A. Sutherland – MessageToEagle.com – Illapa (aka Apu Illapu, Ilyap’a, Katoylla) is considered by many as one of the most important deities in the Inca pantheon.
He had a number of overlapping identities located in several different places. One of his powerful identities we have described earlier here.
Illapa, venerated in areas of the central highlands of Peru and northern Chile, had the power to make rain, hail, and thunder; he also mastered clouds.
His activities were crucial because the sky was the source of both sun and rain for sustaining crops, according to the Inca beliefs.
They prayed to Illapa for rain and protection from drought.
His figure was worshiped at Coricancha (Qorikancha), where Illapa had his own temple the religious complex in the Inca capital at Cuzco, which contained the Temple of the Sun, the most sacred place in the Inca religion and the very center of the Inca world.
Illapa’s was (temple) contained his cult statue and religious objects associated with him. He was depicted with his face covered by a headdress to symbolize the veiling of the thunder by the clouds
During the late sixteenth century the Spanish compared his figure to that of the apostle James, whose horse galloped across the heavens producing the sound of thunder.
According to a myth, Illapa filled a jug of water from the Milky Way and gave it to his sister to care for. It rained only when Illapa broke his sister’s water jug, causing the rain to fall.
The Quechua people in the Peruvian Andes associated Illapa with the Saint James, the patron of Spain. They celebrated both god Illapa and Saint James on July 25. The flashing swords and the explosions from the Spanish soldiers’ muskets reminded the Inca of lightning followed by a clap of thunder.
Sacsayhuaman, a true wonder of prehistoric South America, is constructed of flawlessly fitting cyclopean boulders, which zigzag across the plateau for approximately 400 meters.
It is believed that Sacsayhuaman was created during the time of Pachacutec or Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui (in Quechua: Pachakutiq means “he who overturns space and time” and Yupanki means “with honor”) , who made it to the ceremonial center in honor of the great god Illiapa (god of thunder), which helped him in his struggles.
Therefore, it is said that some walls of Sacsayhuaman are shaped like thunder (zigzag).
Written by – A. Sutherland – MessageToEagle.com Senior Staff Writer
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Expand for referencesReferences:
John E. Staller,Brian Stross, Lightning in the Andes and Mesoamerica