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San Blas is today a downtown
neighborhood in the city known as the " Artists'
District", with narrow and writhing streets, most of
them steep. In Incan times it was one of the most
important districts of Qosqo and its name was "T'oqo-kachi"
(T'oqo = hollow; kachi = salt). Like the other districts
it was inhabited by the Quechua nobility. It seems that
the church was erected over an Incan Sanctuary devoted
to cult of the "Illapa" god (Thunder, Lightning and
Thunderbolt). It was possibly opened for the first time
in 1544 by the city's second Bishop Juan Solano.
Although some other versions say that it was after 1559
as consequence of viceroy Andres Hurtado de Mendoza's
order by which "Indians" had to built churches for their
indoctrination in the districts where they lived. Its
structure was simple with a rectangular floor plan and
mud brick walls, but after the earthquakes in 1650 and
1950 it was partially reinforced with stone walls. It
has just one nave and two gates before which there are
big plazas; and a stone bell tower constructed after the
1950 earthquake instead of the original made with mud
bricks.
Inside the church is one of the
greatest jewels of colonial art in the continent: the
Pulpit of Saint Blaise; which is a filigree made in
cedar wood by expert hands managing a gouge. It is not
known with certainty who was the artist or artists that
made it, how long the work lasted, neither any other
details about it. However, the pulpit is over there as a
mute witness of a great Catholic devotion and devoted
work. There are enough proofs to assert that it was made
carved with funds given by art protector Bishop Manuel
Mollinedo y Angulo; therefore, it was by the end of the
XVII century. There are serious discrepancies about the
identity of the performing artist.
Most authors suggest that it was made
by the most famous Quechua woodcarver: Juan Tomas Tuyro
Tupaq, that was contemporary and protected of Mollinedo
y Angulo, who entrusted him the manufacture of several
works. It also could have been work of some other
artists contemporary with Mollinedo such as Martin de
Torres, Diego Martinez de Oviedo who made the monumental
High Altar of the Compaņia de Jesus Church, or the
Franciscan Luis Montes that made the San Francisco
Church's choir. Oral tradition has its version gathered
by Angel Carreņo who in his "Cusquenian Traditions"
manuscript had stated in writing the name Esteban
Orcasitas as the pulpit's author; but, for the 1st.
edition of his book the name was changed by that of Juan
Tomas Tuyrutupa. Tuyrutupa was Quechua and Cusquenian,
but according to that traditional version he was a leper
woodcarver from Huamanga (Ayacucho). The story tells
that once he had in his dreams a revelation of the "Holy
Virgin of the Good Happening" who told him that if he
wanted to get healed from his leprosy he had to look for
her in the small plaza of Arrayanpata in Qosqo City.
After a long journey and many mishaps, one day he found
her painted on a wall after that the roofing of the "Lirpuy-Phaqcha"
chapel fell in. Falling on his knees and weeping he
invoked her, as the Virgin's rosary became rose petals
with which he rubbed hard his whole body remaining thus
completely healed. The piece of wall containing the
painting was cut and moved to the Saint Blaise Church,
then people agreed upon to build an altarpiece and a
pulpit for the Virgin. The grateful Quechua woodcarver
committed himself to make the pulpit without charging
any money for the work estimated in 1400 pesos. The work
took him 4 years of hard labor with wood from an
enormous cedar tree that was cut in the Kusipata square
(present-day Regocijo). But, when finishing his work the
woodcarver failed his oath as he asked the church's
curate for 70 pesos in order to lionize a Cusquenian
half-breed woman. After fastening the Saint Paul statue
over the pulpit's sounding board, he stumbled and fell
off dying soon after. His corpse was buried under the
pulpit but some time later it was taken out and his
skull placed before the feet of the Saint Paul sculpture,
where it is seen today.
As any other normal pulpit, that of
Saint Blaise has a balcony (basin), a thorax (main body),
a sounding board (cupola), and a gallery (entrance). The
Basin is spherical and supported by a bronze structure;
it contains eight human busts representing the
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