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Legacy of the Incas

Machu Picchu - Lake Titicaca
(11 days/10 nights)

 

Sacred Sites of the Incas

Sacred Sites of the Incas

Machu Picchu - Lake Titicaca
(12 days/11 nights)

 

Ecuador Tours

Empire of the Sun

Machu Picchu - Lake Titicaca
(14 days/13 nights)

 

Ecuador Tours

Ancient Civilizations of Peru

Colca Canyon - Machu Picchu
Lake Titicaca

(16 days/15 nights)

 

Ecuador Tours

Archaeological & Ecological
Treasures

Galapagos - Machu Picchu
Lake Titicaca (or Amazon)
(18 days/17 nights)

 

Ecuador Tours

Grand Tour of the Inca Empire

Colca Canyon - Amazon
Machu Picchu - Lake Titicaca

(22 days/21 nights)

 

Ecuador Tours

Ancient & Colonial Capitals

Machu Picchu
(10 days/9 nights)

 

Ecuador Tours

Inca Trail to Machu Picchu

Machu Picchu
(13 days/12 nights)

 

Machu Picchu Tours and Galapagos Cruises

Machu Picchu & Galapagos

Machu Picchu - Galapagos
(15 days/14 nights)

 

Galapagos & Machu Picchu

Galapagos - Machu Picchu
(18 days/17 nights)

 

Galapagos Cruises

 

Ecuador Tours

Enchanted Isles of the Galapagos

Galapagos
(11 days/10 nights)

 

Ecuador Tours

Galapagos & the Kingdom of Quito

Galapagos - Andes
(16 days/15 nights)

 

Galapagos & the Amazon

Galapagos & the Amazon

Galapagos - Amazon
(16 days/15 nights)

 

Ecuador Tours

 

Ecuador Hacienda Tours

Historic Haciendas of the Andes

Cotopaxi - Antisana - Otavalo
(7 days/6 nights)

 

© 2012 Inka's Empire Corporation.
All rights reserved.

 

Ecuador Tours

Ecuador Tours

Ecuador Tours

 

Ecuador Tours

The 1535 La Iglesia de San Francisco, Quito, Ecuador.
Photo: David Bate.

 

Imagine you've gone back in time to the astonishing colonial world...

 

Land Price (2 days/1 nights)

Imperial US$ 730 per person

The land price includes escorted transfers, private excursions with a professional guide and chauffeur, entrance fees, selected category of accommodations, gourmet cuisine (see details), all transportation, and travel insurance for guests through the age of 59 years (over that age, there is a supplementary fee). All prices are per person based on two people sharing a guest room. For a detailed description of our services, see Opulent Itineraries.

Galapagos CruisesEcuador ToursWhat You Could Add in Ecuador

 

Walk along the cobblestone streets of Ecuador's capital, founded in 1534, through centuries-old parks and plazas to churches filled with gold. Contemplate Gothic, baroque, Moorish and neo-classical art, all blended with the mestizo sentiment, and imagine you've gone back in time to the astonishing colonial world. In the evening, take a horse-drawn carriage past the beautifully illuminated facades of the Spanish monuments, and savor vanguard Mediterranean cuisine at Theatrum.

 

Highlights

Quito

Day 1: Quito. This morning, drive to the top of El Panecillo. Its summit overlooks Old Quito. Begin your walking tour of the colonial quarter, highlighted by La Plaza de la Independencia, the Cathedral, La Compañia de Jesús, La Iglesia de San Francisco and La Iglesia y Convento de la Merced. At the City Museum, see what daily life was like in colonial Quito.

Lunch at El Crater, inside the crater of the Pululahua Volcano. Our afternoon destination is Rumicucho, a late 15th century Inca fortress, observatory and temple of the sun. It was built near the equator, which the Incas called Intiñan (Path of the Sun). Before returning to Quito, go to the equator, where you can stand with one foot in the southern hemisphere and the other in the northern hemisphere.

As an alternative, you may choose an afternoon excursion to the Central Bank Museum.

This afternoon, a lunch at Café Tianguez. To complete your insight into the country's archaeology, history and cultures; investigate Ecuador's ancient past in the galleries of the Central Bank Museum.

This evening, return to El Panecillo for a panorama of the beautifully illuminated colonial quarter. Though not of colonial vintage, the neo-Gothic La Basílica is the place to see bizarre and fascinating gargoyles. Admire the night view of the Spanish monuments along Calle de las Siete Cruces, on the way to La Plaza de la Independencia, where you will board a horse-drawn carriage for a romantic ride through the narrow streets of Old Quito. Arrive at Theatrum to savor vanguard Mediterranean cuisine. Afterward, return to your hotel. Overnight in the Mansión del Angel -- Superior Room (King Bed).

Your next destination

Day 2: Quito - Your next destination. Continue on a cruise of the Galapagos Islands or an expedition to Ecuador's Amazon Rainforest.

