Coracora

{{More citations needed|date=January 2021}}

{{Infobox settlement

| img =

uña del pulgar

| official_name = Coracora

| other_name =

| native_name = Qura Qura

| nickname = Coracora Tierra de Tradiciónes

| motto =

| image_skyline = Ciudad de Cora Cora.jpg

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| pushpin_map = Peru

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| subdivision_type = Country

| subdivision_name = {{PER}}

| subdivision_type1 = Region

| subdivision_name1 = Ayacucho

| subdivision_type2 = Province

| subdivision_name2 = Parinacochas

| subdivision_type3 = District

| subdivision_name3 = Coracora

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| government_type =

| leader_title = Mayor

| leader_name = Alfredo Lopez Gutierrez

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| timezone = PET

| utc_offset = -5

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| coordinates = {{coord|15|01|01.18|S|73|46|49.51|W|region:PE|display=inline}}

| elevation_footnotes =

| elevation_m = 3175

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Coracora or Qura Qura is a town in central Peru, and it is the capital of the Parinacochas Province in the Ayacucho Region.{{in lang|es}} Instituto Nacional de Estadística e Informática. [http://desa.inei.gob.pe/mapas/bid/ Banco de Información Digital] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080423164200/http://desa.inei.gob.pe/mapas/bid/ |date=April 23, 2008 }}, Retrieved June 10, 2008 It has a population of approximately 13,000.{{Cite web|date=October 2018|title=INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE ESTADÍSTICA E INFORMÁTICA: AYACUCHO|url=https://www.inei.gob.pe/media/MenuRecursivo/publicaciones_digitales/Est/Lib1568/05TOMO_01.pdf|url-status=live|access-date=23 November 2021|website=Instituto Nacional de Estadistica e Informatica de Peru|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191116202302/https://www.inei.gob.pe/media/MenuRecursivo/publicaciones_digitales/Est/Lib1568/05TOMO_01.pdf |archive-date=2019-11-16 }}

Etymology

Coracora or Qura Qura comes from the Quechuan qura meaning herbaceous plant,Teofilo Laime Ajacopa, Diccionario Bilingüe Iskay simipi yuyayk'ancha, La Paz, 2007 (Quechua-Spanish dictionary) the reduplication of the syllable indicates that there is a group or a complex of something, "a complex of herbaceous plants".

Geography

Coracora is located 800 km from Lima, Peru at an altitude between 3,150 and 3,350 meters above sea level, known as the Quechua ecological region.{{Cite web|title=Coracora en la region de Ayacucho - Municipio y municipalidad de Perú|url=https://www.distrito.pe/distrito-coracora.html|access-date=2021-11-24|website=www.distrito.pe}} The city of Coracora is the capital of the Parinacochas Province. It forms part of the department of Ayacucho and is located in the southwestern region of Peru. The districts that form the Parinacochas Province are: Coracora, Upahuacho, Pacapauza, Rivacayco, Chumpi, Incuyo, Pullo and Anizo.

= Climate =

The winter season between June and September has frequent frosts, and the temperate and very rainy summer falls between December and March.

{{Weather box|width=auto

|metric first=y

|single line=y

|collapsed = Y

|location = Coracora, elevation {{convert|3149|m|ft|abbr=on}}, (1991–2020)

|Jan high C = 18.2

|Feb high C = 17.6

|Mar high C = 17.6

|Apr high C = 18.6

|May high C = 18.9

|Jun high C = 18.9

|Jul high C = 18.7

|Aug high C = 19.3

|Sep high C = 19.9

|Oct high C = 20.0

|Nov high C = 19.8

|Dec high C = 19.3

|year high C =

|Jan low C = 7.0

|Feb low C = 7.2

|Mar low C = 6.9

|Apr low C = 5.9

|May low C = 4.4

|Jun low C = 4.0

|Jul low C = 3.7

|Aug low C = 4.3

|Sep low C = 5.0

|Oct low C = 5.4

|Nov low C = 5.5

|Dec low C = 6.5

|year low C =

|precipitation colour = green

|Jan precipitation mm = 111.5

|Feb precipitation mm = 136.6

|Mar precipitation mm = 94.4

|Apr precipitation mm = 24.3

|May precipitation mm = 1.4

|Jun precipitation mm = 0.4

|Jul precipitation mm = 2.0

|Aug precipitation mm = 2.0

|Sep precipitation mm = 3.4

|Oct precipitation mm = 5.0

|Nov precipitation mm = 6.6

|Dec precipitation mm = 28.7

|year precipitation mm =

|source 1 = National Meteorology and Hydrology Service of Peru{{cite web

| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230821192714/https://www.senamhi.gob.pe/?p=normales-estaciones

