Pre-Columbian Cultures: See Also

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Pre-Columbian cultures[edit]

See also: Cultural periods of Peru


Andean civilizations of Peru

Norte Chico Caral pyramids in the arid Supe Valley, some 20 km from the Pacific coast.

Chavin Gold Crown Formative Epoch 1200-300 BCE (Larco Museum Collection, Lima).

The Condor, Nazca Lines, created by the Nazca culture.

The Moche culture is world-renowned for its pottery, in picture a condor from about 300 CE.

Walls of Soloco fortress, Chachapoyas, Peru.


Pikillaqta administrative center, built by the Wari culture in Cusco.

Chimú vessel representing a fisherman on a caballitos de totora(1100–1400 CE).

Tiwanaku and Wari culture at its largest territorial extent, 950 CE.

Hunting tools dating back to more than 11,000 years ago have been found inside the caves
of Pachacamac, Telarmachay, Junin and Lauricocha.[1] Some of the oldest civilizations
appeared circa 6000 BC in the coastal provinces of Chilca and Paracas, and in the
highland province of Callejón de Huaylas. Over the following three thousand years,
inhabitants switched from nomadic lifestyles to cultivating land, as evidence from sites such
as Jiskairumoko, Kotosh and Huaca Prieta demonstrates. Cultivation of plants such
as corn and cotton (Gossypium barbadense) began, as well as the domestication of
animals such as the wild ancestors of the llama, the alpaca and the guinea pig. Inhabitants
practiced spinning and knitting of cotton and wool, basketry and pottery.
As these inhabitants became sedentary, farming allowed them to build settlements and
new societies emerged along the coast and in the Andean mountains. The first known city
in the Americas was Caral, located in the Supe Valley 200 km north of Lima. It was built in
approximately 2500 BC.[2]
What is left from the civilization, also called Norte Chico, is about 30 pyramidal structures
built up in receding terraces ending in a flat roof; some of them measured up to 20 meters
in height. Caral is one of the world centers of the rise of civilization.[2]
In the early 21st century, archeologists have discovered new evidence of ancient pre-
Ceramic complex cultures. In 2005 Tom D. Dillehay and his team announced the discovery
of three irrigation canals that were 5,400 years old, and a possible fourth that is 6,700 years
old, all in the Zaña Valley in northern Peru, evidence of community activity to support
improved agriculture at a much earlier date than previously believed.[3] In 2006, Robert
Benfer and a research team discovered a 4,200-year-old observatory at Buena Vista, a site
in the Andes several kilometers north of present-day Lima. They believe the observatory
was related to the society's reliance on agriculture and understanding the seasons. The site
includes the oldest three-dimensional sculptures found thus far in South America.[4] In 2007
the archeologist Walter Alvaand his team found a 4,000-year-old temple with painted
murals at Ventarrón, in the northwest Lambayeque region. The temple contained
ceremonial offerings gained from exchange with Peruvian jungle societies, as well as those
from the Ecuadoran coast.[5] Such finds show sophisticated, monumental construction
requiring large-scale organization of labor, suggesting that hierarchical, complex cultures
arose in South America much earlier than scholars had thought.
Many other civilizations developed and were absorbed by the most powerful ones such as
Kotosh, Chavin,
Paracas, Lima, Nasca, Moche, Tiwanaku, Wari, Lambayeque, Chimu and Chincha, among
others. The Paracas culture emerged on the southern coast around 300 BC. They are
known for their use of vicuña fibers instead of just cotton to produce fine textiles—
innovations that did not reach the northern coast of Peru until centuries later. Coastal
cultures such as the Moche and Nazca flourished from about 100 BC to about AD 700: the
Moche produced impressive metalwork, as well as some of the finest pottery seen in the
ancient world, while the Nazca are known for their textiles and the enigmatic Nazca lines.
These coastal cultures eventually began to decline as a result of recurring el Niño floods
and droughts. In consequence, the Huari and Tiwanaku, who dwelt inland in
the Andes became the predominant cultures of the region encompassing much of modern-
day Peru and Bolivia. They were succeeded by powerful city-states, such
as Chancay, Sipan, and Cajamarca, and two empires: Chimor and Chachapoyas
culture These cultures developed relatively advanced techniques of cultivation, gold and
silver craft, pottery, metallurgy, and knitting. Around 700 BC, they appear to have
developed systems of social organization that were the precursors of the Inca civilization.
In the highlands, both the Tiahuanaco culture, near Lake Titicaca in both Peru and Bolivia,
and the Wari culture, near the present-day city of Ayacucho, developed large urban
settlements and wide-ranging state systems between 500 and 1000 AD.[6]
Not all Andean cultures were willing to offer their loyalty to the Incas as the Incas expanded
their empire, and many were openly hostile. The people of the Chachapoyas culture were
an example of this, but the Inca eventually conquered and integrated them into their
empire.

