TRI BUS
SONDERBAND / SPECIAL EDITION I PERSPECTIVES ON THE INCA I 2015
TRI BUS
SONDERBAND / SPECIAL EDITION
PERSPECTIVES ON THE INCA I 2015
International Symposium from March 3rd to March 5th, 2014.
Staatliches Museum für Völkerkunde
In Cooperation With
Sponsored by
Stuttgart 2015
Publisher
Linden-Museum Stuttgart, Staatliches Museum für Völkerkunde
Hegelplatz 1, D-70174 Stuttgart, Germany
Editors
Monica Barnes,
Inés de Castro,
Javier Flores Espinoza,
Doris Kurella,
Karoline Noack
Cover
Orejón.
Inca-Culture, 13th to 16th century A.D.
Linden-Museum Stuttgart,
Inv.Nr. 119159.
Photo: Anatol Dreyer.
B ook Design
GZD Media, Renningen
Printer
Designpress, Renningen
ISSN 0082-6413
Table of Contents
SONDERBAND / SPECIAL EDITION
10 Prólogo
12 Introduction
16 Karoline Noack Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá.
Los incas de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú
38 Stefanie Gänger Collecting Inca Antiquities.
Antiquarianism and the Inca Past in 19th Century Cusco
50 Manuela Fischer The Inca Collection at the Ethnologisches Museum Berlin.
Genesis and Contexts
64 Ann H. Peters Visions of the Inca Dynasty. Narrative Styles,
Emblematic Dress and the Power of Ancestors
88 Monica Barnes How Did Huánuco Pampa Become a Ruin?
From Thriving Settlement to Disappearing Walls
110 Kylie E. Quave I R. Alan Covey The Material Remains of Inca Power
among Imperial Heartland Communities
128 César W. Astuhuamán Gonzáles The Inca Takeover of the Ancient Centers
in the Highlands of Piura
152 David Oshige Adams Las motivaciones económicas y religiosas de la expansión
incaica hacia la cuenca del lago Titicaca
166 Constanza Ceruti Inca Offerings Associated
with the Frozen Mummies from Mount Llullaillaco
180
Steve Kosiba Tracing the Inca Past. Ritual Movement and
Social Memory in the Inca Imperial Capital
208
Brian S. Bauer I David A. Reid The Situa Ritual of the Inca.
Metaphor and Performance of the State
226
Steven A. Wernke Building Tension. Dilemmas of the Built Environment
through Inca and Spanish Rule
252
Donato Amado Gonzáles Sistema de tenencia de tierras de ayllus y panacas incas
en el valle del Cusco, siglos XVI-XVII
268
Kerstin Nowack What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
9
10
PRÓLOGO
El Linden-Museum Stuttgart, Museo Estatal de Antropología del Estado
de Baden-Württemberg, Alemania, fue fundado en 1911 bajo el nombre
de su fundador, el Conde Karl von Linden. Su prominente colección alberga aproxidamente 160.000 objetos procedentes de las Américas, de
Africa, del Oriente islámico, de Asia del Sur y Este y de Ocenía. Su colección de piezas del Perú prehispánico es excepcional.
En la ciudad internacional de Stuttgart, el Linden-Museum es lugar de
diálogo y de educación multicultural. Durante los meses de invierno
una exposición especial importante sobre un tema antropológico o arqueológico atrae mumerosos visitantes de todas partes de Alemania y
de paises lindantes. Algunas de estas exposiciones son financiadas por
el Ministerio de Ciencia, Investigación y Arte, las así llamadas “Gran Exposiciones del Estado de Baden-Württemberg”.
El Linden-Museum Stuttgart dedicó la Gran Exposición del Estado de
Baden-Württemberg “Los Incas–reyes de los Andes” a una de las grandes culturas de la América precolombina, que fue presentada del 12. de
octubre de 2013 al 16 de marzo de 2014. La cultura incaica creó el mayor
imperio en el continente americano antes de la llegada de los españoles y juega hasta el día de hoy un papel preponderante como aporte de
identidad en el área andina. Pese que la denominación “Inca” se encuentra de modo omnipresente en prospectos de viaje, publicidad o como
atracción para los millones de turistas en Macchu Picchu, nuestros
conocimientos sobre esta considerable cultura no son profundos.
La exposición “Los Incas–reyes de los Andes” que fue efectuada en
cooperación con la Sala de Exhibiciones Lokschuppen de Rosenheim,
mostró una gran variedad de objetos incaicos no presentados anteriormente, procedentes de colecciones europeas en combinación con
piezas perservadas en instituciones peruanas. La exposición contribuyó
notablemente a la comprensión de esta cultura tanto para los expertos
como para los visitantes.
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Nuestros conocimientos sobre la cultura incaica se basan ante todo en
las crónicas de los conquistadores españoles: informes de conquista,
cartas de reclamación y crónicas, así como estadísticas realizadas sobre
el imperio incaico, que contienen diferentes informaciones, dependiendo de la intención del autor. No pueden esperarse informes oficiales
prehispánicos de una cultura sin escritura. La codificación de la información sobre cordones de nudo o textiles no ha podido ser descifrada
hasta el momento. Textos de nobles incaicos, como el informe famoso
de Guaman Poma de Ayala de 1615, que con sus dibujos pinta la vida
incaica, también deben observarse críticamente, pues siendo hijo de
una familia indígena noble, él poseía un enfoque muy personal y limitado.
Durante las últimas décadas, importantes proyectos arqueológicos contribuyeron esencialmente a la comprensión de la cultura incaica, especialmente en el valle de Cusco y en las regiones lindantes. Éstos ayudan
a definir el comienzo de la cultura y a entender su transformación hacia
el imperio.
El gran desafío de la investigación actual es reconocer similitudes o
diferencias entre las fuentes etnohistóricas y los nuevos resultados
arqueológicos.
La conferencia internacional “New Perspectives on the Inca”, que tuvo
lugar en el Linden-Museum del 3 al 5 de marzo de 2014, tenía como
meta presentar y discutir estos nuevos hallazgos. En cooperación con
el Instituto de Arqueología y Antropología Cultural de la Universidad
de Bonn, reconocidos expertos internacionales y jóvenes científicos se
reunieron en Stuttgart para intercambiar ideas y conocimientos
sobre los Incas. Sus contribuciones se encuentran en esta publicación
que apaece como suplemento de nuestra revista anual Tribus .
Deseo agradecer a todos estos autores por haber compartido sus conocimientos con nosotros. La conferencia y esta publicación retoman
varios aspectos de nuestra exposición “Los Incas–reyes de los Andes” y
contribuyen considerablemente a la comprensión de la cultura incaica.
Esta conferencia no hubiera sido posible sin el generoso apoyo de la
Ernst von Siemens-Kunststiftung y de la Deutsche Altamerika Stiftung.
Agradecemos mucho este apoyo importante.
Además, quisiera expresar mi sincero agradecimiento a todo el equipo
del Linden-Museum por la organización de la conferencia “New Perspectives on the Inca” y en especial a la Dra. Doris Kurella, encargada del
departamento de Latinoamérica, por haber tomado el papel de curadora de la exhibición “Los Incas–reyes de los Andes”, perfecta base de
discusión para la conferencia.
Agradezco también al grupo encargado de la redacción de esta publicación.
Prof. Dr. Inés de Castro
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INTRODUCTION
DORIS KURELLA
The papers in this volume were written in conjunction with a major exhibition, “The Incas–Kings of the Andes”. This exhibition was developed
by a team from the Linden-Museum, to show Inca culture in a very broad
perspective. The “Introduction” to the exhibition first provided information on the geography and climate of the central Andes. Next, we gave
visitors a temporal and spatial framework through an interactive map. Important occurrences within the central Andes were compared with those
of the rest of the world. The exhibit then introduced Andean cultures by
presenting the Incas’ predecessors, the Tiwanaku and Wari cultures. The
Chimú culture was presented in the following small module. The next
topic was the many aspects of camelid domestication. Then the exhibition dealt with Inca origins and contrasted one of their most important
myths with the newest insights archaeology has provided on that topic.
Following that, “Cusco–City of Kings” was offered to visitors. Here, we
focused on the life of the nobility and how their status was presented
to the people. Uncus (men’s tunics) with their geometric and symbolic
tocapu designs, gold jewelry, a golden ear spool, and very elaborate chuspas (coca bags) brought together from Europe and Peru impressed visitors. The Temple of the Sun, where we showed beautiful stone vessels,
was dedicated to the topic of religion. This formed the end of the “City of
Kings” module. The public was then guided to pay a visit to Machu Picchu
and consider the topic of Inca royal estates. The second major part of
the exhibit, “The Life of the Conquered People and the Organization of
the Empire” began with the topic of war and conquest, and also covered
the administration of the Inca empire. The last room in this section was
dedicated to the question of how the conquered areas–whether won by
violence or annexed through persuasion–were integrated into the empire. The “Integration of the Economy and Religion” composed the end
of the Inca part of the exhibit. Lead through a tunnel that tried to make
the shock and devastation of the Spanish conquest more impressive for
our visitors, they reached the colonial part of the exhibition. Here, we
picked up the topics of the Inca part–conquest, life of the nobility, life of
the peasants, and integration into the new empire through economy and
religion–and presented them under the colonial theme.
The Inca exhibit was very well received by our visitors. Not only visitor
numbers–together with our second venue in Rosenheim we reached
more than 250,000–but also the comments of the public and the media
were extremely positive. The many topics we raised within the exhibit,
presented within a clear and easy to understand framework, in combination with a selection of exquisite objects, lead to that enormous success.
A very warm thank you goes out to all our partners, who were very generous with respect to lending objects for the exhibition.
The Education Department of the Linden-Museum developed a special
guide for children. A cut-out of a chasqui (messenger), sometimes accompanied by a llama, took the children through the exhibit. Our special
“tambo for kids” with different suggested activities was intensely visited–and not only by kids.
The exhibition as a whole was based on the decades-long work and
the many publications of colleagues from universities and museums in
Peru, the United States, and Europe. In this respect, it was an enormous
pleasure to develop the idea of our director to organize a symposium in
conjunction with the show. To invite to Stuttgart colleagues who have
contributed so much and have had such important insights into Inca was
a great opportunity. For us, it was wonderful to welcome some of the authors whose books I, as a curator, relied on heavily, and for my colleagues
it was a good opportunity to see the exhibition and exchange ideas and
new results during the symposium. For that purpose, we organized the
meeting in a way that provided a lot of time for both formal and informal
discussions. We would have liked to have invited many more colleagues,
but resources have their limits. We hope that the exhibition and symposium have stimulated new ideas for Inca research and the presentation of
its results to the public.
A catalog in German with the same title as the exhibition Inka–Könige der
Anden , edited by Doris Kurella and Inés de Castro, was published by the
Linden-Museum and its partner the Lokschuppen Ausstellungszentrum in
Rosenheim, Germany. This lavishly illustrated book includes twenty-four
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essays by leading scholars aimed at the general public, as well as maps,
color and black-and-white photographs, and short descriptions of all the
objects in the exhibition. The present volume results from the symposium and is directed at scholars. I would like to take this opportunity to
thank my fellow editors–Inés de Castro, Javier Flores Espinoza, Karoline
Noack, and, especially, Monica Barnes, who worked tirelessly for over six
months to perfect this volume.
The fourteen essays presented here range widely in their contributors’
approaches to the Inca. In “Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá. Los Incas
de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú” Karoline Noack begins with
the exhibition “Inka-Könige der Anden” (The Incas-Kings of the Andes)
that inspired the conference. When the show opened at the LindenMuseum it attracted a lot of attention from the German press, in part
because it was the first European exhibition ever to focus exclusively on
Tawantinsuyu, the Inca state.
Noack takes her title from a well-received book by the late Alberto Flores Galindo, Buscando un Inca (1986). In it, Flores Galindo examined the
political messages that Peruvians have derived from Inca history. Many
saw a harmonious utopia of social justice, economic redistribution, and
prosperity that could serve as a model for a modern socialist Peru. This
contrasts with the negative point of view espoused by Louis Baudin in
L’empire socialiste des Inka (1928). In the context of a long-standing debate on the positive and negative aspects of supposed Inca socialism,
Noack examines how German museum goers and the German press see
the Inca culture as mediated by “Inka–Könige der Anden”, imposing their
own political, social, and economic values on what was displayed. Noack
observes that Der Spiegel and Die Zeit on-line did not so much review
the exhibition as use it as a starting point for the exposition of their own
views of socialism, seeing the Incas as a despotic example of central planning. Debate on the positive and negative aspects of Inca collectivism
has continued in Peru where, in contrast to Germany, the Inca regime is
generally viewed positively.
Stefanie Gänger also explores views of the Inca past, in her case
concentra ting on Peruvian collectors and the objects they amassed. In
“Collecting Inca Antiquities. Antiquarianism and the Inca Past in 19 th Century Cusco” Gänger explores the biographies, personalities, and collection strategies of several elite antiquaries who were members of Cusco’s
haute bourgeoisie . Among these were Ana María Centeno de Romainville
who acquired a large collection of prehispanic artifacts and hosted a salon that received many famous travelers. José Lucas Caparó Muñiz also
established a private museum and salon attended by both locals and
visiting foreigners. Cusco antiquaries conducted excavations, studied
their artifacts as best they could, expounded on them in their salons,
corresponded with other learned people, sometimes presented academic
papers, and made iconographic interpretations. By 1900 these collections
were being broken up, and many artifacts from them were acquired by
museums in Lima, North America, and Europe. In this way the decisions,
values, and knowledge of Cusco collectors were incorporated into large
public collections that still exist today.
Manuela Fischer takes the theme of 19 th century collecting forward by
examining the specific case of Adolf Bastian. She describes his policy
governing the acquisition of Inca artifacts for the Berlin ethnographic
museum. Bastian helped to formulate the concept of the psychic unity
of humanity. He wished to demonstrate this by assembling a universal
archive of objects that could serve as witnesses to that unity, as well as
support a science of humankind. Bastian believed that the Inca empire
was harmonious, and thought it could serve as a model for German imperialism. In this context he collected Inca and other precolumbian objects.
Eventually he acquired the Centeno collection for Berlin, as well as one
put together by José Mariano Macedo, and another assembled by Wilhelm
Gretzer. While emphasizing the 19 th century roots of Berlin’s collections,
Fisher advocates fresh interpretations in the light of current knowledge
and research questions.
It is not just museum collections that can be reinterpreted, but also primary documentary sources that have long been available to scholars.
14
In “Visions of the Inca Dynasty. Narrative Styles, Emblematic Dress, and
the Power of Ancestors” Ann H. Peters reexamines the series of portraits
of Incas, their principal wives, and their captains or war leaders executed by Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala (ca. 1615). There are two principal
strands to Peters’ arguments–that female leadership was probably as important to the Inca dynasty as male leadership, and that Guaman Poma
was, in part, not just portraying the Incas, wives, and captains as they
were in life, but seems to have incorporated the hieratic traits of their
mummies, which he may have seen.
Monica Barnes’s contribution to this volume is “How did Huánuco Pampa become a Ruin? From Thriving Settlement to Disappearing Walls”. She
focuses on Huánuco Pampa, a very important provincial Inca site in Peru’s
central highlands, concentrating on the time between its near abandonment in the 1530s and the present. Over the years Huánuco Pampa was
put to a variety of uses. It served as a battlefield, a quarry, a ranch, a
wildlife sanctuary, the site of a Christian chapel, a cemetery for unbaptized infants, a tambo for muleteers, the last stop on a branch of the
colonial postal system, a soccer field, a campsite, an ad hoc garage, and as
festival grounds. The main highland road ran through it. It was changed
by archaeological excavation and reconstruction and probably damaged
by the extirpation of idolatries campaigns. It is rarely possible to ex amine the taphonomy of an Andean archaeological site in so much detail.
In formulating their interpretations of Huánuco Pampa, archaeologists
must take account of the many changes it underwent over the centuries.
In “The Material Remains of Inca Power among Imperial Heartland Communities” Kylie E. Quave and R. Alan Covey examine three communities
near Cusco–Ak’awillay, Cheqoq, and and Pukara Pantillijlla, looking for
architectural and artefactual manifestations of Inca power. Ak’awillya,
occupied during the Late Intermediate Period, shrunk during Inca imperial times as populations shifted. Cheqoq grew under the Incas, while
Ak’awillay, a hilltop site, first grew, then shrunk. Quave and Covey note
that there is not always increased visibility of Inca architecture and ceramics at sites where documentary sources tell us that Inca influence was
strong. There is variability in the occurrence and distribution of canonical Inca architecture and ceramics within sites, perhaps reflecting subtle
interactions of local people with Inca overlords.
Quave and Covey focus on their own excavations and the architecture
they revealed, as does César Astuhuamán Gonzáles in “The Inca Takeover
of the Ancient Centers in the Highlands of Piura”. He postulates that Andean social order was developed around networks of shrines embedded
in sacred landscapes. He focuses on the Piura highlands where he has
conducted survey and excavations, most recently at the site of Ayapata,
under the auspices of Peru’s Qhapaq Ñan project. The four largest Inca
sites in the region exhibit a variety of architectural forms associated with
Inca governance, control, and religious activities. Astuhuamán Gonzáles
also discusses pre-Inca sites. Drawing on a variety of archaeological and
ethnohistorical sources, he postulates that the Incas gained control over
pre-existing religious sites, permitting local worship, while promoting
the Inca state religion.
David Oshige Adams also focuses on Inca religion, as well as upon economic factors, in his contribution, “Las motivaciones económicas y religiosas para la expansión Inca hacia la cuenca del Lago Titicaca”. Under
the Incas, the Titicaca region became one of the most sacred parts of
Tawantinsuyu, both a goal of pilgrimage and a mythic origin place. This,
in turn, allowed the Incas to legitimize their suzerainty over the area.
Such control was necessary to gain access to the wool, meat, fat, transport animals, and dung the region produced. It gave the Incas leverage
they could use to control other areas through exchange, and often without the force of arms. Thus, Oshige provides a partial answer to one
of the most important questions of Inca hegemony–how could a small
group from Cusco acquire and maintain dominion over most of the Andes? Essentially, the Incas had things others wanted–maize, jerky, dried
fish, textiles, and minerals, among other products.
Constanza Ceruti is another contributor who concentrates on Inca state
religion, in her case on the high mountain sacrifices of children and young
15
people known as the Capacocha ritual. For some twenty years Ceruti has
been excavating and studying human remains and artifacts connected
to this rite. In “Inca Offerings Associated with the Frozen Mummies from
Mount Llullaillaco” she discusses what is believed to be the highest archaeological site in the world.
Our papers on Inca religion continue with Steve Kosiba’s essay, “Tracing
the Inca Past. Movement and Social Memory in the Inca Imperial Capital”.
He examines one of the most important Inca rituals, the Capac Raymi
ceremony, during which boys become elite young men. According to
documentary sources, Capac Raymi played out on the landscape around
Cusco. Kosiba has examined the various routes and stages archaeologically and has determined that aspects of the prehispanic past were deliberately evoked through allocentric perceptions, in which places and
things were comprehended in terms of their relationships to other places
and things.
Brian S. Bauer and David A. Reid examine Situa, another important Inca
festival in “The Situa Ritual of the Inca. Metaphor and Performance of the
State”. Performed annually, Situa was intended to purify Cusco and drive
evil and disease away from the Inca imperial capital. Combined with their
knowledge of the Cusco area and its shrines, Bauer and Reid describe
the Situa rite and map its progress on the landscape. They reveal that its
central metaphor was that of warfare, a trope that is common cross-culturally.
