Llawt'u
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/02/Cabeza_inca_con_llautu_y_mascaipacha_%28M._Am%C3%A9rica%2C_Madrid%29_01.jpg/220px-Cabeza_inca_con_llautu_y_mascaipacha_%28M._Am%C3%A9rica%2C_Madrid%29_01.jpg)
The llawt'u or llawthu (Quechua,[1][2] Hispanicized spellings llauto, llautu) was an outfit of the ruling Sapa Incas. It was a variety of turban with the colours of the Tahuantinsuyo. The llawt'u was traditionally woven from vicuña wool with different-colored plaits. On the front was a stripe of wool called the maskapaycha. The symbol of the quriqinqi was displayed on the front. It has been said[by whom?] that small dried frogs were worn under the garment as part of a tradition whose origins have been long lost.
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