The place known as "Pacari[q]tambo" has held special significance in Peru and the whole of the central Andes from the time of the Inkas, through the Colonial and Republican eras, and down to the present-day. For this was the place that the Inkas recognized as their origin site, which was located south of the city of Cuzco. The Inka ancestors were said to have emerged from inside the earth through the central of three caves -- called Tambo T'oco -- at Pacariqtambo. From there, the Inkas moved to the north where they founded the city of Cuzco, capital of their empire.
In the 1980s, the anthropologist Gary Urton, along with his wife, Julia Meyerson, lived in the modern town of Pacariqtambo for two years (1981-82 and 1987-88). While working in the agricultural fields with local farmers, as well as in studying documents held in local archives and those in Cuzco, Urton came to a unique understanding of Pacariqtambo in the 1980s and of what this knowledge implied about the town in earlier times.