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Native Peruvians consider seeds to bring positive energy, happiness, fertility, good luck, and protection from negative energy. They craft huayruro bracelets for newborns to ensure their safety.
In spirituality, roses carry deep and varied meanings, often tied to their color, form, and cultural context. Here’s a detailed look at the spiritual significance of roses: Love and Compassion: Roses are universally seen as symbols of divine love and compassion. They are often associated with the heart and emotions, representing the ability to love unconditionally.
Butterflies are beautiful and have mystery, symbolism and meaning and are a metaphor that represents spiritual rebirth, transformation, change, hope and life.
– Set does not include chain or necklace.
In Inca belief, the Sun (Inti in Quechua) was the primary deity, seen as the husband of the moon. The Sun held the power to heal, control crops, and provide relief to people.
The Inca spiral signifies unity and the eternal cycle of life, connecting with water and the feminine. Abalone shells help calm emotions and create tranquility.
The Wiphala is the flag of the Andean peoples, originating from the Aymara language. It symbolizes indigenous wisdom, embodying the principles of universal order (Pachakama) and the cosmic mother (Pachamama). Its design features the sun and day above and the moon and night below.
Set doesn’t include chain or necklace.
The Wiphala is the flag of the Andean peoples, originating from the Aymara language. It symbolizes indigenous wisdom, embodying the principles of universal order (Pachakama) and the cosmic mother (Pachamama). Its design features the sun and day above and the moon and night below.
Set doesn’t include chain or necklace.
The Andean cross, known as “chakana” in Quechua, signifies a “ladder to the highest.” It’s a four-sided ladder symbol, bridging the human world with the divine, uniting the lower and higher realms, Earth and the Sun.
The Andean cross, known as “chakana” in Quechua, signifies a “ladder to the highest.” It’s a four-sided ladder symbol, bridging the human world with the divine, uniting the lower and higher realms, Earth and the Sun.
The Lambayeque people of 750 AD were skilled in metallurgy and goldsmithing, creating the “Tumi,” a ceremonial dagger for sacrifices to God Naylamp. It symbolized divine power, hierarchy, prestige, and lineage, exclusively held by the nobility.