions

Specialists

Elite architects, engineers, stonemasons

Estimated duration

10-20 years for road and Machu Picchu

Specific techniques on this route:

Section

Technique

Day 2 steps

Carved directly into bedrock

Tunnel near Phuyupatamarca

Drilled through mountain

Intipata terraces

Retaining walls 6+ meters

Road over precipices

Path carved in vertical walls

Bridges (original)

Braided ichu (Andean grass) fibers

 

The Archaeological Sites of the Route

The Inca Trail doesn’t just connect points — the sites along it are integral to the experience.

 

Llactapata (Km 6)

Aspect

Detail

Name means

“Town on the height”

Function

Agricultural and administrative center

Features

Terraces, warehouses, residential structures

Alignment

Direct view to Machu Picchu (possible astronomical connection)

Runkurakay (Km 20)

Aspect

Detail

Name means

“Egg-shaped house” or “House in ruins”

Function

Tambo (rest station) and watchtower

Features

Unusual circular structure, panoramic view

Location

3,760 m, strategic control point

Sayacmarca (Km 22)

Aspect

Detail

Name means

“Inaccessible town” or “Dominant town”

Function

Ceremonial and residential center

Features

Built on precipice, steep access stairway

Particularity

Only accessible by narrow stairs — highly defensive

Phuyupatamarca (Km 28)

Aspect

Detail

Name means

“Town above the clouds”

Function

Ceremonial center emphasizing water cult

Features

6 ceremonial baths/fountains, terraces

Location

3,600 m, frequently above cloud line

View

Spectacular panorama of valley and snow peaks

Intipata (Km 30)

Aspect

Detail

Name means

“Place of the Sun” or “Terraces of the Sun”

Function

Extensive agricultural center

Features

More than 100 agricultural terraces

Theory

Possible food production area for Machu Picchu

Wiñay Wayna (Km 37)

Aspect

Detail

Name means

“Forever young” (name of local orchid)

Function

Important ceremonial and agricultural center

Features

Spectacular terraces, fountains, residential structures

Size

Largest site before Machu Picchu

Theory

Possible final preparation place before entering Machu Picchu

Intipunku – The Sun Gate (Km 43)

Aspect

Detail

Name means

“Sun Gate”

Function

Ceremonial entrance to Machu Picchu

Features

Control structure with trapezoidal windows

Solar alignment

Winter solstice sun (June 21) enters through windows

Experience

First view of Machu Picchu for pilgrims

 

Who Walked the Inca Trail?

The Inca Trail to Machu Picchu wasn’t for everyone. It was a restricted route for specific people.

 

The Privileged Who Used This Route

Group

Purpose

The Sapa Inca

Trips to his royal estate, ceremonies

Royal family

Accompanied Inca or visited independently

Elite priests

Rituals at Machu Picchu and route sites

Nobles and administrators

By Inca’s invitation

The Acllas (Virgins of the Sun)

Women dedicated to solar cult, lived at Machu Picchu

Chasquis

Messengers carrying official communications

Specialized workers

During construction and maintenance

Common people of the empire probably never set foot on this path. It was a sacred route reserved for the elite.

 

What Traveling Was Like in Inca Times

Aspect

Inca Reality

Speed

20-30 km per day walking

Accommodation

Tambos (stations) every 15-25 km

Food

Provided by state at tambos

Security

Extremely high — crime almost nonexistent on imperial roads

Personal load

Carried by porters or llamas

The Sapa Inca

Traveled in litter carried by special porters

Ceremonies on the Route

The journey wasn’t just transportation — each site had specific rituals:

Site

Probable Ceremony

Warmiwañusca

Offerings to apus (mountain spirits)

Runkurakay

Vigilance and protection rituals

Phuyupatamarca

Ritual purification in water fountains

Wiñay Wayna

Final preparation, possible fasting

Intipunku

Ritual entry at solstice sunrise

The Fall of the Empire and Abandonment

Everything changed in 1532.

The Arrival of the Spanish

Date

Event

1532

Francisco Pizarro arrives with ~180 men

November 1532

Capture of Atahualpa in Cajamarca

1533

Execution of Atahualpa, collapse of imperial structure

1533-1536

Conquest of Cusco and initial resistance

1536-1572

Inca resistance from Vilcabamba

1572

Fall of Vilcabamba, end of organized resistance

What Happened to Machu Picchu and the Inca Trail?

