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que se encontro jero en el palacio que estaba saqueando

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The return to Peru of the bones of 177 individuals, who were removed a century ago from the Inca city of Machu Picchu, has marked another important milestone in the repatriation of Peruvian antiquities.

The country is the cradle of many ancient civilizations. The best known is that of the Incas, who ruled the territory that is today Peru for centuries until the arrival of the Spanish colonizers in the 16th century.

The ruins of its monumental temples and palaces can still be seen in its capital, Cusco.

In fact, more than a million visitors come each year to admire the ancient city of Machu Picchu, located near Cusco, on top of a mountain in the Andes.

It is the most important tourist destination in Peru, but the 46,332 pieces that were excavated there between 1911 and 1915 were never exhibited in the country until recently.

Yale University in the United States, which housed them for a century, is slowly returning them. In addition to the bones, another batch composed mostly of ceramics has already returned to Peru.

"I never thought I would be able to see the pieces return," says Blanca Alba, who is in charge of repatriations at the Peruvian Ministry of Culture. Her eyes still fill with tears as she remembers the arrival of the pottery in March.

"There were people waiting at the airport. They started singing the hymn. And I was crying because I was very excited."

Some of the ceramics are now on display in Cusco on a temporary site, and the Peruvian government is building a new museum to house the Yale pieces, when the return of them is completed at the end of next year.

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oscarsanchez4635: amigo no entiendo ingles lo puedes traducir porfavor
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