Steven A. Wernke illuminates the transition from Inca to Spanish colonial rule in “Building Tension. Paradoxes of Power and Place during Inca and
Spanish Rule”. He focuses on the mass colonial resettlements known as
the “Reducción General de Indios” of Viceroy Francisco de Toledo as they
played out in the Colca Valley of southern Peru. Wernke follows Frank Salomon in characterizing the Inca regime as “pseudo-conservative” in that
it made profound changes but ostensibly maintained old forms, while
the Toledan resettlement was “pseudo-radical” in that, in many cases, it
followed policies similar to that of the Incas.
Donato Amado Gonzales’ chapter, “Sistema de tenencia de tierras de ayllus
y panacas incas en valle del Cuzco, s. xvi-xvii” explores the relationship
of royal and non-royal kinship groups and their control of land in early
colonial times. Studying published chronicles and unpublished court
cases relevant to landholdings, Amado is able to place kin groups on the
map and to show how their bases articulated with the interlocking Inca
social, political, and ritual systems, and with the Inca road system.
Finally, Kerstin Nowack takes us into the realm of counter-factual history with her paper, “What would have happened after the Inca Civil War?”
That is, if the Spaniards had never arrived in the Andes, or had arrived a
few decades later, would the Inca empire still have existed as a unified
whole, or would it have broken up in response to various stresses? Could
it even have resisted Spanish conquest? While definitive answers to such
questions can never be given, Nowack offers her well argued conclusion
that Tawantinsuyu would have remained intact and could, perhaps, have
offered greater resistance a little later.
Several broad themes emerge in this volume, all relevant to those elucidated in the exhibition. One is Inca religion, a field in which there is much
active research. Papers dealing with the ways Inca beliefs were made manifest are those of Peters, Astuhuáman Gonzales, Oshige Adams, Ceruti,
Kosiba, and Bauer and Reid. Relationships between settlement patterns
and power are also explored by Amado Gonzales, by Astuhuamán Gonzáles, by Quave and Covey, as well as by Wernke. The impact of collections and collectors are analyzed by Gänger and by Fisher. Noack reveals
how the Incas have been perceived recently. Barnes shows what can
happen to Inca sites from the collapse of Tawantinsuyu to the present,
using Huánuco Pampa as a case study, while Nowack offers well argued
speculation on what might have happened to the Inca empire had the
Spanish arrived a few decades later. Almost all of the authors employ
both historical and archaeological sources. We hope that through this
book we advance our understanding of the Incas and their fascinating
non-Western polity.
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KA R O L I N E N O A C K
BUSCANDO UN INCA DE AQUÍ Y DE ALLÁ.
LO S I N C A S D E N U E S T R O T I E M P O, A L E M A N I A Y L I M A , P E R Ú
Karoline Noack
Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá.
Los incas de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú
17
Introducción. Museo y utopía andina
La exposición “Los Incas, reyes de los Andes” (curada por Doris Kurella), que fuera presentada en el museo etnológico Linden-Museum de Stuttgart (12 de octubre de 2013 a
16 de marzo de 2014) y en el pabellón Lokschuppen de Rosenheim (11 de abril a 23 de
noviembre de 2014), en Alemania, fue la primera muestra exhibida en Europa que estuvo
dedicada únicamente a la sociedad y el estado de los incas. La exposición y el catálogo
destacan por la cuidadosa selección de objetos de extraordinaria calidad, provenientes
de varios museos y colecciones nacionales y extranjeras, estatales y particulares. El tema
de los incas representaba el estado de la cuestión dentro de un amplio contexto diacrónico y cultural, que tenía en cuenta a las culturas arqueológicas anteriores a ellos y que
cerraba con una mirada hacia la época colonial. Fue una exposición con una finalidad
narrativa (véase Ramón 2013, p. 41), ya que concluía en una sala en donde la gente que
vive en el Cusco actualmente aparecía representada como los “herederos” de los incas.
La exposición despertó un extraordinario interés en el público alemán y batió récords en
el número de visitantes que buscaban un inca tanto en Stuttgart como en Rosenheim. 1
1
En Stuttgart asistieron 103,000 visitantes
y en Rosenheim 159,334 (comunicación
personal de Doris Kurella, 30.01.15).
El tema de los incas y su supuesta prole en el museo, súbitamente plantea una pregunta
que proviene de una afirmación que Alberto Flores Galindo hiciera en la introducción a
su célebre libro Buscando un Inca ([1986] 1987). Según este autor, el museo es precisamente lo que le da el último toque a la conversión del “hombre andino” en algo “inmóvil
y pasivo” tanto como “singular y abstracto [, . . . un] personaje al margen de la historia,
inalterable, viviendo en un eterno retorno sobre sí mismo, al que era preciso mantener
distante de cualquier modernidad”. Al mismo tiempo concedía que un museo semejante
era un “museo imposible” porque sí tenía una salida, que es la historia. Precisamente es
ésta la que busca “las vinculaciones entre las ideas, los mitos, los sueños, los objetos y los
hombres que los producen y los consumen” (ibid). La historia que conduce al campo de
batalla de “las luchas y los conflictos, con los hombres en plural, con los grupos y clases
sociales, con los problemas del poder y la violencia en una sociedad” (ibid.). Flores Galindo encontraba la ideología que vinculaba a las insurrecciones con la “utopía andina”, que
en el transcurso de la historia siempre reaparecía, incluso en la década de 1980. Podemos
entender la utopía andina como una descripción idealizada del pasado prehispánico,
especialmente del estado inca, concebido como una época de justicia social, armonía y
prosperidad (Aguirre y Walker 2010, p. XXI). Ella funcionaba “no solo como un discurso sobre “el pasado”, sino también como la base de unas agendas políticas y sociales
18
extremadamente relevantes para el futuro. Diversos actores históricos imaginaron las
estructuras sociales y políticas del mundo andino prehispánico–o al menos lo que ellos
consideraban tal–como modelo para sus sociedades. La sociedad ideal del futuro venía
así a ser un retorno a un pasado glorioso” (ibid.). Una prueba de la actualidad de la utopía
andina es la contemporaneidad de Flores Galindo con la “imagen claramente positiva del
imperio incaico”, presente entre los alumnos de los colegios de Lima en el casco urbano
y en las barriadas en la década de 1980, “tanto de sectores adinerados [. . .], como de los
sectores más pauperizados” (Flores Galindo [1986] 1987, p. 20). Independientemente de
quienes escriben los manuales escolares, para los profesores y alumnos del Perú la sociedad incaica fue una sociedad justa y distributiva.
Por dicha razón, la sociedad incaica constituye “un paradigma para el mundo actual”
(ibid.). Era precisamente por la utopía andina, que lo incaico formaba parte no sólo de las
discusiones ideológicas sino también de los debates políticos actuales, hasta el punto en
que los incas ocupaban la cultura popular (Wekin 1966, citado en Flores Galindo). Esto
quiere decir que la utopía andina trascendió hasta el momento en que vivía Flores Galindo y que fue vista por muchos actores como el modelo de un proyecto socialista para el
Perú actual. Flores Galindo señala, un tanto al margen, que este fondo explica la continúa
popularidad del libro El imperio socialista de los incas (publicado en francés en 1928) del
economista Louis Baudin. Anota así que si bien este autor conservador escribió una crítica al socialismo, “quienes en el Perú hablan del socialismo incaico, lo hacen desde una
valoración diferente” (Flores Galindo [1986] 1987, p. 20).2
Los incas en un museo alemán: surge allí la pregunta, ¿qué buscaban los numerosos
visitantes de la exposición? Aquí no podemos responder exactamente esta interrogante,
pero a modo de ejemplo se buscará indagar lo siguiente: ¿qué buscaban los periodistas
que figuraron entre quienes visitaron la exposición? Justamente el ya mencionado libro
de Baudin–que según Flores Galindo debió su éxito más a su título que a su contenido–aparentemente también tuvo un impacto enorme e ininterrumpido en Alemania, tal
como lo indica la repercusión de la exposición. Por lo tanto, este libro es el nexo entre la
historia del Perú, representada por la utopía andina de Flores Galindo, la exposición en el
Linden-Museum, y los discursos resultantes en la prensa alemana. Puesto que han pasado
casi treinta años desde la publicación de Buscando un Inca, se echará además un vistazo
etnográfico a la situación en Lima para así sondear las huellas actuales de la utopía andina, en la capital del estado que se considera el heredero del “país de los incas”.3
2
Aguirre y Walker subrayan que “no
obstante su título, Buscando un inca movió
a los cientíicos sociales, los intelectuales
y lectores a que abandonaran la búsqueda
de un pasado incaico prístino, sus restos
en el presente, o un proyecto de futuro
inspirado por sus huellas. Debían, más bien,
explorar la apropiación, la recreación y la
síntesis creativas de las múltiples in uencias
culturales que conformaban las sociedades
andinas. Flores Galindo sostenía que era hora
de dejar de buscar un Inca y de abrazar más
bien el “socialismo moderno, la única forma
de canalizar las pasiones y los sueños hacia
la construcción de un futuro mejor” (Aguirre
y Walker 2010, p. XXVIII).
3
Esta parte se reiere únicamente a Lima
y deja de lado la situación existente en el
Cusco porque ella es sumamente distinta.
Karoline Noack
Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá.
Los incas de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú
19
En el planteamiento de Flores Galindo, el museo funciona como la imagen opuesta de la
utopía andina. Mientras que el primero representa la atemporalización o deshistorización
del mundo andino, la utopía andina, que brotaba precisamente del encuentro entre los
mundos “andino” y “occidental”, simboliza más bien la dinámica histórica, esto es la referencia al pasado y la proyección hacia un posible futuro socialista. ¿Qué impacto tiene
el tema de los incas en la prensa alemana? ¿Qué imágenes y discursos se construyeron en
este nuevo encuentro del siglo XXI, es decir a partir de la exposición Los Incas – Reyes de
los Andes, entre el tema incaico y los medios germanos?
Los Incas – Reyes de los Andes en Alemania. Imágenes y discursos en los medios públicos
La muestra Los Incas, reyes de los Andes fue presentada como la Gran Exposición del Estado de Baden-Württemberg en el Linden-Museum, el museo etnológico de Stuttgart, y por
tal razón estuvo acompañada por un gran despliegue de marketing, hasta el punto en que
fue casi como si el tema de los incas hubiese salido en la carátula del semanario Der Spiegel (Arbeitsgemeinschaft Lateinamerika e.V. 2013, p. 65). Con el auspicio de PromPerú,
la ARGE Latinoamérica 4 organizó el viaje de los periodistas a Perú para que conocieran
“el país de los incas” sobre el cual iban a escribir teniendo a la vista la exposición. Los
medios de difusión informaron a gran escala sobre esta exposición incaica, la más grande
que jamás se haya presentado en Europa (Pressespiegel “INKA -Könige der Anden”, mayo
de 2014).
4
“Arbeitsgemeinschaft
Lateinamerika”,
Asociación de trabajo para el fomento del
turismo.
La prensa elogió unánimemente la exposición en términos generales. Lo que llama la
atención es que las reseñas que aparecieron en medios reconocidos, como las revistas
semanales Der Spiegel (Schulz 2013) o Zeit-Online (Willmann 2013), no son análisis de
la exposición misma, de su museografía o de la imagen de los incas. Más bien se utilizó
el espectáculo para difundir ideas y fantasías sobre el estado inca que–adelantémoslo–
parecen provenir de una época pasada, considerando la producción académica publicada sobre este tema. Basta con mirar las palabras claves de los textos presentados. En
Zeit-Online, Urs Willmann se refirió al Estado incaico como un “despotismo perfecto”,
un “régimen de dictadores”, la “economía de planificación centralizada”, el “terror de la
pandilla dominante”, “soplones”, la “inexistencia de la voluntad y libertad del individuo”
o una “dictadura socialista” (ibid.). Los términos centrales de Der Spiegel fueron que los
20
incas eran “más laboriosos, más inteligentes, más vivos que sus vecinos”; que “dispusieron de sinceridad y ética de trabajo”; que “guardaron estrictamente las costumbres”; y
que “organizaron una economía de planificación central como si fueran los ‘Sowjetapparatschiks’ de Stalin que inventaron el sistema, pero que ignoraban la tecnología moderna”
(Schulz 2013, pp. 149-155). El tono de los discursos es distante y varía entre la ironía y la
burla, pero también se desvía hacia un lenguaje propio de la guerra fría. Todos los medios
públicos revisados coincidieron en que los incas fueron una superpotencia legendaria,
enigmática, misteriosa, fantástica y hasta desconocida. 5 Estas ideas no tenían nada que
ver con los objetos presentados en el museo. Aparentemente lo que generó los discursos
fue la mera etiqueta de inca.
Los discursos surgidos en torno a estas palabras claves sorprenden aún más, puesto que
los semanarios son medios consumidos mayormente por personas que se consideran educadas e informadas. Resumiendo el análisis realizado por Schröder, el lector del Spiegel
y de Die Zeit (o Zeit-Online) es principalmente masculino, con un alto grado de educación
y elevado ingreso económico (Schröder 2013a, 2013b, s. p.). 6 Surge así la siguiente pregunta: ¿cómo explicar la diferencia existente entre la información tan estática, errónea
y anticuada sobre la sociedad incaica, las características que tienen los lectores de estos
medios de difusión, y la calidad de la exposición del Linden-Museum? Para contestar esta
pregunta debemos volver a El Imperio Socialista de los Incas, el nexo entre la historia del
Perú, el museo y la prensa.
Louis Baudin. El imperio socialista de los incas
Las palabras claves en los discursos de los medios públicos alemanes que reflejan ciertas
ideas sobre el socialismo, explicitan que el libro de Louis Baudin (París, 1928, y Hamburgo, 1956) puede ser considerado el nexo entre la utopía andina, la exposición del
Linden-Museum y los discursos de los medios públicos alemanes. Flores Galindo advertía
que el éxito del libro provenía más de su título que de su contenido, pero en el caso de
Alemania sería de suponer que los autores conocerían algo más que el título. Pero lo que
se esconde bajo el título alemán no es el mismo texto que fuera publicado en Paris en
1928, y al que se tradujera varias veces a la lengua española (p.e. Baudin 1978).
5
Además de las publicaciones ya citadas,
los periódicos Frankfurter Allgemeine
Sonntagszeitung y Neues Deutschland
también coinciden con esta última evaluación.
6
El Der Spiegel es uno de los medios
impresos más rico en tradiciones y se
publica desde 1947. En 2013 volvió a ser
la revista de noticias más prestigiosa del
país. Cada semana, Der Spiegel vende
aproximadamente
941,000
ejemplares.
Alrededor de 6 millones de personas mayores
de 14 años leen semanalmente la revista. La
mayoría de los lectores proviene de Renania
del Norte-Westfalia o del norte del país, y
sólo unos cuantos de los estados del este.
En cuanto al semanario Die Zeit, éste vende
aproximadamente 514,000 ejemplares por
semana y tiene alrededor de 1.55 millones
de lectores por edición. La mayoría de las
veces el lector típico es masculino, pero
sus lectores incluyen más mujeres que en
el caso del Der Spiegel. Su público es joven
por encima del promedio y tiene educación
universitaria, son profesionales que trabajan
por cuenta propia o como ejecutivos que
en todo caso cuentan con ingresos altos, y
también proviene en la mayoría
Karoline Noack
7
Después de la segunda guerra mundial
el editor trajo consigo esta idea de negocio
desde EE.UU., donde los libros del bolsillo
eran conocidos hacía bastante más tiempo.
Su bajo precio revolucionó el mercado
alemán del libro: http://www.rowohlt.de/
verlag/rororo, 30.5.1.
8
http://www.detlef-heinsohn.de/
sammlung-rde.htm, última actualización
01.06.15.
9
Prem (2008, pp. 254-255) ya había advertido esto.
10
Por estas reformas el presidente recibió
el apelativo de Huiracocha (Ramón 2013, pp.
25 y 26).
La constitución peruana de 1920 consagró la protección de la “raza indígena” y
el respeto a las comunidades indígenas, pero
éstas “siguieron sometidas a la ley del hacendado o al apacible mundo andino de las
comunidades libres y, desde entonces, reconocidas” (Matos Mar 2010, pp. 28-29). Formaron parte de esto la fundación de la Sección de Asuntos Indígenas en el Ministerio
de Fomento (1921), el Comité Pro Derecho
Indígena Tahuantinsuyo (1921), los congresos Indígenas celebrados en Lima (entre
1921-1924) y el Patronato de la Raza Indígena (1922) (Ramón 2013, p. 26).
11
12
Esto se ve, por ejemplo, en que alrededor de 1930, de los miles de comunidades
indígenas existentes, solamente se había reconocido oicialmente a poco menos de trescientas de ellas (Ramón 2013, p. 27).
Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá.
Los incas de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú
21
Der sozialistische Inka-Staat fue publicado en Hamburgo en 1956 por la editorial Rowohlt,
en la serie rororo. Esta serie, a la que se llamaba “enciclopedia alemana Rowohlt”,
representaba el “saber del siglo XX en un libro de bolsillo” (véase la cubierta). La edición
contaba con un consejo científico internacional. Esta serie publicó los primeros libros
de bolsillo que aparecieron en Alemania.7 La “enciclopedia alemana” fue una de las
series más populares en la República Federal de Alemania, y desde 1955 hasta 1981
se publicaron alrededor de 350 tomos. 8 Pero hay una confusión en el título. Según la
información legal, se tradujo el título del libro de Baudin (1928) al alemán, más no su
contenido. Se trata de una traducción de Les Incas du Pérou, publicado por el mismo autor
en París en 1944, que en su versión alemana apareció en 1947 (Baudin 1947). 9 La nueva
edición de la “enciclopedia alemana” se creó añadiendo extractos de fuentes históricas,
actualizando algunas secciones y proporcionándole un título poderoso. Aunque Baudin
no fue el primero que estableció una relación entre el estado inca y el socialismo, sí fue
el que más éxito tuvo en prolongar esta idea a partir del punto de vista del liberalismo.
Con la publicación de la edición original de L’empire socialiste des Inka en 1928, Baudin
se inscribió tanto en el contexto europeo como en el peruano. En Perú, este momento
estuvo caracterizado por el Oncenio del presidente Augusto Leguía (1919-1930), el cual
vivió una “coyuntura económica favorable después de la Primera Guerra Mundial”, la cual
estuvo acompañada políticamente por “una serie de reformas pro-indígenas”–entre ellas
la constitución peruana de 1920–para resolver el “problema del indio” (Ramón 2013, pp.
25 y 26).10 Las nuevas inversiones de capital permitieron una “estabilidad de ideologías,
de análisis de la realidad nacional, de modernización del país, del camino en búsqueda
de un Estado-nación” (Matos Mar 2010, p. 28). 11 Para este fin, el indigenismo de la época
planteó una nueva programación política cuyas palabras claves provinieron del “encuentro entre socialismo e indigenismo” (Flores Galindo [1986] 1987, p. 252). Este “socialismo
peruano” tendría su base en la comunidad andina, además del supuesto socialismo del
estado inca (Mariátegui [1928] 2007). La muerte prematura de Mariátegui interrumpió el
desarrollo de este discurso, el cual tuvo también el objetivo de “ir del reconocimiento a
los incas al de los indios en tanto elemento central de la nacionalidad” (Ramón 2013, p.