The amazing part: The Spanish never found Machu Picchu.

Theory

Explanation

Early abandonment

Machu Picchu may have been abandoned even before conquest, during Inca civil war (1527-1532)

Kept secret

Local inhabitants knew of its existence but didn’t reveal to Spanish

Remote location

Far from main routes, difficult to find without guide

Lack of visible gold

Spanish sought gold; Machu Picchu didn’t have it in superficial abundance

The Inca Trail was progressively abandoned as:

  • Inca population collapsed (European diseases killed 90% in some regions)
  • The tambo system stopped functioning
  • New colonial routes replaced Inca ones
  • The jungle reclaimed the path

400 Years of Oblivion

Between ~1550 and 1911, the Inca Trail and Machu Picchu existed in historical limbo:

Period

Situation

1550-1800

Known by local Quechua settlers, ignored by colonizers

1800-1900

Some mentions in local records, but no formal exploration

1860s-1870s

Explorers like Antonio Raimondi and Charles Wiener mention rumors of lost cities

1902

Local farmer Agustín Lizárraga carves his name at Machu Picchu

1911

Hiram Bingham “discovers” Machu Picchu for Western world

The Modern Rediscovery

The story of Machu Picchu’s “discovery” is fascinating and controversial.

Hiram Bingham III: The “Discoverer”

Fact

Detail

Who he was

American historian and explorer from Yale

Date

July 24, 1911

Original purpose

Was searching for Vilcabamba, last Inca capital

How he arrived

Guided by local peasant Melchor Arteaga

First contact

Quechua families living among ruins

What he found

Machu Picchu covered with vegetation but structurally intact

Did He Really “Discover” Machu Picchu?

The controversy:

Argument

Detail

For Bingham

Was first to document it scientifically and make it known to world

Against

Local inhabitants always knew of its existence

Evidence

Agustín Lizárraga had written his name on ruins in 1902, 9 years before

Other visits

Records of previous undocumented visits

Current perspective: Bingham didn’t “discover” Machu Picchu — he revealed it to the Western academic world. Discovery credit belongs to local settlers who knew of it all along.

Bingham’s Expeditions

Expedition

Year

Achievements

First

1911

Initial documentation of Machu Picchu

Second

1912

Extensive clearing, detailed photography, excavations

Third

1914-1915

Exploration of Inca Trail, route mapping

Bingham also “discovered” the Inca Trail during these expeditions, following the route from Ollantaytambo and documenting archaeological sites along the way.

The Artifacts Controversy

Fact

Detail

Artifacts removed

Bingham sent ~46,000 pieces to Yale University

Original agreement

18-month loan for study

Reality

Yale kept pieces for almost 100 years

Return

Between 2011-2012, Yale returned most to Peru

Current location

Machu Picchu Museum – Casa Concha, Cusco

History of Tourism on the Inca Trail

The Inca Trail wasn’t always a tourist attraction.

Tourism Timeline

Decade

Development

1910s-1940s

Only explorers and academics

1950s

First adventurous tourists, no infrastructure

1960s

Backpacker interest begins, informal route

1970s

Growth of South American “Gringo Trail”

1980s

First agencies organize treks, still unregulated

1990s

Mass tourism begins, degradation problems

2001

Implementation of 500 people/day limit

2010s

Stricter regulations, sustainability focus

2020

Closure due to COVID-19 pandemic

2021-present

Reopening with protocols, conscious tourism

The Problem of the 90s

Before regulations:

Problem

Impact

No visitor limit

Days with 2,000+ people on route

No agency regulation

Anyone could operate

Exploited porters

Loads of 40+ kg, miserable wages, no protection

Environmental damage

Trash, erosion, damage to ruins

Trail degradation

Sections damaged by excess traffic

The 2001 Reforms

The Peruvian government implemented radical changes:

Reform

Detail

500/day limit

Includes tourists + staff

Only authorized agencies

Registration and license mandatory

Nominative permits

Each person identified by passport

Porter regulation

Weight limit (25 kg), minimum wage

February closure

Mandatory annual maintenance

Certified guides

Mandatory licensed guide

Evolution of Porter Protection

Year

Improvement

2001

First weight limit (25 kg)

2003

Porter Law (Law 27607)

2005

Mandatory weight inspections

2010s

Stronger porter unions

2015+

Ethical agencies implement superior standards

Today

Porter Promise and similar certifications

International Recognition

Year

Recognition

1983

Machu Picchu: UNESCO World Heritage Site

1983

Machu Picchu Historical Sanctuary: UNESCO Natural Heritage

2007

Machu Picchu: New Wonder of the World

2014

Qhapaq Ñan (Inca road network): UNESCO World Heritage Site

Mysteries We Still Haven’t Solved

Despite more than 100 years of study, questions remain without definitive answers.

