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==History== [[File:Nazca Stadt.jpg|thumb|The city of Nazca]] There are two versions of the Spanish foundation. According to the writings of chroniclers, the city was founded on October 28, 1548, commissioned by [[Pedro de la Gasca]], peacemaker by [[Alonso de Mendoza]]. The other version states that it was founded in 1591 by the Viceroy [[García Hurtado de Mendoza, 5th Marquis of Cañete]]. During the Spanish colonial period, Nazca was known for viticulture, producing wine and grape brandy (aguardiente de la uva). Today this is commonly called [[pisco]], after the famous port of the same name. Locally, the brandy is known as Nasca. These products were widely distributed throughout the viceroyalty of Peru and beyond.<ref name="cushner">Cushner, Nicholas P. 1980. ''Lords of the Land: Sugar, Wine, and Jesuit Estates of Coastal Peru, 1600-1767.'' Albany: State University of New York Press.</ref>{{page needed|date=July 2020}} The largest of the Nazca vineyards were located in the rich Ingenio Valley, and were property of the [[Society of Jesus]], Jesuit missionaries and priests.<ref>Macera, Pablo. 1966. ''Instrucciones para el manejo de las haciendas jesuítas del Perú, ss. XVII-XVIII.'' Lima: Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos: Facultad de Letras y Ciencias Humanas, Departamento de Historia.</ref> The [[hacienda]] San Joseph de la Nasca, located in the upper part of the middle Ingenio Valley, was owned by the Jesuit College of Cuzco. San Francisco Xavier de la Nasca, in the lower part of the middle valley, was owned by the Jesuit College of San Pablo in Lima. Both of these estates used numerous workers who were enslaved persons of sub-Saharan African descent. In addition to producing wines and brandies, both estates had substantial infrastructure for producing the ceramic storage jars, known as ''botijas,'' in which the wine and brandy was transported.<ref>Negro, Sandra. 2005. "Arquitectura, poder y esclavitud en las haciendas jesuitas de la Nasca en el Perú", In ''Esclavitud, economía y evangelización: Las haciendas jesuitas en la América Virreinal.'' S. Negro and M.M. Marzal, eds. Pp. 449-492. Lima: Fondo Editorial de la Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú.</ref> Today, the towns of San Javier and San José are known for the ruins of the large 18th-century baroque churches built during the Jesuit administration of these estates. In 1767, following the expulsion of the Society of Jesus by King [[Charles III of Spain]], the Crown confiscated and administered these properties as royal estates.<ref name="cushner"/>{{page needed|date=July 2020}} [[File:Nazca city square.jpg|alt=Nazca city square|thumb|Nazca city square]] Nazca Patriots received the Liberating Expedition of General [[Don Jose de San Martin]] on October 14, 1820, after they escaped from the Battle of Nasca. Two days earlier, on October 12, General [[Juan Antonio Álvarez de Arenales]], from Ica, was sent to the South in pursuit of the royal troops of Colonel Manuel Quimper fleeing from Ica. The second commander and chief of staff of the Division de la Sierra, was Argentine Lieutenant Colonel Manuel Rojas Argerich. He commanded 250 men: 110 infantry and 140 cavalry. The town of Nasca was established on August 29, 1821. On July 2, 1855, it was elevated to a district and then it became a province on January 23, 1941. Nasca, as the name is spelled in the 21st century, still has a dry climate. Before and during the time of the Inca, it had a formidable system of hydraulic engineering. The water was accessed through filtration galleries from underground branches, called aqueducts. The openings to the system were called [[puquios]]. More than three dozen continue to operate, to irrigate farmland and provide domestic needs.
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