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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2010) This article includes a list of references, related reading or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please improve this article by introducing more precise citations where appropriate. (December 2010) This article may require copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone, or spelling. You can assist by editing it. (December 2010) Rumi Maki is the reconstruction of the ways to fight the Inca people. In the modern version of Rumi Maki are ten basic levels are taught attacks fist, elbows, head butts, knocks, open hand, leg attacks, blocking, neutralizing, attacking from different heights, and weapons (sling, spear , bow and arrow, clubs, axes, etc). In the five upper levels is taught the philosophy of Inca, Andean cosmogony, festivals and spiritual aspects of the rituals and ceremonies of the Andes. In the Peruvian tradition, "Rumi Maki" means "Hand of Stone." Before the Inca era in Peru, there was a series of Andean cultures (ie, Tiahuanaco, Mochica, Chimu), who developed their own forms of combat and where each one contributed his knowledge to build the technique of Rumi Maki. Myth, religion and ritual contributed to the belief system of pre-Inca Peruvians, such as tests of physical and mental endurance to prove his status as a warrior in the tribe (in the entry at the age of adult), showing their resilience to continue their training in combative arts. The combative nature of Rumi Maki usually only seen in practice during the festivities in the Andean countries (Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru) and almost exclusively as a cultural element. However, their practice outside of cultural activities has been recently revived in the 1960s by the research of Juan Ramon Rodriguez Flores from Lima, Peru, the training method that can be found today is derived from this research and modern education, which is spread by Auka Wasi (House of the Warrior) and non-profit organization dedicated to the rescue of martial practices of the peoples of the Andes and the Amazon. External links RUMI MAKI - The Book (in English) AUKA WASI - The Warrior House - La Casa del Guerrero (in Spanish) Bibliography Juan Ramón Rodríguez Flores y Alex Bushman Vega (2007), Rumi Maki Fighting Arts - Martial Techniques of the Peruvian Inca, (Paperback, 152 páginas), Random House, Inc., ISBN: 978-1-58394-180-5 (1-58394-180-0)