Why Was Machu Picchu Abandoned?

Theory

Argument

Smallpox

Epidemic may have killed inhabitants before conquest

Civil war

Abandoned during Huáscar-Atahualpa conflict (1527-1532)

Death of Pachacútec

Without its creator, estate lost importance

Strategic secret

Deliberately abandoned to protect from Spanish

System collapse

Without Inca state, no resources to maintain it

There’s no consensus. It was probably a combination of factors.

What Was Machu Picchu’s Real Function?

Theory

Proponent

Evidence

Pachacútec’s royal estate

Current dominant theory

Colonial documents, elite architecture

Astronomical center

Dearborn, White

Precise solar alignments

Last Inca refuge

Bingham (original)

Discarded — not Vilcabamba

University/learning center

Popular theories

No strong evidence

Ceremonial center

Multiple

Temples, Intihuatana, ritual fountains

Probable answer: It was all that — a royal estate that also served ceremonial, astronomical and administrative functions.

How Did They Transport the Stones?

Machu Picchu has stones of more than 50 tons perfectly placed.

Theory

Method

Ramps and levers

Similar to Egyptian construction

Wooden rollers

Logs to slide

Organized brute force

Thousands of coordinated workers

Local stones

Many stones from same mountain

The Incas had no wheel or heavy pack animals. The answer is a combination of brilliant engineering, massive organization and exploitation of local terrain.

What Do the Astronomical Alignments Mean?

The Intihuatana and other Machu Picchu elements have precise solar alignments:

Alignment

Event

Intipunku

Winter solstice sun (June 21)

Intihuatana

Equinoxes (March 21, September 23)

Temple of the Sun

Winter solstice, light enters through specific window

Window of Three Windows

Possible alignment with Pleiades

The Incas were sophisticated astronomers who used these alignments for agricultural and ceremonial calendars. But the complete meaning of all alignments continues to be studied.

The Inca Trail Today

500 years after its construction, the Inca Trail is still alive.

Conservation Status

Aspect

State

Original trail

60-70% preserved in original form

Restored sections

20-30% rebuilt with traditional techniques

Archaeological sites

Well preserved, ongoing restoration

Maintenance

Annual February closure, permanent teams

Conservation Challenges

Challenge

Response

Footstep erosion

Visitor limit, alternative paths in fragile sections

Rain and landslides

Retaining walls, improved drainage

Invasive vegetation

Constant clearing

Climate change

Monitoring, practice adaptation

Tourism

Strict regulations, visitor education

The Future of the Inca Trail

Initiative

Objective

Sustainable tourism

Balance access with conservation

Monitoring technology

Drones, sensors to detect damage

Community participation

Local communities as guardians

Ongoing research

New discoveries, better understanding

Education

That every visitor understands the value of what they walk on

Your Role in This History

When you walk the Inca Trail, you join a 500-year history.

Who Have Walked Before You

Era

Who

1450-1550

Pachacútec, his family, priests, nobles, acllas

1550-1900

Quechua peasants, occasional explorers

1911-1950

Bingham, academics, first adventurers

1950-2000

Backpackers, first organized tourists

2001-today

More than 1 million people from around the world

Now you’ll be part of that list.

Your Responsibility

When walking the Inca Trail, you have responsibilities:

Responsibility

How to Fulfill It

Preserve the trail

Don’t leave path, don’t damage structures

Respect history

Understand what you walk on, not just walk

Support communities

Choose ethical agencies with porters

Take only memories

Don’t take stones, plants, artifacts

Leave only footprints

Don’t leave trash, use designated bathrooms

Share the story

Tell others about cultural importance

Walk the History

Every stone of the Inca Trail has a story. Every step was placed by hands that built an empire. Every archaeological site was the scene of ceremonies connecting the Incas with the cosmos.

When you walk the Inca Trail, you’re not doing tourism. You’re participating in a 500-year history.

Are you ready to be part of it?

Your Next Steps

We can help you find alternative Inca Trail dates.

📧 Email: info@inca-trail.pe

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