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Prehistoric Andean States Wilson Ch.-9 (Part 1) The Chavín & The Moche Chavín Wall
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The Chavín Research by Richard Burger (1992) Physical Environment and Subsistence Settlement Pattern, Demography, & Social Organization – Urabarriu phase (~1000-500 BC ) – Chakinani phase (~500-400 BC ) – Janabarriu phase (~400-200 BC ) Social stratificiation- elite priests, economic, political and religious power over other sites Chiefdom, not state society Architecture: began during Urabarriu phase – U-Shaped temple – Anthropomorphic and zoomorphic stone heads – Subterranean galleries and rooms, & a labyrinthine maze
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The Chavín Political Economy – Gallery of the Offerings Burial of a woman and 40 infant teeth 9 doorways to rectangular rooms Foreign pottery indicate trade (Spondylus shells- Ecuador) – Interpretations Offerings, stored objects for ritual or redistribution? Air ducts, storage functionality Center for ritual and worship Evidence of trade – Shellfish from the Pacific coast, obsidian from Quispisisa in the south, pottery vessels from the Casma Valley. Social Stratification- evident in material culture
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The Chavín Art Style Artisans or craftspeople – Social stratification – Figure 9.12 Zoomorphized man with a stalk of San Pedro The Raimondi stela- depicting the Staff God Principal deity of Old Temple: the Lanzón
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The Chavín Ritual and Leadership – Fusion of coastal and tropical forest elements – Cosmopolitan ideology – Hallucinogenic drugs to transform into mythic creatures Figures depict dripping mucous from the nostrils – Similar to the Yanomamo – Priestly class and pilgrims
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The Chavín The Rise and Collapse of the Chavín Cult – Environmentally caused economic decline – Ideological coping mechanism – Deities appear in the art of the Moche & Wari cultures Migration? See Figure 9.13 – Staff Deity (Bolivia) – Tusked Deity- Lord of Sipán – Chavinoid staff goddess with vagina dentata
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The Moche 1950s emergence of the name for the “Mochica” (Moche Valley) “…best candidate for pristine multiv-alley state formation..of South America” Early Intermediate culture- AD 100-750 – Moche I- shorter spout w/pronounced lip (-AD 400) – Moche II-similar spout, smaller lip (up to AD 400) – Moche III- flaring spout w/o lip (AD 600-750) – Moche IV- taller, straight-sided no lip. Figure 9.14
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The Moche Physical Environment – North Valley- 30,000 hectares of irrigable land – South Valley- 15,000 hectares of irrigable land – Semitropical environment – Fauna: parrots, toucans, pumas, iguanas, & boas. Represented in the iconography of pottery vessels
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The Moche Mode of production – Agriculture- Andean crops began by 1800 B.C. – Coast crops: maize, roots, and tubers, legumes, fruits, cucurbits and chili peppers and cotton. (Plus seafood) Settlement Pattern – Cerro Blanco- primary center’s site (Moche capital Huaca del Sol Huaca de la Luna personalized columns or walls per each community who built it “Fictive reciprocity” Functions of the Huacas
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The Moche Mode of Reproduction – 5,000-20,000 people earliest periods – Estimated population= 650,000 people Domestic Economy & Social Organization – Wattle-and-daub quincha structures – Two main rooms – Evidence of an artisans class Specialized craft production found among states. Figure 9.17 b
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The Moche Political Economy Military segmentation for resistance Moche military expansion & conquest – Huaca Tembladera – Centralized power – Similar personalized marks as in Huasca del Sol – Ruled by Moche administratos and elite – Moche state imposed style of pottery making, pyramid construction and administrative policies Iconography depicts collection of tribute and P.O.W.s Warfare, conquest and coercive control
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The Moche Ritual, Leadership, and State Ideology Created a powerful ideology, which permeated P.O.W. were sacrificed and their blood was handed to priests as offerings. Religion as means of social control
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Lord of Sipán Tomb I- largest burial offering of prehispanic vessels ever found Copper bells and backflaps- Decapitator deity Burial included: – Hundreds of pottery vessels – 2 sacrificed llamas – A small child – 5 coffins, one warrior missing a his feet – Women, all secondary burials from elsewhere not sacrificed there
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A Model of Moche State Policy Superstructure – Ideology – Ritual/leadership Structure – Social organization – Political economy Infrastructure – Mode of production – Settlement pattern
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