23 véase también Thurner 2012, pp. 202-204). El proceso de reformas de Leguía se inició
con mucha dinámica, pero pronto se desaceleró hasta que el tratamiento crítico del tema
indígena degeneró en pura retórica gubernamental (Ramón 2013, p. 27). 12 Al finalizar
el Oncenio, es decir su etapa conservadora y contrarreformista, la retórica del gobierno
subrayaba que el dictador Leguía estaba dando forma a una democracia “que nos aleja[rá]
22
para siempre del peligro de la ultrademagogia, el bolcheviquismo” (El ministro de fomento, citado en Ramón 2013, p. 48). Fue en este contexto que Baudin se insertó.
En Europa, el final de la Primera Guerra Mundial no sólo dejó un continente en ruinas,
sino que también trajo consigo el derrumbe de la monarquía en Alemania debido a la revolución de noviembre de 1918, y la extinción del imperio zarista con la fundación de la
Unión Soviética tras la revolución de octubre de 1917. En este contexto, el libro de Baudin
puede ser considerado como una respuesta motivada por la búsqueda de una política
exterior agresiva contra la Unión Soviética, contra el marxismo y contra un posible giro a
un socialismo peruano en ultramar. Por dicha razón, Baudin retomó el tema de los incas
bajo el concepto de socialismo para así ingresar a un debate que hasta el momento se
había dado sobre todo dentro del marco de la política económica marxista (principalmente por parte de Marx, Cunow y Luxemburgo). 13 En la obra de Karl Marx, los incas
representaban un comunismo primordial. Heinrich Cunow, que sería a quien Baudin más
criticaría (además de Mariátegui), trabajó a partir de la obra de Marx y “fue el primero
que trató de ubicar los datos incaicos dentro de un contexto etnográfico” (Murra 1978,
p. 19). Por último, en su obra “Introducción a la Economía Nacional” (“Einführung in die
Nationalökonomie”), 14 Rosa Luxemburgo retomó el ejemplo del estado inca y sus gobernadores “déspotas benévolos”, para argumentar que con el descubrimiento del comunismo agrario–primero como una particularidad de los germanos, luego de los eslavos, los
indios, árabes, los antiguos mexicanos y finalmente del “milagroso estado de los incas”–se
imponía la conclusión de que éste no fue ninguna singularidad en ninguna parte del mundo, sino más bien una forma general de la sociedad humana en cierto nivel de desarrollo
cultural (consúltese Luxemburgo 1975a). Con esta observación, Luxemburgo resumió las
corrientes más importantes del pensamiento europeo hasta ese entonces. Esto incluía la
idea del despotismo, que fuera desarrollada primero por Montesquieu en el siglo XVIII, 15
y al cual Hegel vinculó con las sociedades asiáticas (Minuti 2012). El origen del concepto de despotismo subraya su relación explícita con el Oriente–siempre presente en el
pensamiento occidental–e influyó sobre la contemplación del estado incaico por parte
de los autores europeos, 16 lo que es hoy visible en los medios de difusión alemanes
contemporáneos. Rosa Luxemburgo hizo de la figura del déspota benévolo una parte de
la historia universal, con lo cual la desprendió del Oriente o de cualquier otro lugar de
origen específico.
13
Este enfoque fue retomado por el mismo Murra. Cunow (1890, 1896; Murra 1978)
desarrolló los conocimientos sobre el sistema de parentesco en el antiguo Perú y
demostró la existencia de un comunismo
agrario en las comunidades (ayllu), el cual
constituía la base de la sociedad inca, pero
al mismo tiempo negó que el ayllu tuviese
estructuras estatales.
14
Manuscrito inconcluso. Originalmente se planeó publicar la “Introducción” en
1909/1910 en ocho folletos y en forma de libro. Debido a la disputa que libraba con Karl
Kautsky, Luxemburgo suspendió el trabajo
en la “Introducción” para escribir primero “La
acumulación del capital”. Fue sólo a partir de
1916, como prisionera, que volvió a retomar
la “Introducción”. Todos los intentos de publicarla en editoriales socialdemócratas fracasaron. No sería hasta 1925 que se publicó
el fragmento de este trabajo. Su publicación
en 1975 como parte de las Obras completas (Luxemburgo 1975a, 1975b), se realizó a
partir del manuscrito ológrafo de la autora, al
cual se logró proteger y conservar durante la
época del fascismo. Consúltese Luxemburgo
(1975b).
15
Montesquieu caracterizó al despotismo no sólo como una forma de dominación
política sino también social, puesto que la
dominación despótica podía traspasar toda
una colectividad (Konrad 2010).
16
Durante el siglo XIX, la discusión de si
el estado inca fue una civilización o no, fue
una cuestión a la que se planteó en términos
de orientalismo. En cuanto al origen de Manco Cápac, el supuesto fundador de los incas,
debemos advertir que muchos prestigiosos
autores y viajeros europeos decimonónicos
cuestionaron su origen “peruano” y lo buscaron más bien en China, en Armenia, Egipto o
entre los hebreos. Alexander von Humboldt
vio su posible origen en el Oriente, y era aquí
donde brillaba el concepto del despotismo
oriental (Thurner 2012, pp. 102-103).
Karoline Noack
Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá.
Los incas de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú
23
En comparación con este debate, el énfasis de Baudin en el estado inca como un estado
socialista, idea en la cual insistiría a lo largo de toda su vida, era más un debate político que académico. 17 En lo que a su marco teórico respecta, su libro no estuvo al nivel
académico de la época. 18 A partir del liberalismo político y económico, Baudin reemplazó
la terminología del comunismo primordial con la del socialismo estatal. Mezcló así ideales liberales como la centralidad de la persona, la libertad y equilibrio del mercado, la
cuestión del alcance de la intervención estatal y el énfasis en el derecho a la propiedad
privada, con el conocimiento que se tenía en su época de los incas a partir de las crónicas.
De este modo los presentó como un Estado ejemplar y único que logró combinar el poder
económico y político, y que tuvo una gran capacidad (“genio de la organización”) para la
administración “geométrica” con la “civilización”, el bienestar y un control efectivo de la
población dentro de un gran territorio, pero a costa de una tristeza generalizada y de la
desaparición del individuo (Baudin 1978, pp. 451, 453). Con esta obra, Baudin se posicionó dentro de las discusiones políticas que estaban en la orden del día, tanto en Europa
como en Perú.
La controversia en torno a si en el estado incaico predominaba el comunismo agrario 19
o un socialismo estatal, se extendía a nivel político en la discusión sobre las distintas
formas de entender el socialismo. Baudin criticaba a otros autores, sobre todo a Heinrich
Cunow, por sostener el supuesto carácter socialista de las comunidades que conformaban
la base imperial:
17
Murra menciona en este contexto que
Hermann Trimborn “durante años sostuvo que no tenía sentido hablar de socialismo en el contexto incaico”, no obstante lo
cual “emple[ó] el término en el título de una
obra reciente, dirigida al gran público” (Murra 1978, p. 17, introducción a la versión de
1955).
18
En su reseña en la revista Anthropos,
Trimborn (1929, p. 1143) resaltó que de los
autores que participaron en “la controversia
conocida”, Baudin manejaba un extenso material de fuentes.
19
O “colectivismo agrario”, en palabras de
Trimborn (1923-24, 1925).
Sin duda, la comunidad es una agrupación de apariencia colectivista [. . .] pero
se presenta como la resultante de una larga evolución natural [. . .]. Es una formación espontánea y no una creación racional; es un sistema soportado y no
un sistema querido (Baudin [1928] 1978, p. 235).
El estado, por otro lado, destacaba por su capacidad de racionalización. Como admirador
de los incas-gobernadores y a diferencia de los autores arriba mencionados, Baudin entendía su socialismo como la racionalización de la sociedad a partir de la estadística y de
la planificación de la oferta y demanda en el mercado (ibid., pp. 235-236). Aunque el estado incaico se sobrepuso a las comunidades sin destruirlas, no era por ello que se le debía
entender como socialista. Más bien el socialismo partía de la clase gobernante, que se
apoyaba “sobre una ‘superorganización’ económica” que ella misma había creado (ibid.,
pp. 360, 361-362). Además de la estadística y regulación de un mercado equilibrado, la
24
racionalización de la sociedad también implicaba “una verdadera absorción del individuo
por el estado”, aun cuando “el elemento igualitario no es absoluto” (ibid., pp. 235, 237).
Pero había una correspondencia entre el “interés del soberano” y el “interés del pueblo
entero” que era el bienestar, junto con la aceptación de “un intervencionismo extremado,
un verdadero despotismo” (ibid., pp. 235, 237).
Baudin llevó a cabo otro debate sobre el socialismo con el escritor marxista peruano José
Carlos Mariátegui. En la década de 1920 Mariátegui estuvo en Europa, donde descubrió
al Perú. 20 Se discutían entonces distintas formas de socialismo como alternativa política,
a las que Flores Galindo señala como afluentes de la utopía andina (Flores Galindo 2010,
p. 152). En este debate Baudin se involucró en la discusión en torno a la pregunta de si la
autocracia (un término emparentado con el despotismo) y el comunismo, emprendido por
el socialismo, serían compatibles o no. Según Mariátegui, “la autocracia y el comunismo
son incompatibles en nuestra época, pero no lo fueron en sociedades primitivas.” 21 Según
Baudin, la “[a]utocracia y [el] comunismo están necesariamente ligados [el] uno al otro
(Baudin [1928] 1978, p. 240).” Esta no fue una discusión meramente académica sino más
bien política y se refería a la situación actual, tanto en Europa como en el Perú. Baudin
(ibid.) intentaba sonar la alarma con respecto a las “recientes experiencias alemana y
rusa”, con lo cual hizo alusión a las revoluciones de noviembre de 1918 en Alemania y
octubre de 1917 en Rusia, y ello ante la crisis del sistema oligárquico en el Perú y las perturbaciones que este país viviera a comienzos del siglo XX, sobre todo en el sur andino
(Flores Galindo 2010, p. 152). Al negar la relación entre autocracia y comunismo en el
socialismo contemporáneo, Mariátegui advertía la historicidad de las formas sociales en
los Andes y que no eran restos de un tiempo pasado. Era una combinación de las ideas de
Cunow y de su convicción de la posibilidad de que hubiese un socialismo de tipo peruano
basado en el ayllu pero como parte de un estado moderno, con lo cual estaría libre de las
características atribuidas al despotismo, como la autocracia. Como respuesta implícita a
la economía liberal, Mariátegui planteaba que “a pesar de que el socialismo contemporáneo nace del liberalismo, es su antítesis” (Mariátegui [1928] 2007, pp. 64-65).
En efecto, la concepción que Baudin tenía de los indígenas de su época era del todo
contraria a la de un actor de la historia capaz de resolver el “problema del indio”, y era
la antítesis de la propuesta de Mariátegui. Según Baudin, el indígena esperaba todo del
estado y no tenía iniciativa propia, porque la herencia del estado inca le había dejado una
mentalidad de esclavo y un carácter perezoso, indolente, sucio y también dulce, sumiso,
20
Flores Galindo (2010, p. 181) se refería
a las distintas in uencias ilosóicas y políticas, entre ellas las marxistas y las que provenían de la Unión Soviética, que Mariátegui
tomó para entender la “realidad peruana”.
21
Mariátegui, citado en Baudin ([1928]
1978, p. 240, p. 237). Baudin citó los 7 Ensayos de Interpretación de la Realidad Peruana de José Carlos Mariátegui, que también
fue publicado en 1928 como una colección
de una serie de ensayos escritos para diferentes revistas.
Karoline Noack
Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá.
Los incas de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú
25
servil y resistente a la fatiga. En suma, según Baudin los supuestos hijos de los incas pertenecían a una “raza sojuzgada y embrutecida”, con “hombres [que] no son ya hombres,
son piezas de la maquina económica o números de la estadística administrativa” (Baudin
[1928] 1978, pp. 450, 452, 457). Baudin aisló el debate sobre los incas que ya se había
llevado a cabo en contextos históricos más amplios. Con su enfoque liberal abordó problemas que estaban en la orden del día, entre ellos el peligro que veía en las experiencias
socialistas europeas, sobre todo en la Unión Soviética, opción ésta que según él se podía
excluir en el caso del Perú, precisamente por la herencia del estado inca. Esta herencia
fue justamente la razón por la cual los defensores de la utopía andina, los indigenistas,
pensaron una alternativa para el Perú.
22
Se trata de una versión ampliada en
comparación con las ediciones anteriores de
París (1944) y de Essen (1947).
23
Capítulos
von heute” (El
IX, “Die Lehren
(El aprendizaje
incas).
VIII, “Das Indianerproblem
problema del indio hoy), y
aus der Geschichte der Inka”
a partir de la historia de los
24
Völkisch, uno de los términos más importantes del nazismo, se deriva de Volk,
pueblo, y su traducción resulta sumamente
difícil.
En la traducción alemana de Baudin (1944), publicada en 1956 22 con el mismo título de
1928, no hay muchos cambios en comparación con la primera edición francesa a pesar de
los avances realizados en el estudio de los incas (Murra 1978, “Introducción a la versión
de 1955”). Pero Baudin añadió una parte más extensa justamente sobre el “problema del
indio”. 23 En esta parte presentó el desarrollo de su pensamiento después de la Segunda
Guerra Mundial y de la ocupación de Francia por parte de Alemania, lo que amplió sus
convicciones anticomunistas, racistas y elitistas que hacen de este libro un verdadero
testimonio no sólo de la Guerra Fría, sino también de un lenguaje propio del Tercer Reich
(LTI – Lingua Tertii Imperii) (Klemperer 1980). Lo que en la edición de 1928 solamente se
percibía como un eco–su crítica del indigenismo y con ello del marxismo–, ocupaba ahora
un lugar mucho más importante en la edición alemana. Frente a la reciente experiencia
nazi en Europa, el vocabulario del autor provoca en el lector una sensación irritante. Los
indigenistas aparecen o bien como propagandistas del bolchevismo, como defensores
de los pobres y explotados, o sino como nacionalistas hostiles a los norteamericanos.
Baudin enfatizaba que no sería difícil explicar el dogma marxista de la lucha de clases a
los “mezclados” (Mischlinge) ignorantes y bobos, y moverlos así a iniciar una sublevación
(Baudin 1956, p. 72). Y una vez más volvió a debatir con Mariátegui, quien ya había fallecido en 1930. Mariátegui, el “heraldo del socialismo en Perú”, era el responsable de la
confusión de ideas que Baudin advertía en el indigenismo y de que se nutriera de influencias “eslavo-foráneas”, marxistas, ideas sindicalistas y recuerdos del tiempo de los incas,
además de un nacionalismo exagerado (ibid., p. 73). La renovación del indio debía tener
un carácter “völkisch” 24 y el rechazo de los axiomas marxistas era el orden del día. De este
modo el temor más grande, en particular, era que estos indios indolentes se convirtieran
en proletarios envidiosos y organizados (ibid., pp. 74, 80). Baudin cerraba su libro con
26
una vista de Francia bajo la ocupación de la Alemania fascista, indicando así lo actual
que era el tema de los incas. Baudin comparaba a los incas con la “socialización” de la
economía francesa que se dio bajo la ocupación alemana y su conversión en una economía
dirigida, con un mercado dirigido, un dinero casi inexistente y un sistema de reglamentos como si fuera un sistema socialista (1956, pp. 89-91). Una comparación como esta
facilitaba la identificación del socialismo con el totalitarismo. 25 La conclusión finalmente
era que la sociedad, tanto la incaica como la francesa de la posguerra, necesitaba de una
elite. En esto los incas sí servían de modelo porque ellos separaron la elite de la “masa”,
limitando la socialización de la economía sólo a esta última. De este modo la elite garantizaba una fuerza ascensional dinámica sobre la base de una sociedad sólida; esta era la
promesa que los incas también guardaban para Francia y su reconstrucción después de
la guerra (ibid., pp. 92-93). Si comparamos ambos libros de Baudin advertimos una fuerte
coherencia. Ambos estaban claramente ligados a contextos políticos correspondientes
equivalentes e intentaban responder a las cuestiones candentes de la épocas anterior y
posterior al fascismo y la Segunda Guerra Mundial desde una perspectiva conservadora,
anticomunista, elitista y hasta racista. 26
El análisis aclara que las palabras claves en los discursos sobre la exposición inca en los
artículos de los semanarios Der Spiegel y Die Zeit provienen del debate que Baudin libró
con el socialismo, para lo cual utilizó a los incas, que se encontraban insertados ya en
la discusión historiográfica desde la segunda mitad del siglo XIX. Pero no hay ninguna
vía que conduzca directamente desde Baudin hasta la prensa en Alemania. Hay un texto más al que podemos considerar como el catalizador de esta forma de pensar sobre
los incas. Su autor, Hans-Gert Braun (2004), economista y profesor extraordinario de la
Universidad de Stuttgart, y evidentemente un admirador de su colega Baudin, publicó
un artículo basado explícitamente en el libro de 1956 y al que se accede fácilmente en
la Internet. En este artículo Braun comparó las economías de planificación central de la
Unión Soviética y la de los incas, tal como él las imaginaba, partiendo de la idea de que
a diferencia de lo sucedido en la primera, en el estado inca ella sí funcionó. Plantear
esto en 2004, trece años después del colapso de la Unión Soviética, parece de por sí
bastante raro. No habría por qué dedicarle mucho espacio a este artículo, si no fuera
porque fue publicado en una revista universitaria. Cierto es que resulta difícil imaginar
una brecha más amplia entre la discusión del tema de los incas, tal como está planteado
en la historia y antropología alemana e internacional, y lo que Braun presentó como un
“conocimiento garantizado” sobre los incas. Resulta sumamente curioso que un colega
25
El título del libro de Karsten (1949)
resulta sumamente engañoso y dado que
había transcurrido tan poco tiempo desde la
experiencia fascista europea, solamente es
explicable por motivos de marketing. En el
texto Karsten más bien argumenta en contra
la idea de un liderazgo totalitario (véase la p.
265). Prem (2008, p. 331) también señaló lo
engañoso del título.
26
Este es un tema sobre el cual hay que
hacer más preguntas e investigar más, puesto que después de la Segunda Guerra Mundial dicho discurso no fue construido sobre
la base del trabajo de Alfred Métraux, una
de las personas que inspiró el Handbook of
South American Indians, que estuvo a cargo
del proyecto de los Andes de la UNESCO, y
que además es autor de varios libros, igualmente populares y que fueron traducidos al
español y al inglés, pero que cuentan con un
discurso democrático sobre el estado incaico (por ejemplo Métraux 1965; Murra 1978,
p. 12).
Karoline Noack
Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá.
Los incas de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú
27
de una disciplina vecina utilice teorías tan obsoletas para explicar con ellas fenómenos
recientes, para los cuales no hace falta ningún análisis adecuado. Lo que sí le salió bien
fue captar la atención, como tal vez lo deseaba, porque este texto fue justamente el
puente entre la obra de Baudin y las reseñas que aparecieron en los medios en 2014,
sobre todo la de Schulz en Der Spiegel. Los incas aparentemente han sido el ejemplo
preferido por muchas corrientes ideológicas para probar la existencia de una utopía,
desde los representantes de la Ilustración, los teóricos del movimiento obrero alemán
durante los primeros decenios de su organización y hasta las primeras décadas del siglo
XX, e incluso como influencia de la utopía andina en Perú. Los medios utilizaron esta
muestra, tan comercializada, como un espacio de proyección limitado donde seguir las
líneas de argumentación iniciadas por la obra de Baudin. Un término constante es el de
despotismo, el cual formó parte de las corrientes arriba mencionadas, pero que sufrió
una re-significación en manos de Baudin, quien lo extrajo de los discursos preexistentes
como “verdadero despotismo”, relacionándolo así con el Oriente, que en 1928 se reconfiguró como la Unión Soviética. Willmann (Die Zeit) lo reformuló como un “despotismo
perfecto”, y Schulz y Willmann vincularon el concepto con las palabras claves de Braun.