| archive-date = 21 August 2023

| url = https://www.senamhi.gob.pe/?p=normales-estaciones

| title = Normales Climaticás Estándares y Medias 1991-2020

| publisher=National Meteorology and Hydrology Service of Peru

| access-date = 6 November 2023}}

}}

History

{{Unreferenced section|date=January 2023}}

Founded by Spanish conquerors in the 17th century, Coracora developed on what was then the road between Lima and Cusco. Its old colonial buildings, such as the beautiful local church in the Baroque and styles were built of white ashlar.

During the 19th and 20th centuries Coracora became a flourishing Peruvian south mountain city thanks to cattle ranching.

Around the 1940s, Coracora reached an uncommon cultural and economic peak for a small city in mountainous Peru. This prosperity began to fluctuate in the 1980s due to the social violence of those years in Peru.

As of modern times, it has recovered its character as a ranching, commercial and tourist center, with significant improvements to roads, infrastructure, and services.

Festivities

{{Unreferenced section|date=January 2023}}

From August 1 to August 8, Coracora celebrates La Virgen de Las Nieves, known as "Virgin of the Snow".

August 1: People prepare for the festivities and cook food for the entire family.

August 2: People walk to Pumahuiri (the mountain where the Virgin of the Snow was found). They sing and dance as they walk. The songs are usually prayers.

August 3: It is the "Entrada de Negritos" (Entrance of the Blacks). Children walk into town singing and dancing and people follow them as they did on their way to Pumahuiri.

August 4: "Entrada de Chamiza" (Entrance of retama). They plants are brought in on donkeys and llamas. At night, people burn the dry plant and dance around the fires to the rhythm of live music that plays all night. The same night, they have Los Castillos, or fireworks on wood, in the main plaza, Plaza de Armas. They also have serenades with people dancing and singing.

August 5: It is the main day of the festivities. The townspeople walk around the main plaza where the church is located.

August 6 to August 8: The city goes to the bullring. Each family pays for its own place. Every square foot is worth $200.00.{{citation needed|date=April 2022}} People buy bulls in honor of Our Lady of the Snows and the offering estimates the person (compadres). It is somewhat like a donation. If the bull does not die, the person who bought it and the person receiving it enter the bullring. People dressed in red lead a team of bulls.

Each year, a person must sign up to be in charge of the town festival on August 5.

Virgen de Las Nieves

Spaniards were bringing a statue of the Virgin from Lima to Cuzco, but along the way, they stopped at Pumawiri.{{Cite journal|last=Garcia Rivas|first=Alida Jesus|date=2019|title=Impacto del turismo en el patrimonio inmaterial religioso. Caso "Festividad de las Virgen de las Nieves de Coracora - Ayacucho - 2017"|url=https://repositorio.usmp.edu.pe/handle/20.500.12727/4955|journal=Universidad de San Martín de Porres }} Pumahuiri was a long and very tiring mountain, so they stopped and rested. But one man dreamed of the Virgin of the Snow, who told him she wanted to stay in Coracora, not go to Cuzco.{{Cite book|last=Martínez Parra|first=Reynaldo|title=Tradición y leyenda de la Virgen de las Nieves: (patrona de Coracora)|trans-title=Tradition and Legend of the Virgin of the Snows: (patron saint of Coracora) | publisher=University of Texas|year=1999|location=Texas}} That town was Coracora. When the man awoke, he told his fellows about his dream. They believed what he had dreamed, so they went down the mountain and took the Virgin to Coracora.

Notable people

References

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