Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
National Geographic Traveller (UK)

Peru

f0124-01.jpg

The magnificent Machu Picchu ruins were made famous when rediscovered by explorer Hiram Bingham in 1911

IMAGE: AWL IMAGES

A trip across Peru feels like passing through multiple countries and cultures merged into one. The topography is as diverse as it is dramatic; in just a few days, you can pass from the desert of the coastal lowlands to the saw-toothed, glacial peaks of the Andes Mountains and onwards to reach the emerald enclave of the world’s largest tropical rainforest. En route are thousands of 16th-century towns, Indigenous communities and archaeological sites, relics of ancient civilisations that have managed to capture the collective imagination like few others around the world.

Chief among those civilisations is the Inca, a superpower that ruled in the 15th century from modern-day Ecuador in the north, down to the Chilean capital of Santiago. Itineraries for first-time visitors focus on the heart of their empire, the Andean highlands of southern Peru. Tack on an extra week and you can discover the other big-hitting wonders of the country’s south, including Lake Titicaca, Arequipa city and the Nasca Lines. It’s a journey from mountains to dusty lowland

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from National Geographic Traveller (UK)

National Geographic Traveller (UK)6 min read
Transylvania
Transylvania’s name derives from a Latin term meaning ‘beyond the forest’, but it’s the destination’s gothic links most people have a hard time looking past. Over 125 years after Bram Stoker’s Dracula was first published, this region in central Roman
National Geographic Traveller (UK)2 min read
A Seven-day Trip To Montenegro For Four
Part of the Oliver’s Travels collection, which features luxury holiday villas around the world, Hilltop Retreat is a beautifully restored, 400-year-old stone property overlooking the Bay of Kotor in Montenegero’s south west. There are five en suite b
National Geographic Traveller (UK)2 min read
Editor’s Letter
Many think they know Australia — sometimes before they’ve even been. But once you’ve seen Sydney and its sights, the Great Barrier Reef, Uluru and the wine regions, you’ve only really just started. Maybe you know Melbourne, Perth and the Red Centre?

Related