De Chinchorro a Chiribaya: los ancestros de los mallquis Chachapoya-Inca

Authors

  • Sonia E. Guillén Centro Mallqui

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.200301.012

Keywords:

Chachapoya culture, Inca empire, Funerary contexts, Mummification, Chinchorro, Chiribaya

Abstract

From Chinchorro to Chiribaya: The Ancestors of the Chachapoya-Inca Mallquis

In 1977 agricultural workers, turned into looters, found an intact funerary site in the cloud forest in northeastern Peru. A prompt archaeological rescue project permitted the recovery of an important collection of mummies and artifacts that are providing important insights about the archaeology of the Chachapoya people that established in this area around 900 A.D. up to the Inca conquest of this territory around the year 1475. The mummies recovered showed evidence of cultural practices devised and used to assure the preservation of the human bodies. Such practices are also reported among Chinchorro and Chiribaya mummies in the Andes. A cultural interpretation of these funerary activities is discussed connecting the practice of the cult to the ancestors to the access and management of resources and territory.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

2003-04-10

How to Cite

Guillén, S. E. (2003). De Chinchorro a Chiribaya: los ancestros de los mallquis Chachapoya-Inca. Boletín De Arqueología PUCP, (7), 287–303. https://doi.org/10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.200301.012