Inca Empire (1438–1532)[edit]


Main article: Inca Empire
Inca Empire
Inca expansion (1438–1533).

View of Machu Picchu built by the Incas.

The Incas built the largest and most advanced empire and dynasty of pre-Columbian
America.[7] The Tahuantinsuyo—which is derived from Quechua for "The Four United
Regions"—reached its greatest extension at the beginning of the 16th century. It dominated
a territory that included (from north to south): the southwest part of Ecuador, part
of Colombia, the main territory of Peru, the northern part of Chile, and the northwest part
of Argentina; and from east to west, from the southwest part of Bolivia to the Amazonian
forests.
The empire originated from a tribe based in Cusco, which became the capital. Pachacutec
wasn't the first Inca, but he was the first ruler to considerably expand the boundaries of
the Cusco state- probably he could be compared to Alexander the Great (from
Greece), Julius Caesar(of the Roman Empire), Attila (from the Hunns tribes) and Genghis
Khan (from the Mongols Empire). His offspring later ruled an empire by both violent
invasions and peaceful conquests- i.e. intermarriages among the rules of small kingdoms
and the current Inca ruler.
In Cuzco, the royal city was created to resemble a cougar; the head, the main royal
structure, formed what is now known as Sacsayhuamán. The Empire's administrative,
political, and military center was located in Cusco. The empire was divided into four
quarters: Chinchaysuyu, Antisuyu, Kuntisuyu and Qullasuyu.
The official language was Quechua – imposed on the citizens. It was the language of a
neighbouring tribe of the original tribe of the empire. Conquered populations—tribes,
kingdoms, states, and cities—were allowed to practice their own religions and lifestyles, but
had to recognize Inca cultural practices as superior to their own. Inti, the sun god, was to
be worshipped as one of the most important gods of the empire. His representation on
earth was the Inca ("Emperor").
The Tawantinsuyu was organized in dominions with a stratified society, in which the ruler
was the Inca. It was also supported by an economy based on the collective property of the
land.
Many unusual customs were observed, for example the extravagant feast of Inti Raymi
which gave thanks to the God Sun, and the young women who were the Virgins of the Sun,
sacrificial virgins devoted to the Inti. The empire, being quite large, also had an impressive
transportation system of roads to all points of the empire called the Inca Trail,
and chasquis, message carriers who relayed information from anywhere in the empire to
Cusco.
Machu Picchu (Quechua for "old peak"; sometimes called the "Lost City of the Incas") is a
well-preserved pre-Columbian Inca ruin located on a high mountain ridge above
the Urubamba Valley, about 70 km (44 mi) northwest of Cusco. Elevation measurements
vary depending on whether the data refers to the ruin or the extremity of the mountain;
Machu Picchu tourist information reports the elevation as 2,350 m (7,711 ft)[1]. Forgotten
for centuries by the outside world, although not by locals, it was brought back to
international attention by Yale archaeologist Hiram Bingham III, who rediscovered it in 1911
and wrote a best-selling work about it. Peru is pursuing legal efforts to retrieve thousands of
artifacts that Bingham removed from the site that are in possession at Yale. Bingham sold
them to Yale.[8]
Although Machu Picchu is by far the most well known internationally, Peru boasts many
other sites where the modern visitor can see extensive and well-preserved ruins, remnants
of the Inca-period and even older constructions. Much of the Inca architecture and
stonework found at these sites continues to confound archaeologists. For example, at
Sacsaywaman in Cusco the zig-zag-shaped walls are composed of massive boulders fitted
very precisely to one another's irregular, angular shapes. No mortar holds them together,
but nonetheless they have remained absolutely solid through the centuries, surviving
earthquakes that flattened many of the colonial constructions of Cusco. Damage to the
walls visible today was mainly inflicted during battles between the Spanish and the Inca, as
well as later, in the colonial era. As Cusco grew, the walls of Sacsaywaman were partially
dismantled, the site becoming a convenient source of construction materials for the city's
newer inhabitants. It is still not known how these stones were shaped and smoothed, lifted
on top of one another (they really are very massive), or fitted together by the Incas; we also
do not know how they transported the stones to the site in the first place. The stone used is
not native to the area and most likely came from mountains many kilometers away.

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