Regional Centrality, Religious Ecology, and Emergent Complexity in the Lake Titicaca Basin Formative
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.200701.002Keywords:
Emergent complexity, Ritual practice, Lake Titicaca basin, Late Formative, Khonkho WankaneAbstract
In this paper, I discuss early complexity in the southern Lake Titicaca Basin of the Bolivian Andes. I examine a regional landscape of multi-community formations that emerged during the Late Formative Period (100 BC-AD 500). I suggest that during the Late Formative in the southern Lake Titicaca basin, the establishment of Khonkho Wankane and other disembedded centers, played an important role in the social transformations that ultimately gave rise to centralized political systems. Political activity was undoubtedly an important element of social interaction, but it was enmeshed with ritual and other activities, such as mound construction, and formed an embedded part of more encompassing, large-scale ceremonial encounters. More than they were aggrandizers, those who resided at Khonkho were social and ideological mediators. This case suggests that non-state complexity may be far more variable than most current archaeological models propose.
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Copyright (c) 2016 Boletín de Arqueología PUCP

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