De este modo se fue creando una formación discursiva que ligaba de modo indisoluble
las combinaciones del despotismo, el totalitarismo, la dictadura y el socialismo con
la Unión Soviética imaginada (el Oriente de antes), esto es respectivamente Rusia y el
estado inca. Así, en los medios públicos alemanes se fue desarrollando toda una formación discursiva anticomunista, racista y elitista que usualmente no tiene cabida en
la prensa democrática. La sociedad y el estado de los incas quedaron presos dentro de
esta formación discursiva. Ni la exposición, ni el viaje de los periodistas, ni tampoco la
celebración de los incas como nunca antes se había hecho con ningún otro tema arqueológico-antropológico latinoamericano (Arbeitsgemeinschaft Lateinamerika e.V. 2013,
p. 65), lograron revertir esta formación discursiva que se desarrolló en la Alemania de
la postguerra. Requeriría otro estudio indagar con mayor profundidad de qué manera,
un lenguaje de la guerra fría que contenía los sedimentos del LTI (Klemperer 1980) y
que estaba presente en la edición de Baudin de 1956, logró pasar de estas fuentes a los
medios públicos democráticos.
28
La imagen de los incas en la Gran Lima contemporánea. Observaciones etnográficas
Las reformas urbanas en la capital peruana, efectuadas en la década de 1920, formaron
parte de la modernización del país durante el Oncenio de Leguía. En esta época se registró
el crecimiento de la población que llegaba a Lima (Ramón 2013, pp. 25, 33). En la década de 1950 se dio el “inicio de la concentración de grandes contingentes de migrantes”
(Matos Mar 2010, p. 33). Caminando por las calles de esta ciudad, salta a la vista que hay
cierto patrón en su denominación. 27 Las que llevan nombres de incas están repartidas
por el espacio urbano de manera sumamente desigual. Si vemos el mapa de Lima encontramos que después de la reforma de los nombres de las calles limeñas (intramuros) en
1861, cuando los únicos incas incluidos fueron Atahualpa y Manco Cápac (Ramón 2013,
p. 24), éstos solamente comenzaron a aparecer y a expandirse por la ciudad a partir de
los años veinte. Este fue el año en que se fundó el distrito obrero de La Victoria. 28 Su plaza central lleva el nombre de Manco Cápac, el supuesto fundador del estado inca, cuyo
origen e identidad fueron tan cuestionados durante el siglo XIX. 29 La estatua de bronce
del mismo inca, obsequiada por la comunidad japonesa de Lima, se encontraba en este
distrito desde 1926 y constituía una “novedad absoluta” no obstante hallarse en un lugar
desplazado–pues estaba lejos del centro–ya que hasta ese entonces se había excluido a
los incas de la topografía de la capital (Ramón 2013, pp. 44-45, 48). Además, los distritos
más céntricos que cuentan con un considerable número de calles con nombres de incas
son Jesús María y Lince, el último de los cuales fue creado en 1936. Pero los distritos con
la gran mayoría de calles con nombres incaicos se encuentran en los conos de la Gran
Lima, donde vive la gente de las clases populares (San Juan de Lurigancho, Independencia, Villa María del Triunfo, Villa El Salvador, Santa Anita). Esta forma de representación
pública de los incas en la capital, está ligada casi exclusivamente a los espacios marginales de la población migrante. En Santa Anita, en el cono este, los primeros migrantes
provenientes de Ayacucho y de Andahuaylas, que huían de la “guerra interna” (antes de
1993), reprodujeron una geografía cultural urbana nombrando a las calles con topónimos
de su tierra de origen.
Podemos hacer otra observación a partir de algunas manifestaciones de antropólogos,
historiadores y artistas en Lima. 30 Se les pidió que dijeran: ¿qué es lo que se podría determinar como la “herencia” de los incas para el Perú de hoy? Entre las diferentes respuestas
también hay coincidencias, generalmente en torno a dos ejes: 1. La imagen del inca es
el mayor legado y uno de los pilares de la nacionalidad peruana actual, que en lugar de
Figure 1 Calles con nombres
incas en Lima. Elaboración: Jasmin
Uhlemann y Lothar Niewald.
27
Agradezco a Jasmin Uhlemann la pesquisa de los nombres de las calles limeñas.
28
Consúltese Ramón (2013, pp. 28 y ss.)
con respecto a la construcción de Santa Beatriz y La Victoria, dos barrios socialmente
opuestos y segregados, como la nueva Lima.
29
Se buscaba su origen ya fuera en China,
ya en Armenia, Egipto o entre los hebreos
(Flores Galindo [1986] 1987, p. 32).
30
Agradezco su participación a Susana
Aldana, Javier Aldana, Sabino Arroyo, Carlos Contreras, Jürgen Golte, Luis Millones,
Kerstin Nowack, Francisco Quiroz, Ricardo
Ramírez, Teresa Vergara, Marina Zuloaga y el
Grupo El Averno Quilca.
Karoline Noack
Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá.
Los incas de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú
29
30
Figure 2 Calles con nombres incas
en Santa Anita. Elaboración: Jasmin
Uhlemann y Lothar Niewald.
Karoline Noack
Figure 3 Avenida y Plaza Manco
Cápac. Elaboración: Jasmin Uhlemann
y Lothar Niewald.
Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá.
Los incas de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú
31
32
dividir une a los peruanos. Es la organización social y política de la comunidad campesina
que ha sobrevivido hasta el día de hoy. El legado incaico equivale a la cultura andina y es
una fuente de identidad nacional que da a los peruanos un sello propio y diferenciador, y
es al mismo tiempo un extenso territorio con fronteras étnicas. Los incas representan la
tecnología, los conocimientos alternativos (sociales, culturales, el equilibrio con el medio
ambiente), la ética y la moral que se reproducen en las comunidades campesinas y en los
migrantes de Lima. 2. Los incas son un sinónimo del fracaso, la incomunicación y de un
fallido intento de inmortalidad. Se les debe asumir como lección, aunque parecería que
estamos condenados a repetir el fracaso. La admiración que se les tiene se debe a que
se les percibe como lo único bueno que ha existido en el Perú, pero no hay ninguna continuidad; esta desconexión tiene como base el prejuicio y el racismo. La mayoría de los
peruanos negamos parte de nuestra identidad. No somos un país integrado.
La idea de que parece “que estamos condenados a repetir el fracaso” (Luis Millones, comunicación personal, noviembre de 2014) implica que en la historia peruana, la utopía
andina sigue siendo la base de la “comunidad imaginada” (Anderson 1996), tal como lo
hemos visto a partir de las voces que invocan la nación unida y la identidad nacional;
Flores Galindo observaba que identidad y utopía son dos dimensiones del mismo problema (Flores Galindo [1986] 1987, p. 15). Pero la utopía andina está quebrada en el régimen
neoliberal actual. En vez de buscar un inca, se está más bien “buscando una Inc.”. El seminario del mismo nombre, según las organizadoras, fue un intento por comprender el Perú
contemporáneo enfocando “el neoliberalismo como régimen cultural” (Cánepa, Méndez y
Ilizarbe 2013). El emprendedurismo según los medios peruanos es una cualidad innata
del incanato (Gisela Cánepa, communicación personal 10.04.14). La paradoja es que al
mismo tiempo que se celebra el emprendedurismo del “hombre andino” en el marco del
neoliberalismo, se argumenta que éste no necesita del estado, a pesar de que el inca es su
encarnación. Se trata entonces de un “emprendedurismo desde abajo y sin estado” (ibid.).
Una última observación que quiero mencionar aquí, se relaciona con el monumento al
inca en la Plaza Manco Cápac en La Victoria. Este distrito, que a comienzos del siglo XX
fue el primer barrio popular de la nueva Lima, es hoy en día, aproximadamente cien años
después, el centro del boom económico de los emprendedores. Parte del régimen cultural neoliberal y de su estética es el “‘asalto popular’ de los espacios públicos” (Ludeña
Urquizo 2013, p. 160), 31 lo que quiere decir “la masificación del arte público” (ibíd.,
p. 160) que corresponde al emprenderismo de abajo. Ludeña subraya que nunca hubo
31
El autor contextualiza los motivos de
este “asalto popular” dentro de la misma
historia peruana reciente (Ludeña Urquizo
2013, pp. 160-161).
Figure 4 Pachacuti y Mama Anavar
en la Plaza Manco Cápac ©Karoline
Noack (noviembre de 2013)
un fenómeno como éste en la historia peruana republicana, excepción hecha del Oncenio
leguiista (ibíd.). En este contexto, no es casualidad que el mayor cambio en la cultura
visual pública se observe en la Plaza Manco Cápac de La Victoria. Es justamente este
lugar el que ha cambiado considerablemente desde 2013. Hoy en día, el monumento al
inca se encuentra encerrado dentro de cuatro muros de concreto y está acompañado por
cuatro parejas incas. Todo eso quiere ser un nuevo “museo a cielo abierto” que costó
cuatro millones de soles (alrededor de un millón de euros; Javier Aldana, comunicación
personal, noviembre de 2013). Como un nuevo emprendedor-creador, el alcalde inició la
obra sin consulta o negociación ciudadana (Ludeña Urquizo 2013, p. 161). 32 Las nuevas
y fabuladas parejas incas del siglo XXI, con sus referencias visuales globales, son figuras
historicistas de fibra de vidrio. Con Ludeña podemos ver esta creación como una forma
ejemplar de una “miseria estética”, una “acentuada degradación [. . .] por el valor de lo
público” (ibid.).
Ludeña menciona que es “el amparo de
un sistema de abierta desregulación normativa desde el punto de vista urbanístico
y artístico compatible con el mandato neoliberal primario, por el cual los alcaldes [. . .]
están facultados para perpetrar cualquier iniciativa sin control alguno bajo el entendido
de que este sistema ‘facilita’ y promueve las
inversiones y la construcción rápida de más
obra urbana (ibid.).”
32
Esta miseria hunde sus raíces en el “dramático y violento enclaustramiento experimentado
por la población en medio de la guerra” [ibíd.] Con la expansión económica subsiguiente y
con nuevos líderes políticos que necesitan legitimarse, los espacios públicos urbanos llegaron a ser “la principal caja de resonancia de formas de desembozado populismo y manipulación social y política”, dentro de un “sistema de abierta desregulación normativa”
urbanística [ibíd.]. Entonces no se trata de ninguna “creación popular” en nuevo atuendo
y con nuevos materiales, sino más bien de un giro privado (del alcalde) hacia el público
34
de las políticas y relaciones económicas dominantes; en suma, del “neoliberalismo como
régimen cultural” (Cánepa, Méndez y Ilizarbe 2013).
Encontramos una situación y cultura visual contrarias en una galería de Barranco, el barrio bohemio de Lima, donde el artista Javier Aldana expuso sus INCAS en febrero de
2014, con otro inca Manco Cápac y además con el inca Pachacútec. Aquí Manco Cápac fue
imaginado como el organizador del pensamiento y Pachacútec como el conquistador del
territorio. El artista los representó de modo abstracto, único y peculiar. Su perfil es anguloso y la madera aserrada con cantos vivos. Se notan los contrastes y las contradicciones
en una forma fracturada como es el Perú de hoy, pero sin melancolía, nos dice el artista.
La “muestra es una reflexión sobre la crisis cultural que nos tiene capturados, que nos
impide identificarnos con nosotros mismos y que altera de manera profunda la herencia.”
Ella representa la “síntesis de una continua sucesión de aportes culturales y [. . .] el gran
legado de una cultura que se mantiene viva. [M]e asisten a la comprensión de lo que una
nación debe de ser” (Javier Aldana, comunicación personal, 25.1.14). Es justamente aquí,
en este espacio social y bohemio, donde se viene buscando un inca vinculándolo a la
búsqueda de la identidad nacional y de modo tan creativo en figuras de madera reciclada,
visualmente tan contrarias a las parejas de incas de material industrial en la Plaza Manco
Cápac de La Victoria. Se trata de una cultura visual capitalina que se encuentra entre las
antípodas del alcalde-emprendedor y la del artista como creadores, entre el público popular del barrio más comercial y el público que cuenta con una educación formal en arte,
dedicado más (incluso) al consumo del arte y a la contemplación.
Conclusiones
Durante siglos, utilizar a los incas en los discursos y espacios públicos, además de en
agendas políticas distintas, fue sumamente tentador tanto en Europa como en el Perú.
Ellos sirven como un plano de proyección abierto entre la utopía (comunismo, socialismo)
y el despotismo (totalitarismo, autocracia, también socialismo). Su apropiación se dio
siempre bajo distintos signos, autores y actores, y en diferentes contextos. Como eco de
la exposición, en los medios de difusión de Alemania, los incas se encontraron encerrados dentro de una formación discursiva consumida por una elite intelectual y económica.
En el Perú, la primera estatua de un inca en la historia de Lima se encuentra encerrada
Karoline Noack
Buscando un Inca de aquí y de allá.
Los incas de nuestro tiempo, Alemania y Lima, Perú
35
desde hace poco en un “museo a cielo abierto”, multiplicada en el espacio hoy céntrico
de un público popular y comerciante. La estatua forma parte de un público que considera que la sociedad incaica fue una sociedad justa y distributiva, independientemente
de lo que se escriba en los manuales escolares, algo sobre lo cual Flores Galindo llamó
la atención hace ya casi treinta años. Lo mismo se puede observar en Alemania pero en
sentido contrario, esto es, se describe a los incas en términos de la Guerra Fría y como
crítica a la Unión Soviética–y respectivamente a Rusia–, independientemente de lo que los
académicos publican. La línea que partía desde los primeros utopistas y pasaba por el
marxismo, se interrumpió después de la Primera Guerra Mundial y fue reemplazada por
un perfil conservador, y hasta reaccionario, el cual perduró después de la Segunda Guerra
Mundial. Este rasgo pervive hasta el día de hoy en los medios de difusión, a pesar del gran
interés que el público alemán tiene por la historia de los incas e independientemente del
colapso de la Unión Soviética. En Perú están buscando un inca en el emprenderismo neoliberal creando un nuevo régimen cultural, mientras que en la búsqueda de un inca se está
guardando una utopía de la nación como fuente de identidad, la que tiene su expresión en
el arte, entre otros ámbitos. Esta situación tan ambigua a ambos lados del Atlántico exige
la apertura del tema–también en la prensa alemana–hacia la difícil y compleja realidad
actual peruana en la cual “el inca” está implicado de maneras multifacéticas, mucho más
allá de cualquier presupuesto y certeza que se nutre de un pensamiento anticuado. Es
un trabajo continuo en el que deberían colaborar periodistas, académicos y el público en
general, tanto en el Perú como en Alemania.
36
O b ra s c i t a d a s
O b ra s n o p u b l i c a d a s
Cánepa, Gisela, Cecilia Méndez y Carmen
Ilizarbe (2013), Introducción: Hacia una comprensión del neoliberalismo como régimen
cultural en el Perú , presentado en el Seminario Buscando un Inc. Nuevas subjetividades y
utopías del Perú contemporáneo, Lima: Taller
de Cultura, Persona y Poder del Departamento
de Ciencias Sociales, Pontificia Universidad
Católica del Perú, 21 de noviembre.
http://agenda.pucp.edu.pe/vida-universitaria/
convocatoria-vida-universitaria/buscandoun-inc/, última actualización: 01.06.15.
O b ra s p u b l i c a d a s
Aguirre, Carlos y Charles F. Walker (2010),
Editors’ Introduction, en: In Search of an Inca.
Identity and Utopia in the Andes, por Alberto
Flores Galindo; Carlos Aguirre, Charles F. Walker
y Willie Hiatt (eds. y trads.), Cambridge y
Nueva York: Cambridge University Press,
pp. XIII–XXIX.
Anderson, Benedict (1996), Imagined Communities. Reflections on the Origin and Spread of
Nationalism, London: Verso.
Arbeitsgemeinschaft Lateinamerika e.V. (2013),
Somos Latinoamérica. Lateinamerika daheim
und unterwegs erleben , en: América Latina.
Das Magazin für Lateinamerika 11, p. 65.
Baudin, Louis (1928), L’empire socialiste des
Inka, Paris: Institut d’Ethnologie
(1944), Essais sur le socialisme. I. Les Incas
du Pérou, Paris: Librairie de Médicis, DL.
(1947), Die Inka von Peru , Essen: Dr. Hans
v. Chamier.
(1956), Der sozialistische Staat der Inka ,
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von J.H.W. Dietz.
Flores Galindo, Alberto ([1986] 1987), Buscando un inca. Identidad y utopia en los Andes ,
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Utopia in the Andes, Cambridge y Nueva York:
Cambridge University Press.
Karsten, Rafael (1949), A Totalitarian State of
the Past. The Civilization of the Inca Empire
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zu Exotismus und Orientalismus. Der Islam als
Antithese Europas (1453-1914)? Hg. v. Institut
für Europäische Geschichte (IEG), Mainz (European History Online [EGO]).
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38
S T E FA N I E G Ä N G E R
C O L L E C T I N G I N C A A N T I Q U I T I E S. A N T I Q U A R I A N I S M A N D
T H E I N C A PA S T I N 1 9 T H C E N T U R Y C U S C O
1
Stefanie Gänger
Collecting Inca Antiquities. Antiquarianism and
the Inca Past in 19th Century Cusco
39
Many people are familiar with the opulent collections of Inca material culture held at
the great natural history, art, and ethnological museums in Berlin, Paris, New York, or
Chicago, and have marveled at their extent and the great diversity and exquisiteness of
their holdings. Few are aware, however, that many of these artefacts were not collected
for or by these institutions in the first place. Rather, many of Europe’s and North America’s
great museums are collections of collections, that is, a greater or lesser part of their
holdings incorporate private collections formed by the hands of individuals that were
later acquired on behalf of these grand museums. It was the owners and makers of these
private collections who first sought these things out, categorized them as objects worthy
of archaeological or ethnographic collection and study, and arranged them as displays.
Many of the private collections that are the foundations of the Inca holdings of Peru’s,
Europe’s, and North America’s great public museums today were formed in Peru, in the
decades following the Wars of Independence, in cities like Lima and Puno, but above
all, in the city of Cusco, the former capital of the Inca empire. Travelers who visited
Peru’s southern highlands in the period often noted how common it was among the
elite of Cusco to own a collection, or at least some scattered Inca antiquities, things
they associated with the time before the Spanish conquest. The landed gentry, the
clergy, and the city’s bourgeoisie put antiquities on display in their private mansions,
some in separate museum-salons, others spread out in living rooms, as the French
traveler Laurent Saint-Cricq, better known under his pseudonym Paul Marcoy, relates,
“on the tables and mirror consoles” (Rivera Martínez 2001, p. 362; see also Castelnau
1851, pp. 243-4).
1
This article draws on, and summarizes,
parts of the irst chapter of my dissertation,
which has also been published as a book, and
rewords them for a wider audience (Gänger
2014).