 

Details

 

Colonial Quito with El Panecillo in the distance, Ecuador.
Photo: Dan Heller.

 

Under the diadem of the Incas, Quito assumed a magnificence which it never saw before and has not displayed since. It was the worthy metropolis of a vast empire stretching from the equator to the desert of Atacama, and walled in by the grandest group of mountains in the world. On this lofty site, which amid the Alps would be buried in an avalanche of snow, but within the tropics enjoys an eternal spring, palaces more beautiful than the Alhambra were erected, glittering with the gold and emerald of the Andes. But all this splendor passed away with the sceptre of Atahuallpa...

-- James Orton, Andes and the Amazon, 1870

 

Day 1: Quito

Quito has the best-preserved historic district in South America. It is located on an active volcano, 9,300 feet above sea level in the Andes mountains. The city's origins date back to the first millennium, when the Quitu tribe occupied the area and eventually formed a commercial center. The Quitu were conquered by the Caras tribe, who founded the Kingdom of Quito about 980 AD. In 1462, the Incas conquered that kingdom and created a majestic capital for their northern empire. In 1533, Rumiñahui, an Inca war general, razed the city to prevent the Spaniards from taking it, thereby destroying any traces of the prehispanic metropolis. In 1534, the Spanish conquistadores invaded, and Francisco Pizarro founded San Francisco de Quito. Walking along its cobblestone streets through centuries-old parks and plazas to churches filled with gold, you will imagine you've gone back in time to the astonishing colonial world.

Source: Adapted from www.worldheritagesites.org.

 

 

La Plaza de la Independencia, Quito, Ecuador.
Photo: Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.

 

This morning, drive to the top of El Panecillo. The significance of this hill dates back to Inca times, when it was known as Shungoloma ("hill of the heart") and used as a place to worship the sun. Its summit overlooks Old Quito and is crowned by a winged statue of the Virgin. Begin your walking tour of the colonial quarter at La Plaza de la Independencia, where the country's history was written. On one side is the Cathedral (1640), considered to be the oldest in South America. Down Calle de las Siete Cruces (Street of the Seven Crosses) is La Compañia de Jesús (1605), one of the great baroque masterpieces of the continent. Also in the baroque style is the oldest of South America's colonial churches, La Iglesia de San Francisco (1535). It was constructed over the Inca Palace of Atahualpa and decorated with images of the sun to lure in the native people. The Moorish style of La Iglesia y Convento de la Merced is most likely explained by artists seeking refuge in South America after the expulson of the Moors from Spain. Started in 1538, the church was rebuilt in 1737. At the City Museum, see what daily life was like in colonial Quito.

 

 

El Pucará de Rumicucho
Photo: Erythren.

 

Lunch of Ecuadorian or international cuisine by chef Carlos Alvear at El Crater, inside the Pululahua Volcano. Our afternoon destination is Rumicucho, a late 15th century Inca fortress, observatory and temple of the sun. It was built near the equator, which the Incas called Intiñan (Path of the Sun). Rumicucho was strategically located to allow communication by smoke signals with the ceremonial center of Cochasqui, 9 miles to the east, and with Quito's El Panecillo and the Palace of Atahualpa, 17 miles to the south. Before returning to Quito, go to the equator, where you can stand with one foot in the southern hemisphere and the other in the northern hemisphere. Don't be fooled by the Equatorial Monument, which isn't in the true position.

As an alternative, you may choose an afternoon excursion to the Central Bank Museum.

This afternoon, a lunch of traditional Ecuadorian cuisine by chef Juan José Loaiza at Café Tianguez. To complete your insight into the country's archaeology, history and cultures; investigate Ecuador's ancient past in the pre-Inca, Inca and colonial galleries of the Central Bank Museum. The Incas believed that gold nuggets were the tears of the sun, and one of the galleries, the Golden Court, dazzles the visitor with the gold masks and figurines they fashioned to worship their deity.

 

 

Traditional horse-drawn carriage, Quito, Ecuador.
Photo: Hotel Plaza Grande.

 

This evening, return to El Panecillo for a panorama of the beautifully illuminated colonial quarter. Though not of colonial vintage, the neo-Gothic La Basílica is the place to see bizarre and fascinating gargoyles in the form of giant tortoises, iguanas, anteaters, monkeys, pumas, condors and other Ecuadorian fauna. Admire the night view of the Spanish monuments along Calle de las Siete Cruces, on the way to La Plaza de la Independencia, where you will board a horse-drawn carriage for a romantic ride through the narrow streets of Old Quito. Arrive at Theatrum to savor vanguard Mediterranean cuisine by chef Julio Jose Avendaño Ostolaza. Afterward, return to your hotel. Overnight in the Mansión del Angel.

 

Day 2: Quito - Your next destination

Breakfast. Continue on a cruise of the Galapagos Islands or an expedition to Ecuador's Amazon Rainforest.

 

 

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© 2012 Inka's Empire Corporation, Luxury Peru Tours & Travel. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ecuador Tours