Late Preceramic Period Public Architecture and the Conceptual Challenge of Andean Urbanism
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.200601.008Keywords:
Prehispanic urbanism, Andean ceremonial center, Preceramic period architecture, Archaic period archaeology, Caral, Çatal HüyükAbstract
An analysis of the architecture and spatial organization of the Caral-Chupacigarro complex is compared with Pachacamac and other Central Andean prehispanic settlements and also with Çatal Hüyük in Anatolia. It is concluded that the term "settled ceremonial center" describes these sites better than the term "city". The formal diversity of the architectural spaces that make up these early monumental complexes is explained by the ritual activities carried out at them, including banquets, feasts, dances, offerings, sacrifices, etc. The differences in size, volume, and duration of continuous use of buildings in the same complexes, as well as the ceremonial centers, is believe to have no relationship with the number of permanent settlers at them; rather, it is suggested to be directly proportional to the number of regular visitors, and therefore, to the religious and political prestige of these sites. The construction of monumental ceremonial spaces, jointly used by a single community or by an alliance of several communities, and their maintenance and eventual expansion are, in this context, a mechanism for the materialization of the memory of the ritual kinship relations established and periodically legitimized through shared rituals at these localities.
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Copyright (c) 2016 Boletín de Arqueología PUCP

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