One of the earliest, and perhaps most splendid, Peruvian collections of Inca antiquities
was that formed by Ana María Centeno de Romainville (1817-1874) in the city of Cusco,
begun allegedly as early as 1832, when Centeno was still a teenage girl (García y García
1924, p. 255). A decade or two later, she already owned almost one thousand antiquities,
most of them Inca and from the Cusco area–clay pots, vessels, plates, and whistles, some
wooden jars and figurines, almost three hundred stone antiquities, over two hundred
precious metal plates, adornments, and jewelry, woven tunics made of fine fabrics, and a
mummy, wrapped up in cloth (Catálogo del Museo de la señora Centeno 1876). Centeno’s
city mansion doubled as a museum and a salon, a meeting ground for learned and
polite society. Her parlor attracted and brought together upper-class Cusqueños and the
European and North American travelers who visited Cusco during the mid-19th century.
40
Men like the US diplomat Ephraim George Squier, François de Castelnau, or Paul Marcoy,
all of whom would publish later on Inca ruins and material culture, met in Centeno’s
salon. Centeno was even “kind enough”, as Squier put it, to share both the antiquities
from her collection–she occasionally bestowed one or another upon her visitors–and her
extensive knowledge about them. An educated woman and a prolific reader, many found
her conversation about the antiquities in her collection informed and valuable (Squier
1877, p. 465). 2
Centeno was but one of many who possessed Inca antiquities in the city of Cusco. Her
collection was intertwined with a close-knit network of literate and wealthy citizens
who owned, displayed, and sought to understand the meaning of Inca antiquities. The
foundation of a city museum, the Cusco Museum of Archaeology (Museo Arqueológico
del Cuzco) in 1848, conveys a glimpse of the general possession of Inca antiquities
among a diminutive provincial bourgeoisie. With the Cusco prefect Miguel Medina,
forty of the “most select and important” members of Cusco society contributed “the
best Incan pieces they owned” and “their most valued (preciados) artefacts”. The official
scribe Don Julián Tupay[a]chi, the Cusco tailor Bruno Bolívar, who had made a fortune
as a merchant and moneylender, and Mariano Campos, administrator of the publisher
Imprenta República, were some of those who donated pieces. 3 Travelers’ writings retain
a glimpse of how several of the donors to the Municipal Museum also displayed Inca
antiquities in their mansions. Whereas 20th century archaeology would see mostly
male professionals in Peru, the mid-19th century witnessed a number of learned
women like Centeno among the donors to the Municipal Museum, as well as among
the owners of the more outstanding cabinets. The English geographer Sir Clements
Markham was particularly impressed with the Bennet family’s collection. Mr. Bennet, a
compatriot of Markham’s, had moved to Cusco thirty years earlier and owned “a great
many curiosities”, Inca vessels, stone figures, gold head ornaments, and smooth golden
bracelets. It appears that Bennet adopted his learned interest from his wife, Señora
Astete de Bennet, “a descendant of Pizarro’s warriors”, according to Markham, “steeped
in the traditions and folklore of the Incas, and the traveler’s authority for the sites of
Inca palaces” (Markham 1910, p. 288).
By the 1870s, other salons, like Centeno’s, doubling as museums and forums for learned
debates involving foreigners and locals alike, had emerged in Cusco. José Lucas Caparó
Muñiz established his own collection as a museum in 1877 in his Cusco mansion, where
2
On Centeno’s erudition, see García y
García (1924), p. 254. The German traveler
Gustav Brühl also commented on Centeno’s
museum, in a passage that bears close
resemblance to Squier’s account of his
visit (Brühl 1875-1887, p. 126). Francis
de Castelnau published a widely read
travelogue, in which he refers to Centeno’s
museum, but by the name of her husband,
Romainville (Castelnau 1851, p. 244).
3
For the complete list of the 41 donors,
see Pardo (1948), pp. 123-4.
Stefanie Gänger
4
On the José Lucas Caparó Muñiz collection, see Guevara Gil (1997).
5
For a catalogue of the collection, see Caparó Muñíz (1878).
Several of Caparó Muñíz’s notebooks have
been preserved by his descendant, Armando
Guevara Gil, who was kind enough to give
me permission to use them for my research
(Caparó Muñíz 1878, 1903). For the similarly
diverse proile of English antiquaries, see
Levine (1986), p. 13.
6
7
On Caparó’s library, see Hettner (1889).
For comments by Caparó’s visitors and
disciples, see Tamayo Herrera (1980), p. 137.
8
For the emerging market in Andean
antiquities, and the role of forgery in it, see
Bruhns and Kelker (2009).
9
For instance, Caparó’s niece, Concepción
Saldívar de Palomino, supplied Caparó with
artefacts (Caparó Muñíz 1891).
10
On the Montes collection, see Bauer
(1992), pp. 2-3; Bauer and Stanish (1990).
11
Collecting Inca Antiquities. Antiquarianism and
the Inca Past in 19th Century Cusco
41
it occupied various rooms.4 By 1878, Caparó possessed a collection of five hundred
Peruvian antiquities, containing utensils, vessels, and figurines of both coarse and
precious stones, wooden queros, textiles, fine ceramic vessels and plates, human busts,
metal objects, and wool and cotton textiles. 5 The collection would continue to grow and,
by 1919, shortly before his death, Caparó owned more than two thousand antiquities
(Caparó Muñíz 1919). Caparó was essentially an antiquary of the mid-19th century,
the product of a world that continued to encourage and expect a broad approach and
a wide range of interests. Like his counterparts in England, Spain, or France, Caparó
concentrated his attentions on the locality in which he lived, but engaged in activities
in different areas of study related to the Inca past. Caparó was a prolific excavator
and collector of antiquities. He made drawings of the architectural structures of Inca
ruins, studied linguistic matters related to the Inca past, and compiled local legends. 6
A lawyer and judge, Caparó worked at night on his studies, in the few hours he could
spare from his public duties (Guevara Gil 1997, pp. 170-1). Familiar with the perusal
of written documents “of genealogical proofs and ancient manuscripts” due to his
profession, his work was based on the material culture in his collection, but also on “a
small library”, containing manuscripts, European publications, and “all editions of the
Spanish chroniclers and Quechua grammars”. 7 As with Centeno, foreign travelers and
local students of “Incan history” frequented Caparó’s museum and often sought dialogue
with its owner. Caparó published only very few of his studies in newspapers or journals,
but he read out his manuscripts about Quechua linguistics and Inca archaeology in his
museum to interested visitors (Caparó Muñíz 1905). Several of the key figures in early
20th-century Cusco anthropology and archaeology would subsequently acknowledge
the impact their conversations with Caparó had on them. 8
Incan antiquities were given as presents to one another among friends or family, they
were exchanged among the city’s antiquaries, while they were also, and had been ever
since the conquest, subject to a local and, from the mid-19th century, an expanding
trans-Atlantic market, where they could be sold and purchased. 9 Caparó’s catalogue
documents how he received some antiquities as gifts from relations and acquaintances, 10
how he acquired entire collections “formed by a variety of individuals”, among them
“the opulent collection” formed by the Concha family (Guevara Gil 1997, p. 172), and
how he bartered pieces with other collectors, in particular Emilio Montes, who formed
a grand assemblage of pre-Columbian antiquities from the Cusco area between the
1860s and the 1910s. 11 Carlos Bravo, a La Paz lawyer and linguist, sent his collection
42
to Vilquachino to exchange it for manuscripts (Hettner 1888), while the painter Mariano
Corvacho offered his small collection of stone pots adorned with snakes, precious stone
vessels in the shape of alpacas, mortars, bronze animals, and skulls in exchange for a
lithographic press. 12
Pre-Columbian artefacts had long been unearthed incidentally, in construction or during
agricultural works, but from the mid-19th century, purposeful excavation became
another common means to obtain antiquities in the city of Cusco. Some of the collectors
excavated objects from the ground on their own land, often with the help of the peasants
on whose labor their estates were invariably dependent. The collectors Montesinos and
Quino, the latter a priest, thus discovered objects on their farmland. 13 Antonio Lorena,
the owner of a collection of 150 crania from the Cusco Department, had mostly excavated
by himself in Ollantaytambo or Hillahuamán by 1908 (Lorena 1909, p. 164), while the
Puno collector Miguel Garces, who owned the period’s “largest gold and silver collection”
(Saville 1896) from Titicaca Island, including gold, silver, and bronze llamas, figurines,
and topos, [women’s dress and shawl pins], needles, and bracelets, as well as artefacts
made from turquoise and lapis lazuli (Garces 1896), had ordered digs under his direction
(Secretary of the Natural History Museum 1896). In their catalogues and notebooks, Peru’s
antiquaries leave no record of whether they paid attention to the finds’ contexts, or the
artefacts’ stratigraphic positions in relation to other artefacts in the ground, but it is
improbable that they would have. Prior to the 1890s, Cusco’s learned antiquaries, like
their European and North American visitors, did not generally admit a chronological
depth beyond the Inca past. It was only by that decade that the existence of a pre-Inca
epoch and a deep chronology began to surface as a research question in Cusco. In his
second catalogue, published in 1892, Montes suggested that some artefacts associated
with the Incas might not actually have been made by them, but found in graves and
put to new use by them. Even so, he classified most of his collection as Inca. 14 For
most of the period under consideration, relative chronology was simply not of great
interest to Cusqueños. As the chronicles spoke only of the immediate pre-Columbian
history, the Inca past remained central, even exclusive, to historical narratives about the
precolumbian period in Cusco. As was the case with Germanic, Celtic, or Slavonic life in
European antiquarianism (Sommer 2008, p. 235), the Inca continued to be imagined as
occupying a timeless past, with most of what was known about them condensed into one
single picture.
For comments on Corvacho and his
collection, see Hettner (1889a).
12
13
Montes makes reference to these
excavations in entry number 1221 of his
catalogue (Montes 1892).
His assertions about pre-Inca origin
only appear in the irst two catalogue entries
(Montes 1892).
14
Stefanie Gänger
Collecting Inca Antiquities. Antiquarianism and
the Inca Past in 19th Century Cusco
43
Cusco antiquaries were, however, familiar with a considerable body of knowledge on
Andean material culture, which allowed them to recognize artefacts associated with Inca
culture, to choose them for their collections, and to offer interpretations of the pieces’
meanings. Caparó, for instance, not only grouped artefacts together according to their
material quality–stone, metal, ceramics, or textiles–his collection catalogue also contained
detailed descriptions and a meaningful taxonomy. He had taken up “the scientific, historical
and archaeological study of the Incan antiquities, so [the collection] would serve as a key
to express the [antiquities’] meaning, in order not to say ... ‘little plate’, ‘little vessel’,
as did those ignorant of the objects’ value”, he explained. “It was shameful”, he wrote,
that the antiquities in the National Museum in Lima were exhibited “unsystematically,
without classification” (Caparó Muñiz 1905). Most Cusco antiquaries corresponded in
English or gave academic papers in French, but they were also bilingual in Quechua and
Spanish. 15 They knew the things’ Quechua names–uncus, llicllas, mascapaycha–and had
interpretations to offer on their past and present functions and meanings. Emilio Montes
was aware of the traditional use of keros in pairs, as is evident from a catalogue entry on
a “pair of grand jars or keros” (Montes 1892, entries 563-564). He also identified “hunkos”
(today usually spelled uncus), men’s tunics, among the ancient textiles in his collection
(ibid., entries 801-804).
Emilio Montes, for instance, presented
his paper at the Chicago Congress in French
(Montes 1893) and supplied translations
of Quechua lyrics in his catalogue (Montes
1892, 1893).
15
Some Cusqueños engaged in iconographic “readings” of pre-Columbian artefacts, in a
quest for references to visual and literary sources. They generally preferred to collect
pieces representing motifs, portraits, and scenes, to describe their themes, and seek out
their deeper meanings or content. A kero depicting a combat scene between the “royal
army and the chunchos” was “of great merit because it revealed the clothes and weapons
of those days”; a precious silver topo adorned with human figures worshiping the sun
was “useful” because it gave an “understanding of Incan theogony”; while another kero, “a
splendid object of wood with paintings and incrustation”, unveiled “the dress and some
customs of the Incas in those times of the empire” (ibid., entries 780, 1580). Though
Montes was mistaken in attributing the kero to pre-Columbian times–imperial keros are
covered with regularized geometric forms that, for the most part, bear no visual relation
to objects and beings (Cummins 2002)–his preference for the figurative is characteristic
of his time. The collection of Nicolas Sáenz contained colorful and refined pottery and
textiles, as well as elaborate metal and wooden artefacts from the coast and the southern
Andes of Peru. As with the collection of Montes, in the eyes of their owner, the antiquities
bore deeper meanings and contents: a black Virú vessel depicting a snake biting the
44
tale of a lizard revealed the struggle of “evil genies”; a jug from Casma showed death
playing the drum, “as if to call for the living”; while a vessel from Cusco bore the image
of a warrior, kneeling down, “imploring the protection of the Sun” (Saenz n.d., entries
15, 37, 43). 16 As Montes put it, the “figures” that “adorned” ancient ceramics conveyed to
him and his contemporaries knowledge of “the ceremonies, rites and the nature of those
primitive generations” (Montes 1892, entry 302). In addition to iconographic readings,
Cusco antiquaries also adopted comparative approaches. 17 Montes’ detailed compilations
of descriptions of antiquities that had been excavated or found by his fellow antiquaries
in Europe, Lima, and Cusco, for instance, were grounded in his belief that the more pieces
one juxtaposed, the “wider one’s horizon would be for investigation” (Montes 1892, entry
302). Historians of Peru had hitherto worked “premised upon the imagination and the
fable”, he lamented, and it was only “from a comparative analysis, attentive and rigorous,
of all the objects” that “the history of those times we know nothing about will undoubtedly
see the light with all its splendor” (ibid.).
Cusco antiquaries were proficient in diverse bodies of knowledge. They engaged in
iconographic readings and comparative analysis, cited Quechua nomenclature, and
were well aware of the functions and meanings of the antiquities in their collections.
Contrary to what historians have hitherto assumed, the aesthetic recognition of preColumbian materials was not a phenomenon of the early 20th century. 18 While it is
undeniable that the prevalent perception of American antiquities as art became an
influential discourse in Peru and elsewhere only from the 1920s (Majluf and Wuffarden
1999, p. 23; see also Williams 1985), references to the beauty of Inca material culture, at
least, was already a recurrent motif in the writings of Peruvian antiquaries in the second
half of the 19th century. Collectors explicitly interlinked, and justified, their praise of
the antiquities’ beauty with references to their similarity–in their purity, simple elegance,
and exact dimensions–to classical art. Montes, for instance, remarked how some of the
bottles in his collection “imitate [afectan] the shape of the amphora the Romans used,
disinterred from the ruins of Herculaneum and Pompeii”. In his eyes, Andean ceramics
had reached “a state of perfection that equaled that of Greece or Etruria”. They were
“identical in their shapes, glazes, drawings and reliefs” to classical antiquities (Montes
1892, entries 468-75). Or, as another observer contended, in their “purity” and “elegance”
Inca artefacts could “compete with the best Etruscan vessels” (Zevallos 1897). Montes
referred to the objects in his collection as “very beautiful” [hermosísimo] because of the
I thank Natalia Majluf for making me
aware of this document.
16
On comparative demonstration as an
antiquarian method, see Schnapp (2008), p.
402.
17
For a general discussion of the aesthetic
recognition of American art, see Kubler
(1991).
18
Stefanie Gänger
Collecting Inca Antiquities. Antiquarianism and
the Inca Past in 19th Century Cusco
45
material, colors, drawings, and the exactness in the dimensional representation of humans
and animals. As such, he claimed, the objects resembled the Greek vessels fabricated
under the Roman Empire (Montes 1892). Melquiades Saldívar, author of a commentary
on the Montes collection, likewise delighted in the pieces’ “elegance and fine drawing of
exquisite simplicity”. Recounting the details of a stone mosaic found in Cusco, Saldívar
asserted that the precious object “revealed a high level of civilization that makes ... the
sons of the sun comparable with the opulent peoples of the Orient, with ancient Greece
and the assimilating Rome” (Saldívar, Colunge, and Castillo 1873). As in contemporary
European histories of art, the lens of classicism allowed for the recognition of Inca
aesthetics and cultural significance, rendering Inca artefacts collectibles and “antiquities”
for Cusqueños. 19
See Henrik Karge’s analysis of Franz
Kugler’s Handbuch der Kunstgeschichte
(1842)–a manual of art history–which
included Mexican monuments (Karge 2002,
pp. 330-34).
19
It was only following legislation passed
in 1892 and 1911 that control of the
exportation of antiquities was enforced
in Peru. On protective legislation in Latin
America, see Earle (2007), pp. 27-64.
20
21
On the sale see the correspondence
between the Berlin Museum and Centeno’s
heirs (Romainville 1887).
22
On the sale of the Montes collection, see
Bauer and Stanish (1990).
Various scholars have referred to the
purchase of private collections “in the
provinces” for the Lima National Museum, for
instance, Guevara Gil (1997) and Majluf and
Wufarden (1999).
23
The decades around 1900 witnessed a re-distribution and re-location of antiquities
from Peru to North America and Europe, and within Peru, from private to state-based
collections. The world’s large museums absorbed many of the collections of Inca
antiquities formed in private hands, in cities like Cusco (see Fischer, this volume). At
the time, public museums in Europe and North America were larger than ever before
and objects from all over the world reached them to an unprecedented extent (Alberti
2009; Penny 2002). Several of the most outstanding and prominent private collections
formed in Peru were sold abroad around 1900, mostly to Europe and the United
States, in the absence of an appropriate state policy to hinder exportation. 20 Centeno’s
collection was eventually sold to the Berlin Ethnological Museum 21, Emilio Montes’s to
the Columbian Museum of Chicago 22, Nicolás Sáenz’s to the Chilean National Museum
in 1897 (Hettner 1889c), and Miguel Garcés’s to the American Museum of Natural
History (Bauer and Stanish 1990), to name but a few examples. At the same time, the
Peruvian government began to invest more heavily in public collections, the national
and university museums, above all, and likewise acquired existing private collections
for that purpose. 23 Caparó’s collection was thus to stay in the country, becoming the
foundation for the Museo Arqueológico de la Universidad San Antonio Abad del Cusco
(Guevara Gil 1997).
The sales of these collections abroad, or to public institutions in the country, entailed
the end of an era. They are emblematic of the gradual transition from private amateurism to professionalization and institutionalization, but, paradoxically, also its
persisting legacy. Peruvian antiquaries did not sell Europeans, Cusqueños, and North
46
Americans “raw material” destined to be processed into knowledge in the “centers”.
Their knowledge and expertise was woven into the texture of their collections, bound
up with their selection, composition, and order. Every time we visit collections in Berlin,
Paris, Cusco, Chicago, or New York, their original owners speak to us through them,
grounding our own vision of the Inca past.
Stefanie Gänger
Collecting Inca Antiquities. Antiquarianism and
the Inca Past in 19th Century Cusco
47
R efer en c es C i t ed
U n p u b l i sh ed d o c u men t s
Caparó Muñíz, José Lucas (1887), Apuntes y
tradiciones que se pueden utilizar para la
historia del imperio de los Incas , in: Colección
manuscritos de José Lucás Caparó Muñíz,
Cusco.
(1903), Khipu pre-colombiano , in:
Colección Manuscritos de José Lucas Caparó
Muñíz, Cusco, Estudios especiales de José
Lucas Caparó Muñíz sobre los khipus,
geoglíficos, emblemas, fijos i mudables,
i avisos volantes pre-colombianos.
(1905), Carta a D. Jorge Polar, Ministro
de Justicia, Paruro, 3 de junio , in: Colección
manuscritos de José Lucás Caparó Muñíz,
Cusco. Libro borrador de cartas, artículos
necrológicos, histórico-arqueológicos.
(1919), Catálogo de las antigüedades
incanas que constituyen el Museo Caparó
Muñíz , in: Colección manuscritos de José
Lucás Caparó Muñíz, Cusco.
Garces, Miguel (1896), Inventario, Lima, 11
de junio , in: American Museum of Natural
History, Division of Anthropology Archives,
New York, Bandelier 1896-31.
Hettner, Alfred (1888), Brief an Adolf Bastian,
Arequipa, 17. Dezember , in: Staatliche Museen
zu Berlin, Ethnologisches Museum, Sammlung
Centeno Pars I B. Litt. A.
(1889a) Brief an Adolf Bastian, Cuzco,
7. Mai , in: Staatliche Museen zu Berlin,
Ethnologisches Museum, Sammlung Centeno
Pars I B. Litt. A.
(1889b), Brief an Adolf Bastian, Cuzco,
10. Mai , in: Staatliche Museen zu Berlin,
Ethnologisches Museum, Sammlung Centeno
Pars I B. Litt. A.
(1889c), Brief an Aldolf Bastian, Puno,
25. März , in: Staatliche Museen zu Berlin,
Ethnologisches Museum, Sammlung Centeno
Pars I B. Litt. A.
Romainville, Adolfo (1887), Carta a Adolf
Bastian, Lima, 24 de Septiembre , in: Staatliche
Museen zu Berlin, Ethnologisches Museum,
Sammlung Centeno Pars I b. Litt. A.
Sáenz, Nicolas (n.d.), Catálogo de los objetos
que remite Nicolas Sáenz á la Exposición
Universal de Paris por conducto de la
Comisión Nombrada al efecto por el Supremo
Gobierno, Lima , in: Archivo del Ministerio de
Fomento, Dirección de Obras Públicas, Rimac
pp. 40-110.
Saville, M. H. (1896), A Brief Report on the
Garces Collection , in: American Museum of
Natural History, Division of Anthropology
Archives, New York, Bandelier 1896-31.
Secretary of the Natural History Museum
(1896), Letter to Adolph Bandelier, New York,
n.d. , in: American Museum of Natural History,
Division of Anthropology Archives, New York,
Bandelier 1896-31.
48
R efer en c es C i t ed
Pu b l i c a t i o n s
Alberti, Samuel J.M.M. (2009), Nature
and Culture. Objects, Disciplines and the
Manchester Museum , Manchester and New
York: Manchester University Press.
Bauer, Brian S. (1992), Avances en arqueología
andina , Archivos de Historia Andina 16, Cusco:
Centro de Estudios Regionales Andinos
“Bartolomé de las Casas”.
Bauer, Brian S., and Charles Stanish (1990),
Killke and Killke-Related Pottery from Cuzco,
Peru, in the Field Museum of Natural History ,
in: Fieldiana 15, pp. 1-17.
Brühl, Gustav (1875-1887), Die Culturvölker
Alt-Americas . Cincinnati, OH: Verlag von
Benziger-Bros.
Bruhns, Karen Olsen and Nancy L. Kelker
(2009), Faking the Ancient Andes . Walnut
Creek, CA: Left Coast Press.
Caparó Muñíz, José Lucas (1891), Museo
de Antigüedades Peruanas Precolombinas
pertenecientes al D.D. José Lucas Caparó
Muñíz quien las colectó con afan incesante de
15 años. Cusco: Imprenta de Manuel Florencio
Minauro.
(1878), Colección de antigüedades peruanas , in: El Comercio (Lima), 15, 17, and 18 May.
Castelnau, Francis de (1851), Expédition dans
les parties centrales de L’Amérique du Sud,
de Rio de Janeiro á Lima, et de Lima au Para.
Exécutée par ordre du gouvernement français
pendant les années 1843 á 1847, 6 vols, vol. 4,
Paris: B. Bertrand.
Catálogo del Museo de la Señora Centeno
(1876), Lima: Imprenta de la Merced.
Cummins, Thomas (2002), Toasts with the
Inca. Andean Abstraction and Colonial Images
on Quero Vessels , Ann Arbor, MI: University of
Michigan Press.
Earle, Rebecca (2007), The Return of the
Native. Indians and Myth-Making in Spanish
America , 1810-1930, Durham, NC and London:
Duke University Press.
Fischer, Manuela (2015) The Inca Collection at
the Ethnologisches Museum Berlin. Genesis
and Contexts , Monica Barnes, Inés de Castro,
Javier Lores Espinoza, Doris Kurella, and
Karoline Noack (eds.). Stuttgart: LindenMuseum, Sonderband Tribus 2015,
pp. 48-61.
Gänger, Stefanie (2014), Relics of the Past.
The Collecting and Study of Pre-Columbian
Antiquities in Peru and Chile, 1837-1911 ,
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
García y García, Elvira (1924), Ana María
Zenteno , in: La mujer peruana a través de los
siglos, Lima: Imprenta Americana.
Guevara Gil, Armando (1997), La contribución
de José Lucas Caparó Muñíz a la formación
del Museo Arqueológico de la Universidad del
Cuzco , in: Boletín del Instituto Riva-Agüero
24, pp. 167-226.
Karge, Henrik (2002), El arte americano
antiguo y el canon de la antigüedad clásica.
El nuevo continente en la historiografía del
arte de la primera mitad del siglo XIX , in:
Herencias indígenas, tradiciones europeas y
la mirada europea. Actas del Coloquio de la
Asociación Carl Justi y del Instituto Cervantes
Bremen, del 6 al 9 de abril de 2000, Helga von
Kügelgen (ed.), Frankfurt am Main: VervuertIberoamericana, pp. 315-34.
Kubler, George (1991), Esthetic Recognition
of Ancient Amerindian Art , New Haven and
London: Yale University Press.
Levine, Philippa (1986), The Amateur and the
Professional. Antiquarians, Historians and
Archaeologists in Victorian England, 18381886 , Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Lorena, Antonio (1909), Algunos materiales para
la antropología del Cuzco, in: Boletín de la
Sociedad Geográfica de Lima 25(3), pp. 164-73.
Stefanie Gänger
Majluf, Natalia and Luis Eduardo Wuffarden
(1999), Elena Izcue. El arte precolombino en
la vida moderna , Lima and Madrid: Museo de
Arte de Lima.
Markham, Clements (1910), The Incas of Peru ,
London: Smith, Elder, & Co.
Montes, Emilio (1893), The Antiquity of the
Civilization of Peru . In: International Congress
of Anthropology, C. Staniland Wake (ed.),
Chicago, IL: The Schulte Publishing Company,
pp. 95-99.
(1892), Catálogo del Museo de
Antigüedades Peruanas e Inkaikas de la
Propiedad del Dr. D. Emilio Montes y de
Aldasábal Vasquez de Velasco , Cusco:
Imprenta Manuel F. Minauro.
Pardo, Luis A. (1948), Primer centenario del
Museo Arqueológico de la Universidad del
Cuzco , in: Revista del Instituto y Museo
Arqueológico de la Universidad Nacional del
Cuzco 12, pp. 121-34.
Penny, Glenn H. (2002), Objects of Culture
Ethnology and Ethnographic Museums in
Imperial Germany , Chapel Hill, NC: University
of North Carolina Press.
Rivera Martínez, Edgar (ed.) (2001), Paul
Marcoy. Viaje a través de América del Sur ,
Collecting Inca Antiquities. Antiquarianism and
the Inca Past in 19th Century Cusco
Lima: Instituto Francés de Estudios Andinos
(IFEA).
Saldívar, Melquiades, Angel Enrique Colunge,
and Pablo del Castillo (1873), Antigüedades
peruanas , in: El Correo del Perú, 1 February,
pp. 38-39.
Schnapp, Alain (2008), B etween Antiquarians
and Archaeologists. Continuities and
Ruptures , in: Tim Murray and Christopher
Evans (eds.), Histories of Archaeology. A
Reader in the History of Archaeology, Oxford:
Oxford University Press, pp. 392-405.
Sommer, Ulrike (2008), Choosing Ancestors.
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(eds.), Archives, Ancestors, Practices.
Archaeology in the Light of its History, New
York: Berghahn Books, pp. 233-45.
Squier, Ephraim George (1877), Peru. Incidents
of Travel and Exploration in the Land of the
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49
Primitivist Revolution, in: George W. Stocking
(ed.), Objects and Others. Essays on Museums
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Zevallos, Rosendo A. (1897), Exposición
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24 July.
50
MANUELA FISCHER
T H E I N C A C O L L E C T I O N AT T H E E T H N O LO G I S C H E S M U S E U M B E R L I N .
GENESIS AND CONTEXTS
Manuela Fischer
The Inca Collection at the Ethnologisches Museum Berlin.
Genesis and Contexts
51
The Utopian Empire of the Inca
“In the Peruvian Cordillera it was the beneficent appearance of the Inca, who gathered
the dispersed inhabitants of the mountains under a civilized rule…. The height of
development these cultural states had reached holds great interest for historical studies,
as they had the opportunity to form their nationalities in undisturbed isolation. The
bloom faded soon after the discovery [of the New World] under the pressure of a narrow
fanaticism, and the few remains of their greatness are all the more precious”.1
1
„Auf der peruanischen Cordillere war es
die segensreiche Erscheinung des Inca, der
die zerstreuten Bergbewohner unter einer
gesitteten
Regierungsform
vereinigte….
Die Höhe der Entwicklung zu der diese
Culturstaaten gelangt waren, bietet für die
Geschichtsforschung ein großes Interesse,
da sie in ungestörter Abgeschlossenheit
ihre Nationalität hatten durchbilden können.
Die Blüthe derselben welkte bald nach
der Entdeckung unter dem Druck eines
beschränkten Fanatismus dahin, und die
wenigen Reste, die als alleinige Zeugen ihrer
Größe geblieben sind, müssen uns deshalb
um so werthvoller sein (Bastian 1873, p.1)“.
2
„Cuzco bildete bald den Mittelpunkt eines
mächtigen Reiches. Alljährlich berief dahin
der Inca die Söhne des Sonnengeschlechts;
segenbringend und beglückend durchzog er
die Länder, an der Spitze eines glänzenden
Heeres, das stets seine heilige Person
umgab, aber nur selten der Wafe bedurfte….
Ueberall fügten sich die wilden Stämme
seinem sanften Joche, sie zerbrachen ihre
grimmen Götzen, sie thaten hinweg mit den
blutigen Menschenopfern und wandten sich
dem reinen Cultus der Sonne zu (Bastian
1873, p.5)“.
3
[Tradición] „utópica-liberal en la que
el imperio inca era presentado como una
antigua gran civilización ilustrada“ (Villarías
Robles 2005, p. 116; see also Flores Galindo
2010).
Cusco soon formed the center of a powerful empire. Every year the Inca convened the
sons of the sun lineage. Benevolent and happy, he crossed the lands, at the head of a
magnificent army, which surrounded his sacred person, but which only rarely needed
to make use of their weapons. Everywhere the ierce tribes submitted themselves to his
gentle yoke. They broke their ferocious idols. They stopped their bloody human sacrifice
and turned to the pure cult of the sun (my emphasis).” 2
In Bastian’s words we find already expressed what will be the impetus for the future
program which he will realize only some decades later – the idea of the Americas as a
laboratory for the study of the history of humankind, possible because of its supposed
geographical “undisturbed isolation”, the utopian vision of an ideal state under the reign
of the Inca,3 the peaceful conquest by the Inca as opposed to the “narrow fanaticism”
of the Spanish conquest, and the imposition of a religion of the “pure cult of the sun”
(as opposed to the Catholic religion). Historically, this point of view is pronounced in
the Kulturkampf, a confrontation between the state and the Catholic Church in imperial
Germany during the 1870s. This process finally led to the separation of church and
state, but it was also a confrontation between the cosmopolitan, Protestant, modern
(industrialized) Germany in opposition to the feudal, Catholic, and rural population.
Bastian himself was cosmopolitan (his family were shipowners based in Bremen), as well
as urban and Protestant (Fischer et al. 2007).
This tradition, which presented the Inca state as a utopia, as opposed to the “barbarism”
before and after the Inca era, was based on the “leyenda negra”, which emphasized the
cruelty of the Spanish conquest, as transmitted through the translations of colonial
documents and the works of systhesis by Bastian’s contemporary, the British historian Sir
Clements R. Markham (1830-1916) (Markham 1873, 1892, 1911).
52
Bastian goes on with his vision:
“There is no other people in the history of the world that had suffered such a hard fate
as the Peruvians. No other people were surprised by misfortune so immediately and
undeservedly. They lived peacefully and without worries in the wide cordillera beneath
the shelter of the Inca empire. From far-away Cusco their branches spread to the coast
and the montaña, to Quito and Chile. Careful guardians watered its roots and they were
able to protect themselves from every shake up.
Suddenly, without an augury of an approaching storm, a stroke of lightening smashed the
mighty trunk, when it was just unfolding to its full growth, and destroyed in a moment
the work of a century and drove mature Indians from the order and decorum of wellregulated civic life back to the desert of their former barbarism”. 4
Markam’s work not only influenced Adolf Bastian, but, through Lewis Henry Morgan, it
also had a great impact on the work of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, and, even in
the following generation, on Heinrich Cunow (1862-1936) (Cunow 1896, 1937), Adolphe
Bandelier (1840-1914), and Max Uhle (1856-1944).
The controversy between Markham and the contemporaneous Spanish historian, Marcos
Jiménez de la Espada (1831-1898), who took a more critical approach to the Inca conquest,
divided the Americanist community at the end of the 19th century (Rowe 1963; cf. Villarías
Robles 2005, p. 116). Even Jiménez de la Espada himself openly complained about not
being considered, when he mentions that an erroneous interpretation by Markham had
been accepted by the “influential Adolf Bastian” (Rowe 1963, p. 194; Villarías Robles 2005,
p. 137).
Bastian’s roots in the Romantic philosophy of early German anthropology (Köpping [1983]
2005) obviously favoured his collecting policy in the second half of the 19th century.
As we have seen earlier, related to Inca collections, Bastian insists, “the few remains of
their greatness are all the more precious” (Bastian 1873, p. 1).
However, the influence of the Enlightenment also can be seen in the formulation of Bastian’s
collecting policy in the search for generalized statements of the “elementary ideas”
(Elementargedanken) based on a general archive of material culture, “An unconditional
4
„Wohl kein anderes Volk der Weltgeschichte hat ein so hartes Schicksal zu
beklagen gehabt, als das der Peruaner,
über kein Anderes brach das Unglück so
plötzlich, so unmotiviert herein. Friedlich
und unbekümmert lebten die Völker der
weiten Cordillera unter dem schützenden
Schatten des Incareiches. Fernhin breitete
es von Cuzco seine Äste über die Küste und
die Montaña, nach Quito und Chili, sorgsame
P eger begossen seine Wurzeln und wußten
sich vor jeder Unbilde zu wahren.
Da, ohne ein Vorzeichen des nahenden
Sturmes, fährt ein Blitzstrahl aus heiterem
Himmel und zerschmettert den mächtigen
Stamm, als er sich gerade zu seinem vollsten
Wuchse entfalten wollte, zerstörte in einem
Augenblicke das Werk der Jahrhunderte
und scheuchte die unter Ordnung und Sitte
zum geregelten Staatsleben erwachsenden
Indianer in die Wüste ihrer früheren Barbarei
zurück (Bastian 1873, p. 13)“.
Manuela Fischer
The Inca Collection at the Ethnologisches Museum Berlin.
Genesis and Contexts
53
prerequisite is the complete survey of the whole mental creations of humankind through
time and space, geographical variations and historical influences” (Bastian 1893-1894,
vol. 1, p. 14). 5
„In ‚conditio sine qua non‘ wird der Gesammtüberblick des Menschengeschlechts
verlangt, durch Raum und Zeit, nach geographischen Wandlungen (wie umschrieben) und
die historischen Phasen hindurch (in cultureller Entwicklung (Bastian 1893-1894, vol.
1, p. 14)“.
5
6
„Dem Gedächtnisse Alexander’s von
Humboldt widmet diese psychologischen
Erörterungen, deren Bearbeitung durch die
wohlwollenden Worte ermuthigt wurde, womit der vom Leben Scheidende ihre ersten
Ausführungen noch entgegennahm (Bastian
1860; I)“.
7
Bastian irst worked as an assistant at the
Ethnographische Sammlung as a collaborator
of Leopold von Ledebur. From 1876 he was
director of the Königliches Museum für Völkerkunde, which he had founded three years
earlier.
8
„Ein übermüthiger, aber überall als
Consequenz des Egoismus wiederkehrender
Stolz hat lange den Europäer verleitet, sich
als Ideal des Menschen anzusehen, auf alle
anderen Zeiten verachtend herabzublicken
und jedes Volk, das verschiedene Ansichten
aus seinem Gesellschaftsleben zu gewinnen
wagte, schon deshalb zu verdammen. Er
denkt weder an die weiten Continente,
die noch den Globus bedecken, und wo
unzählige Völker ihre selbständigen Culturen
entwickelten; er erinnert sich nicht der
vielen glänzenden Geschichtsepochen, die
entstanden und vergingen, wenn noch kein
Lichtstrahl der Civilisation in die Barbarei
seiner Wälder gedrungen war (Bastian 1860,
vol. 1, p. 230)“.
There two opposed currents of thought merge, as Klaus-Peter Köpping states in
relationship to this ambitious program of creating the archive of humanity which could
bridge “Two seemingly incompatible epistemological paradigms: the subjective and the
objective, the comparative and the unique, the inner view and the outside analysis, the
general and the particular” (Köpping 1995, p. 75).
Only shortly after Bastian’s return to Europe after travelling for eight years around
the world as a ship’s doctor his programmatic work Der Mensch in der Geschichte. Zur
Begründung einer psychologischen Weltanschauung (Man in History. The Foundation of a
Psychological World-View) was published with a dedication to Alexander von Humboldt
(1769-1859). 6 The world-view expressed in this book equates the natural and the moral
(human) orders. Both Humboldt and Bastian dedicated their lifelong research to these
interdependencies to understand the rules of a (harmonious) cosmos. Bastian adapted
to the field of humanities the methods of the natural sciences and the empirical studies
that he practiced on his long travels (Köpping 2005, p. 78). Bastian’s conviction of the
“psychic unity of humankind” was considered by his contemporaries to be an important
question (Taylor 1905) in a political sense, but it was, first of all, the basis of an
ambitious program as well as the basis of the “science of humankind” (Wissenschaft vom
Menschen) in a liberal tradition. 7 This program contributed to the universal mapping
initiated in the early 19th century (Köpping 2005, p. 29; Pratt 1992).
“Above all, as a consequence of egotism and a reoccurring, arrogant pride, the European
had long been induced to see himself as the ideal man, despising other times, and looking
down on other people who dared to view different ideas about their society with sympathy.
For this reason he condemns them. Neither does he think about the wide continents that
cover the globe, where countless peoples developed their independent cultures, nor does
he remember the many brilliant historical ages, the rising and passing away, when no
beam of the light of civilization had penetrated their barbarian forests“ (Bastian 1860,
vol. 1, p. 230). 8
54
Strategies for the Acquisition of Inca Collections
Bastian began his career 1867 at the Ethnographische Sammlung which, for more than
a decade (since 1856) had been shown in the New Museum (Neues Museum) under the
direction of Leopold von Ledebur. 9 In 1869 Bastian was appointed assistant to the
director (Direktorial-Assistent) and, during the same year, together with Rudolf Virchow
and other scholars, he founded the Berlin Society of Anthropology, Ethnology and
Prehistory (BGAEU) and the associated journal, the Zeitschrift für Ethnologie, which
became a forum of exchange for anyone who was interested in joining the BGAEU (Pohle
and Mahr 1969; Quijada 2005, pp. 193-212). The ambitious program Bastian pursued
consisted in the foundation of the Museum of Ethnology (Ethnologisches Museum)
as an autonomous “Universal Archive of Humanity” and the institutionalization of
anthropology as an academic science at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität in Berlin
(now the Humboldt-Universität).
The earliest collections recorded in the catalogues of the Ethnologisches Museum are
not from the Andean highlands, but are more like souvenirs gathered by members of the
Prussian Navy (Preußische Seehandlung) around the 1830s. It is only with Adolf Bastian’s
journey to the Americas in 1876 that the collection of Inca artefacts was initiated. One
of the main objectives of this travel to Peru in 1875 was to secure the collection of Doña
María Ana Centeno (1816-1874) in Cusco for the Königliches Museum für Völkerkunde in
Berlin. In her lifetime she resisted the sale of her collection, but her heirs seemed willing
to sell, so Bastian decided to travel to Peru immediately after Doña María Ana’s death
(Gänger 2014).
“The most important reason for this voyage in 1875 was the chance to secure the well
known, and long famous archaeological collection owned by Doña María Ana Centeno for
the Berlin Museum. She had ceaselessly worked to complete it, but was unapproachable
for any sale. After her death in 1874 her heirs seemed willing to sell” (Bastian 1889, vol.
3, p. 73). 10
The prices on the “archaeological market” had already risen and, when Bastian arrived
in Lima, he considered them out of reach for the Berlin Museum. This situation was
caused by railroad engineers from the United States who collected for their hometown
museums, and by wealthy Peruvians. This gold flood (Goldfluth) of the previous years
9
In the 17th century the Kunstkammer
was housed in the Berliner Stadtschloss.
From 1856 the collection, which was
named the Ethnographisches Museum, was
exhibited in the Neues Museum (in a space
totaling 750 square meters) together with
the Egyptian and prehistoric collections. In
1873 the Königliches Museum für Völkerkunde was founded. In 1876 Bastian
became the director. Then a new building
was constructed at the Königgrätzer Straße
(today the Stresemannstraße), which opened
to the public in 1886 (Westphal-Hellbusch
1973).
10
„Der nächste Anlaß zu der im Jahre 1875
angetretenen Reise bildete die Aussicht, dass
die allbekannte und altberühmte, aber bisher
Ankaufsverhandlungen unzugängliche Alterthumssammlung in Cuzco, die im Besitz
der Doña Maria Ana Centeno durch deren
unausgesetzte Thätigkeit mehr und mehr
vervollständgt war, vielleicht für das Berliner
Museum gesichert werden möchte, da mit
ihrem, im Jahre 1874 erfolgten, Tode die
Erben einer Veräußerung nicht abgeneigt
schienen“ (Bastian 1889, vol. 3, p. 73).
Manuela Fischer
The Inca Collection at the Ethnologisches Museum Berlin.
Genesis and Contexts
55
Figure 1 Adolf Bastian at the age
of 34 after he returned from his irst
voyage (1850-1858). Wood engraving
by Adolf Neumann (Illustrierte Zeitung,
Leipzig, vol. 35, 1860, 219-222).
11
„Die Aussichten schienen damals nicht
sehr günstig zu liegen, da das Aufstellen von
Alterthümern eine Art Modesache werden zu
wollen schien und sie so, bei der mehrfachen
Nachfrage, auf allen seiten festgehalten
wurden. Die americanischen Ingenieure, die
beim Eisenbahnbau beschäftigt, die Funde
aus erster Hand zu erhalten p egten, sam
melten meistens für die Schulmuseen
ihres Heimathsorte’s und in Lima hatten
manche der während der Gold uth der
letztvergangenen Jahre in unerschöp icher
Reichthumsquelle
schwimmenden
Banquier’s und Kau eute unberechenbare Lieb
haberpreise für ausgewählte Stücke bezahlt,
deren dadurch übermäßig hinausgeschraubte
Preisforderungen zu zahlen um so bedenklicher schien, weil sich bei der voraussichtichen Reaktion umgekehrt wieder der
Markt mit einem „embarras de richesse“ in
Angeboten aus den Trümmern jener dann zerstreuten Sammlungen überschwemmen mag.
Auch bei den Einheimischen inden sich
Privatsammlungen; die eine, besonders durch
Gegenstände aus kostbarem Metall werthvoll,
in den Händen eines Bankdirector’s,
die andere einem Arzte gehörig, einem
leidenschaftlichen Sammler, der sich nur
schwer von einem seiner Stücke getrennt
haben würde, und dann die bekannte Conde
Marin’s (Bastian 1878, vol. 1, pp. 4748)“.
12
In total Bastian stayed in Peru from July,
4th to July, 21th 1875, and September 4th to
October 15th 1875.
made purchases impossible. 11 Bastian decided to leave Peru and go on to Colombia
to collect the more accessible material from the Muisca in the central highlands and
the Cauca Valley (Bastian 1878, vol. 1, p. 47; Bastian 1889, BIII, II. Abtheilung, Nachschrift, p. 73).
As he only stayed two months in Peru 12, Bastian could only purchase a few objects and
receive some gifts. Most of the nearly 2000 South American objects gathered by Bastian
stem from already extant private collections. There was, for example, the nearly forgotten
collection of Manuel B. Ferreyros (1793-1872), previously mentioned by Marcos Jiménez
de la Espada, gathered on his journey in Peru with the Spanish expedition “Comisión
Científica del Pacífico” (1862-1866) (López-Ocón 2000, figure 47).
56
However, it was the ownership of the collection of Doña María Ana Centeno de Romainville 13
which became, in the words of Bastian, “a kind of vital question” for the museum in Berlin.
“For future studies of American archaeology (in particular, and first of all, Peruvian) to
own this collection became a kind of vital question because it stemmed not only from the
actual capital of the Inca in the sierra, but from the seat of the dynasty, while the museum
collections formed part of the conquered empires at the time of the conquest.” 14
It is the provenance of the artefacts from the “actual capital of the Inca”, which made
them so special. However, it would take Bastian more than twelve years of insistence and
the help of the German Embassy in Peru to get the Centeno collection to Berlin.15 The
collection was purchased in 1888 for the price of 48,000 marks. 16 (Acta Centeno, EMB:
075/88, letter from Herrn Emmel Hermanos & Comp., Arequipa, dated 15.11.1888 to
Director General of the Königliches Museum für Völkerkunde in Berlin).
In the meantime, José Mariano Macedo (1823-1894), a well known medical doctor in Lima,
professor at the faculty of medicine of the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos,
founder and president of the Peruvian Medical Society (Sociedad de Medicina en Perú) in
1881, offered his collection, which he considered to be menaced by the War of the Pacific
(1879-1884). 17
In a letter sent to the director of the Berlin Museum, Macedo refers to the current events
of his day, calling them “los desgraciados acontecimientos de mi país” (the unfortunate
events of my country), but, at the same time, he also exerts pressure on those who were
potentially interested, by threatening a public sale of his collection.
14
13
For biographies of María Ana Centeno, see: Clorinda Matto de Turner, María
Ana Centeno de Romainville http://www.
cervantesvirtual.com/servlet/Sirveobras/
06920623155758651932268/p0000003.htm.
(retrieved 22 January 2015; Gänger 2014).
„Und für das künftige Studium der americanischen (im Besonderen zunächst der
peruanischen) Alterthumskunde war der
Besitz dieser Sammlung als eine Art Lebensfrage zu betrachten, weil sie aus dem
eigentlichen Herrschersitz der Inca, aus der
Sierra nicht nur, sondern dem Sitz der Dynastie selber stammte, während die sonst in
den Museen beindlichen Sammlungen vorwiegend den zur Zeit der Entdeckung einverleibten Reichen des Küstengebietes anzugehören p egen“ (Bastian 1889, vol. 3, p. 74).
15
According to the biographical data
provided by Clorinda Matto de Turner (1890,
p. 200) María Ana Centeno was born on the
26th of July, 1816. She was the daughter of
Anselmo Centeno who fought in the War of
Independence, held various political oices,
and was nominated councilor, prefect, and
general commander of the department. Later
he held the oice of the Director and founder
of the irst mint in Peru. María Ana Centeno
married the merchant Pedro Romainville in
1842 and had two sons. She was widowed
in 1847. In 1854 she purchased the Pucuto
inca where she was living. Her archaeological
collection was already famous during her
lifetime. Various scientiic travelers studied
it, among them the Count of Castelnau and
Paul Marcoy, sent by the French Government.
http://www.cervantesvirtual.com/servlet/
SirveObras/06920623155758651932268/
p0000003.htm
16
„Sammlung Centeno ist in gutem Zustand angekommen, Kaufpreis 48,000 mark.
Ihre Rechnung ist von Herrn Isidor Richter am
30.10.1888 an Herrn Gerhard Dauelsberg in
Hamburg gezahlt worden. Es sind Zinsen in
Höhe von 140 Mark angefallen“ (Acta Centeno, EMB: 075/88, letter from Herrn Emmel Hermanos & Comp., Arequipa, dated
15.11.1888 to Director General of the Königliches Museum für Völkerkunde in Berlin).
17
(EMB, Acta Macedo, o. newspaper clipping: De la sección „El Día” de la Opinion Nacional del 17. De agosto de 1874). Macedo was
in Berlin and participated in the meeting of
the BGAEU during which the zoologist Alfred
Nehring expressed thanks for the donation
of mummiied dogs for his comparative studies. These complemented material collected
by Wilhelm Reiss and Alphons Stübel at Ancón
(Nehring 1888). While in Peru Bastian had the
opportunity to visit the Macedo collection in
Lima. In his correspondence from Paris, Macedo recalled the visit and insisted that his collection had increased and been improved considerably since then (EMB, Acta Macedo, s.n.,
carta Macedo a Bastian, Paris, 21 julio 1881).
Manuela Fischer
18
ALEMANIA
Para el Sr. A. Bastian, Paris, julio 21 de 1881
Muy señor mío de mis respetos:
He recibido su estimable carta del 19 y al contestarla puedo indicarle que los desgraciados
acontecimientos de mi país y el temor de que
mi colección de antigüedades peruanas, que
tantos sacriicios me ha costado, hubiera caído
en poder de enemigos, me ha obligado a hacer
este viaje para exponerla en Paris y en Londres
y sólo en el caso de que una Nación o un capitalista me pague lo que estimo por ella, me
resolvería a venderla íntegra. Si no encuentro
quién me la pague bien estoy resuelto a separar
aquellos objetos que no son de facil adquisición y el resto, por el mes de Octubre, proponerla en venta pública (EMB, Acta Macedo, s.n.
carta de Macedo a Bastian, Paris, 21 julio 1881).
19
Macedo refers to photographs of
his collection taken by M. Castillo for the
publication of Charles Wiener’s Pérou et Bolivie
(1880). Categories include: Localités diverses
(various locations) (225-1209), Objets en bois
(wooden objects) (1210-1321), Objets en
pierre (stone objects) (1322-1372), Objets en
cuivre (leather objects) (1373-1421), Objets en
argent (silver objects) (1422-1460), Objets en
or (gold objects) (1461-1464), Objets en nacre
(shell objects) (1466-1468), Tissus (fabrics)
(1469-1505), Momies (mummies) (15061513), Objets provenant des tribus d’Indiens
sauvages de Chanchamayo (objects from the
savage Indians of Chanchamayo) (1514-1574).
In the catalogue there are also uncategorized
objects (1-72) and Recuay objects (73-224).
20
In the 31 years Wilhelm Gretzer lived in
Lima (1872-1903) he gathered approximately 37,000 objects, which were purchased in
1899 under the sponsorship of Arthur Baessler and in 1907 thanks to the sponsorship of
Julius van den Zypen (Eisleb 1973).
21
[Die] „nächste Aufgabe, [ist] denjenigen
Andeutungen geschichtlicher Wege nachzugehen, die auf dieses Hochland einen Ein uss haben ausüben können“ (Bastian 1889, p. 101).
The Inca Collection at the Ethnologisches Museum Berlin.
Genesis and Contexts
57
Germany
To Mr. A. Bastian, Paris, 21 July 1881
Dear sir, with my respect,
I have received your esteemed letter of the 19th and in answering it I can indicate that the
unfortunate events of my country and the fear that my collection of Peruvian antiquities,
which has cost me many sacrifices, had fallen into the hands of enemies, forced me to
make this voyage to exhibit them in Paris and in London and I have resolved that only if a
country or a capitalist pays me what I think they are worth will I sell them as a complete
collection. If I don’t encounter anyone who pays me well I am resolved to separate out
those objects that are not easy to acquire and sell the rest at public auction.18
These “unfortunate events”, mentioned in a letter written to Bastian, refer to the War of
the Pacific (1879-1884), and are the reason for bringing the collection to Europe where
it had already arrived in July 1881, but the negotiations concerning the acquisition for
Berlin would take nearly a year, until April 1882. Albert Voss (1839-1906), assistant to the
director, and the person responsible for the department of prehistory at the Königliches
Museum für Völkerkunde, was in charge of the negotiations. The initial price of 600,000
French francs rapidly was bargained down to 100,000 French francs, which corresponded
at that time to 97,886 marks or 25,000 pounds sterling.
For the final purchase, the sum was disbursed by the business man Werner von Siemens
(1816-1892). The manuscript of the catalogue Macedo sent to Bastian matches the
catalogue published in Paris in 1881 and lists a total of 1574 objects (Macedo 1881). 19
Besides the private collections of Centeno and Macedo, there is the huge collection
of Wilhelm Gretzer (1847-1926) in which Late Horizon material is also present.
Approximately 900 of the 39,439 archaeological items originally in the Gretzer collection
are now at the Ethnologisches Museum in Berlin.20
Until the beginning of the 1890s, there were only amateur collections. No research-based
collections were available. At the 1888 International Congress of Americanists held in
Berlin, Bastian clearly formulates the program to pursue for a better understanding of the
historical connections in the Andean highlands, “The next duty is to follow the indications
of the historical path which may have had an influence on these highlands”. 21
58
Max Uhle was assigned to the Königliches Museum für Völkerkunde’s first expedition
to Tawantinsuyu. He was considered especially suited for this purpose because of his
interests in archaeology and philological studies, and his interest in material culture
and museum collections with an emphasis in the Americanist field. Uhle had recently
finished editing the book on Tiahuanacu written with Alphons Stübel (Stübel and Uhle
1892). He had been already working for seven years at the Dresden museum (1881-1888)
and supported the organization of the International Congress of Americanists in Berlin
(Höflein 2002, p. 6).
The collection Uhle gathered in Argentina and Bolivia contains 380 objects which can be
considered Inca, out of a total of 4640 objects, although they had not been excavated, either.
Uhle would never have the opportunity to work on his collection again and publish it.
In his future academic life he worked with the University of Pennsylvania and with the
support of sponsors based in California. He only came back to Berlin as an old man in
1933. His pioneering research was in areas that were poorly known in those days. This
research is quite well documented, by letters, notebooks, and photographs. 22 Several
scholars, mostly Argentinians with research interests in their country’s Northwest, have
worked with it.
22
His legacy is hosted at the Ibero-Amerikanisches Institut, PK in Berlin.
Reevaluation of the Inca Collections
As an “Archive of Humanity” this collection is subject to a continuous process of
reinterpretation, under which forgotten objects are rediscovered and new questions can
be addressed. There are, for example, the ropes and bridles (sogas y bozales) from the
Uhle collection, which have been studied as a reference collection in the context of the
discovery at the Quebrada de Tucute, Provincia de Jujuy. 23
Within the corpus of quipu, which were published by Bastian (Bastian 1895) and which
have also been intensely studied in the last decades by Gary Urton and other scholars,
there are also artefacts from the 19th century. Interesting in terms of the history of
the collection are the quipolas studied by Carmen Beatriz Loza. 24 The history of these
artefacts is curious, as they were collected before the first Inca quipu was offered to the
23
The more than 140 ropes from the site of
Doncellas, now at the Museo Juan Ambrosetti of the Unversity of Buenos Aires, are made
from the same local materials as the ones in
the Uhle collection (Cortaderia spp. and the
oral stalks of plants from the Festucoidea
subfamily of the Gramineae). The AMS dates
for Doncella correspond to the era just before
the Inca expansion into Northwest Argentina
and, by analogy, may be similar for the items
at the Berlin collection (Pérez de Micou 2012).
24
Quipola is a term which has been created to distinguish artifacts made in the 18th
century out of woolen strings of diferent vivid
colors from knotted strings belonging to Inca
or earlier times (c.f. Loza [1999], pp. 43-44).
Figure 2 Ropes and bridles.
Collection Max Uhle from Argentina.
Ethnologisches Museen der Staatlichen
Museen zu Berlin, PK, V A 11410 a.
museum. Since the 18th century, interest in knot records has been fueled by the novel of
Françoise de Grafigny (1695-1758), Lettres d’une Peruvienne [1747], inspired by Garcilaso
de la Vega, Inca (1609) (Loza 1999, pp. 43-57). There are two collections of quipolas in the
Berlin Museum, the first one provided by the German ambassador to Peru Theodor von
Bunsen in 1872, the second one by Louis Sokoloski in 1877.
Objects of interest for the history of the collections also include historical photographs
which have been acquired since the 1870s. They were initially considered to be mere
illustrations. A digitalization project recognizes the value of these visual objects. Some
of them had been purchased as series, some are illustrations of purchase offerings, while
others were exchanges with peers to share field-work experiences.
Another category of visual objects which has been found virtually abandoned in the
storerooms is the so-called “portraits of the Incas”. This series of 16 “portraits”, including
one of the wife of the Inca, the Coya and one of Pizarro, had been found in the collection
which have not been inventoried. Since they have been restored they have been requested
frequently as loans and have been on exhibit almost continuously.
A selection of the objects in the Berlin collection is now available online at:
www.smb-digital.de
60
Figure 3 Manco Capac from
the series of “Inca portraits”.
Ethnologisches Museen der Staatlichen
Museen zu Berlin, PK, V A 66694.
Manuela Fischer
The Inca Collection at the Ethnologisches Museum Berlin.
Genesis and Contexts
61
The Utopia of a Harmonious Empire?
The long history of the constitution of a collection, changing perspectives, political
decisions, institutions, and places create the frame of any exhibit. After two centuries, the
collections of the Ethnologisches Museum will return to the place where the Kunstkammer
once had been. The struggle to find an accurate vantage point for viewing the history
of the collection, and the various possible complementary readings in a location which
alludes to the German Empire is a challenge. The important Inca collection the founder of
the museum so avidly pursued as a “vital question”, has to be contextualized within the
foundation of the German Empire, considered by the founder of the Königliches Museum
für Völkerkunde; the Inca state as bearing witness to the possibility of a harmonious
empire.
Object-based institutions that produce knowledge and cultural narratives should make
visible how they, themselves, were produced, both in the past and at present. The Berlin
collection was conceived in the 19th century as an archive, so the questions which have
to be asked when looking at an archive should be addressed. A main issue is the political
assumptions according to which the institution organized the collections, stores tangible
objects, and makes them accessible. What is the function of the collections and how are
they made visible around the globe and in the digital field of research?
Since the very beginning, as an institution, the Königliches Museum für Völkerkunde
was dedicated to the production of knowledge. Consequently, its procedures should
reflect the acquisition policy, and should take account of the motives and the ideological
background underlying their genesis. In future presentations, the idea behind making
collections of the past should be visible. Agents and actors, institutions and collectors,
and the way they worked on this archive can sensitize us to the political functions of
knowledge as cultural heritage in a contested field.
62
R efer en c es C i t ed
U n p u b l i sh ed d o c u men t s
P u b l i ca t i o n s
[Archiv Ethnologisches Museum, Staatliche
Museen zu Berlin (EMB)]
Bastian, Adolf (1860), Der Mensch in der Geschichte, vol.1. Leipzig: Verlag von Otto Wigand.
(1873), Die Reste des Incareiches in Peru.
Geographische und ethnologische Bilder, Jena:
Hermann Constenoble.
(1878-1889a), Culturländer des alten Amerika,
vol.3, Berlin: Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung.
(1889), Bedeutung amerikanischer Sammlungen, in: Verhandlungen der Berliner Gesellschaft für Anthropologie, Ethnologie und
Urgeschichte, Sitzung vom 19. Januar 1889,
in: Zeitschrift für Ethnologie, 21, pp. 98-105.
(1893-94), Controversen in der Ethnologie ,
Berlin: Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung.
(1895), Peruanische Quipus, in: Verhandlungen der Berliner Anthropologischen Gesellschaft, 27, p. 96.
[EMB Acta Bastian]
Acta betreffend die Reise des Professors
Dr. Bastian nach Amerika in den Jahren
1875/76. Vom Januar 1875 bis Ende Mai 1878.
Pars I. Bastian 10.
[EMB 475/74]
Museum für Völkerkunde
Acta betreffend die Erwerbung ethnologischer Gegenstände aus Amerika. Vol. 3, vom 1.
Januar 1873 bis Ende September 1876. Pars I.B.
[EMB Acta Macedo]
Museum für Völkerkunde
Acta betreffend die Erwerbung der Sammlung
Macedo, Pars I.B. Litt. J.
[EMB Acta Centeno]
Acta betreffend die Erwerbung der Sammlung
Centeno in Cuzco sowie die Reise des
Dr. Hettner nach Amerika, vol.1, vom 17.
Dezember 1874 bis Ende März 1889. Pars I.B.
Litt. A.
Archive of Humanity. The Origins of German
Anthropology, Hildesheim: Olms.
Flores Galindo, Alberto (2010), In Search of an
Inca. Identity and Utopia in the Andes, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gänger, Stefanie (2014), Relics of the Past.
The Collecting and Study of Pre-Columbian
Antiquities in Peru and Chile, 1837-1911,
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Grafigny, Françoise de (1990 [1747]), Lettres
d’une Peruvienne , Paris: Cotê-femmes.
Höflein, Michael (2002), Leben und Werk Max
Uhles. Eine Bibliografie, Berlin: Ibero-Amerikanisches Institut.
Eisleb, Dieter (1973), Abteilung Amerikanische
Archäologie, in: Krieger, Kurt and Gerd Koch
(eds.), Hundert Jahre Museum für Völkerkunde
Berlin (Baessler-Archiv N.F. XXI), Berlin: Reimer, pp. 175-217.
Köpping, Klaus-Peter ([1983]2005), Adolf Bastian and the Psychic Unity of Mankind. The
Foundations of Anthropology in Nineteenth
Century Germany, Münster: LIT.
(1995), Enlightenment and Romanticism in
the Work of Adolf Bastian. The Historical Roots
Of Anthropology in The Nineteenth Century, in:
Vermeulen, Hans F. and Arturo Alvarez Roldan
(eds.), Fieldwork and Footnotes. Studies in the
History of European Anthropology, London,
New York: Routledge, pp. 75-89.
Fischer, Manuela, Peter Bolz, and Susan Kamel
(eds.) (2007), Adolf Bastian and his Universal
López-Ocón, Leoncio, and Carmen María
Pérez-Montes (eds.) (2000), Marcos Jiménez
Cunow, Heinrich (1896), Die soziale Verfassung
des Inkareichs, Stuttgart: Dietz.
(1937), Geschichte und Kultur des Inkareichs, Amsterdam: Elsevier.
Manuela Fischer
de la Espada (1831-1898). Tras la senda de un
explorador, Madrid: CSIC.
Loza, Carmen Beatriz (1999), Quipus and
Quipo las at the Museum für Völkerkunde,
Berlin. Genesis of a Reference Collection.
1872-1999, in: Baessler-Archiv XLVII (1), Berlin:
Reimer, pp. 39-75.
Macedo, José Mariano (1881), Catalogue
d’objets archéologiques du Pérou de l’ancien
Empire des Incas, Paris: Imprimerie Hispano-américaine.
Markham, Sir Clements R. (1873), Narratives
of the Rites and Laws of the Yncas, London:
Hakluyt Society.
(1892), A History of Peru, New York: Greenwood Press.
(1911), The Incas of Peru. London: Smith,
Elder & Co.
Matto de Turner, Clorinda (1890), Bocetos al
lápiz de americanos célebres, vol. 1, La Bibliotheca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes, La Biblioteca Virtual del Español.
(http:www.cervantesvirtual.com/obra-visor/
bocetos-al-lapiz-de-americanos-celebres-tomo-primero—0/html/ff49ed0e-82b1-11df-acc7002185ce6064_6.html#I_55_), retrieved 22
January 2015.
Nehring, Alfred (1888), Hr. Nehring fügt einige Bemerkungen hinzu über altperuanische
The Inca Collection at the Ethnologisches Museum Berlin.
Genesis and Contexts
Hausthiere, in: Verhandlungen der Berliner Gesellschaft für Anthropologie, Ethnologie und
Urgeschichte 20, p. 335.
Pérez de Micou, Cecilia (2012), Bozales y sogas
de Pueblo Viejo, Quebrada de Tucute (Jujuy,
Argentina), in: Baessler-Archiv 60, Berlin: Reimer,
pp. 57-66.
Pohle, Hermann and Gustav Mahr (eds.) (1969),
Festschrift zum Hundertjährigen Bestehen der
Berliner Gesellschaft für Anthropologie, Ethnologie und Urgeschichte, 1869-1969, Erster
Teil, Fachhistorische Beiträge, Berlin: Verlag
Bruno Heßling.
Pratt, Mary Louise (1992), Imperial Eyes. Travel
Literature and Transculturation, London, New
York: Routledge.
Quijada, Mónica (2005), América Latina en las revistas europeas de antropología desde los inicios
hasta 1880. De la presencia temática a la participación académica, in: López-Ocón, Leoncio, Jean
Pierre Chaumeil, and Ana Verde Casanova (eds.),
Los americanistas del siglo XIX. La construcción
de una comunidad científica internacional, Madrid: Iberoamericana/Vervuert, pp.193-212.
Rowe, John H. ([1946]1963), Inca Culture at the
Time of the Spanish Conquest, in: Steward,
Julien H. (ed.), Handbook of South American
Indians, vol. 2, The Andean Civilizations, New
York: Cooper Square Publications, pp. 183-330.
63
Stübel, Alphons and Max Uhle (1892), Die Ruinenstätte von Tiahuanaco im Hochlande des
alten Peru. Eine kulturgeschichtliche Studie
auf Grund selbststaendiger Aufnahmen, Breslau: C.T. Wiskott.
Taylor, Edward B. (1905), Adolf Bastian, in:
Man 76, pp. 138-142.
Vega, Garcilaso de la, El Inca (1609), Primera
parte de los comentarios reales, qve traten
del origen de los Yncas, reyes qve fveron del
Perv, de sv idolatria, leyes, y gouierno en paz
y en guerra: de sus vidas y conquistas, y de
toto lo que fue aquel imperio y su republica,
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64
ANN H. PETERS
V I S I O N S O F T H E I N C A D Y N A S T Y.
N A R R AT I V E S T Y L E S , E M B L E M AT I C D R E S S A N D
T H E P O W E R O F A N C E S TO R S
Ann H. Peters
Visions of the Inca Dynasty.
Narrative Styles, Emblematic Dress and the Power of Ancestors
65
A dynasty of Inca rulers is remembered, described and represented in colonial texts
and images. There are no accessible prehispanic sources, as khipu coding of historic
narratives has been more difficult to decipher than administrative records (Quilter and
Urton 2002). Inca art is highly symbolic, composed of figures that represent conceptual
categories, as opposed to the highly iconic western imagery that seeks to evoke particular
persons, animals, objects, or places and there is no extant evidence that carved or painted
likenesses of Inca rulers were produced prior to the colonial period. Inca historic narratives
were probably diverse and contested, based on the interests of each descent group, but
official versions established by a commission of elder authorities were developed after
the death of each ruler and maintained by certain khipu kamayuq, masters of record
keeping in knotted cords. As in the documented oral histories of other Andean peoples,
Inca narratives incorporate recurrent mythic themes, in which heroic powers and natural
forces manifest in each particular regional landscape and political actor.
The Inca discourse about their place in Andean history and social geography asserts that
a series of wise Inca rulers invented the principal institutions of civilization and government. But to what extent are Inca practices and institutions unique, and to what extent
are they an explicitly codified variant of well established social and political practices
shared by contemporary and previous Andean polities? My approach to addressing these
questions draws on my own research specialty analyzing elaborate dress and regalia
wrapped around the preserved bodies of socio-political leaders from about 2000 BP in the
mortuary tradition known as Paracas Necropolis.
The Quechua suix –kuna marks plural,
in this discussion largely used to describe
groups of people of a particular social category.
1
Sixteenth century narratives describe the Incas as a dynasty and society where all political
relationships and roles were defined based on kinship, both descent and marriage alliance.
Like some dynasties of ancient Egypt, the Inca ruling couple, Sapa Inca (called by Guaman
Poma Qhapaq Apu Inca) and Quya, were defined ideally as brother and sister as well as
man and wife. Subject polities were linked to the Inca ruler through marriage exchange,
which gave the Inca the labor and reproductive power of many secondary wives. Their
sons were called the awkikuna, the warriors, while their daughters were the ñustakuna, to
be given as wives of the next generation of principal kuraka leaders. 1 Trusted allies and inlaws could be declared “Incas by Privilege” and would take on positions of responsibility
in the management and expansion of the empire. The elite Inca women, the pallakuna,
were under the leadership of the Quya and doubtless essential to the political strategies
of rule, though the chronicles lack explanations and stories like those told about Inca
66
men. The institution of the aqllakuna, selected women who served the Sun temples and
Inca, expanded exchange relationships with a wider range of elite families and provided
a huge women’s labor force for hospitality and textile production.
A descent group founded by each Sapa Inca and Quya became the panaqa who managed
their estates and cared for the richly dressed mummified body of each ruling Inca, as well
as a dressed stone wawki “brother”, who stood in for the Inca, in life or after death, on
occasions when the ruler could not be physically present. At the same time, each ruler
is said to found an ayllu, a corporate kindred of hurin Cusco, the lower half, or hanan
Cusco, the upper half. The ritual and political power of the mummies of prior rulers and
their continuing agency expressed through panaqa interpreters played a key role in the
political relations among the Inca descent groups, and occasionally intervened in the
affairs of empire.
This particular kinship system, interaction with deceased forebears and relationship to
the ruling order are generally considered unique to the Inca, largely because we lack
information on earlier Andean polities. In descriptions written by or for Spaniards,
Iberian concepts of kinship and rule intervene, distorting the connotations of kin terms
and clouding their relationship to normative practice or lived experience. The narratives
about each Inca ruler include assertions about family relationships connected to their
political strategies and achievements, but the names of persons, the character of the
relationships, and the events described vary among the chronicles.
The earliest extant portrait-style depictions of the Inca rulers come from two related
sources, the pre-1615 manuscript of Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala, and a contemporary
manuscript produced for, and partly by, the Mercedarian friar Martín de Murúa (Galvin
Codex, Murúa [ca. 1590-98] 2004). Guaman Poma appears to have worked for Murúa,
and may have produced some of the images (Adorno and Boserup 2008, Ossio 2008);
many of the details correspond closely, but the Galvin Codex is incomplete. A second
illustrated version of the Murúa manuscript, the Getty or Wellington Codex (Murúa
[1611-16] 2008) is a more complete copy, but it does not accurately reproduce details
of color and accoutrements. Colonial portraits of the Incas also change over time, in
both the conventions of representation and the elements of dress and regalia depicted
(Barnes 1994; Cummins 1991, 2014). The textual notes and accompanying descriptions
by Guaman Poma are more detailed and systematic than those of the other illustrated
Ann H. Peters
Visions of the Inca Dynasty.
Narrative Styles, Emblematic Dress and the Power of Ancestors
67
manuscripts and portraits with captions, but all refer to analogous categories of
information.
Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala appears to have been a member of an elite family,
kurakas from the Huánuco region of Chinchay Suyo, to the north of Cusco on the route
to Cajamarca. He asserts that his grandfather and father were Incas by Privilege and
his mother an Inca woman of royal descent. In colonial Peru, kuraka heirs were sent to
special schools run by the clergy, where Guaman Poma must have been an outstanding
student as he became fluent in Spanish, familiar with European religious and historic
discourse, skilled in European artistic conventions, and an assistant to clerics involved in
the persecution of idolatry (Adorno 1979, 1989; López-Baralt 1993).
Doubtless as a result of this experience, Guaman Poma later wrote and illustrated a
document of over a thousand pages, with some 350 pages describing Inca and Andean
history and customs and some 310 pages describing the abuses of the colonial system
(Guaman Poma de Ayala, [ca. 1615] 1980). 2 The rest of the document places the Andean
history in the context of biblical and European history, summarizes personages and events
of the Conquest, civil wars, and early colonial administration, and recommends practices
of good government for colonial and Andean authorities. Although the manuscript
is directed to both Spanish and Andean readers, Guaman Poma dedicated it to King
Felipe III of Spain and dispatched it in 1616, or perhaps a little later (Adorno 2002,
accessed 4 February 2015). Eventually it became part of the Royal Library of Denmark. 3
2
All texts cited from Guaman Poma ([ca.
1615] 1980) are translations by this author.
Quechua terms, other than names, are
spelled according to their interpretation and
transcription by Urioste in that volume.
3
See The Guaman Poma Website,
http://www.kb.dk/permalink/2006/poma/
info/en/frontpage.htm, for more information
regarding the history of the manuscript and
images of its pages, including the images
illustrating this article.
The Inca dynasty is described by most 16th century chronicles, and detailed accounts
exist in the early writings of Cieza de León ([1553] 1967), Betanzos ([ca. 1555] 1880), and
Sarmiento ([1572] 1999) as well as a careful later compilation by Cobo ([1653] 1979). Like
Guaman Poma, these chroniclers gathered information from Andean sources, drawing on
a combination of personal relationships and official sources. Julien (2000) has carefully
compared their narratives, and considers that the similarity and differences among them
are probably due to differences among different genres of Inca narratives maintained by
different Cusco descent groups, which would have included details of the achievements of
their direct ancestors and stressed their role in territorial conquest and in establishing the
institutions and procedures of Inca state religion and administration. It is also likely that
there is a similar bias in all these narratives, corresponding to aspects of rule considered
most important by the European observers based on their own political culture.
68
Guaman Poma’s images of Inca rulers closely correspond to his texts, which differ
significantly from descriptions provided by the Spaniards, and are very similar to the
illustrated Murúa text. Julien (ibid.) ascribes this to the fact that these narratives were
composed at the end of the 16th century, and therefore are more distant from Inca
narratives generated prior to the colonial period. I would add that Guaman Poma’s account
is an idealized, “normative” account, which sacrifices the details of events and historic
accuracy in order to stress Andean principles. To compare Inca practice with that of a
smaller regional power some 1500 years earlier, it is helpful to elucidate Andean principles
of social and political leadership, how they have been linked in discourse to concepts of
kinship and descent, and how they have been linked in practice to relationships between
the living and the dead. Guaman Poma’s illustrated text and the Murúa documents that he
partially illustrated, are the most valuable sources for this purpose. Moreover, Guaman
Poma appears to present genres of Inca and Andean narrative not presented by other
chroniclers, albeit filtered through a syncretic colonial perspective.
In Guaman Poma’s account, historic references have been compiled into a common theme
and unified into a mythic narrative. Underlying the moral of this story is the Andean
principle of accomplishment through gender balance and sibling solidarity, a recurrent
theme in Guaman Poma’s description of each generation of Inca rulers. Guaman Poma does
appear to be drawing on a different genre of narrative about Inca rule, told in a different
social context as well as at a later period. One principle expressed is that of gender
complementarity in household management, extended with equal vigor to management
of the affairs of state. United with the principle of sibling solidarity, the ruling couple is
logically considered as both man and wife and brother and sister, and the chosen heirs are
logically considered as their children. Comparisons with the Spanish accounts elucidate
several examples of heirs who do not appear to be biological children of one or both of
the previous ruling couple, but are explicitly asserted to be such by Guaman Poma.
Guaman Poma presents an illustration and narrative for each Qhapaq Apu Inca and Quya
and a third individual (or two) labeled in Spanish as “Captain” but also referred to as
leader of the awkikuna, and described as a son of the ruling couple. Only Guaman Poma
and the closely related Murúa ([c. 1590] 2004) manuscript describe each generation
of rulers as a triad, and Murúa’s subsequently revised ([1590-1598] 2008) manuscript
abandons this information structure. Other Spaniards’ accounts, in contrast, tend to
stress military contributions of the son who goes on to become the next ruler, and to
Ann H. Peters
Visions of the Inca Dynasty.
Narrative Styles, Emblematic Dress and the Power of Ancestors
69
present non-inheriting military leaders in the context of conflict over succession. Guaman
Poma summarizes military accomplishments of each Inca ruler during his father’s reign
and his own, and then separately illustrates and describes the accomplishments of his
Captain(s). For Guaman Poma the awkikuna are a sibling cohort, all the male children of
a ruling Inca, warriors led by those defined as sons of the ruling couple. However, this
definition does not hold for the historic Captains during the reigns of Huayna Capac
and his sons Huascar and Atahuallpa. Guaman Poma’s list of the sons of each ruling
couple and their relationship to the role of Captain of the awkikuna may be as much
an ideological construct as is his list of their sisters and their relationship to the role
of Quya. Rather than reifying the kinship chart as a biological phenomenon, we should
consider that political leadership might have been expressed in the language of kin terms
and ascent to power justified by a restructuring of kin relationships.
Julien (ibid.) hypothesizes two types of pre-conquest narratives about the Inca dynasty,
which she describes as the Genealogical genre and the Life History genre. She considers
that these genres were preserved by the panaqa descent groups and official khipu masters,
and presented on occasions when the mummified and adorned Incas and Quyas were
seated in public to be honored and consulted. She traces evidence for these genres in
detailed comparisons between the narratives produced by different 16th century Spanish
and Andean authors. She also traces some of their oral and textual sources, including lost
manuscripts and accounts originally based on khipu coded information. Guaman Poma’s
text is structured in what Brokaw (1999, 2003) has described as khipu logic, a highly
structured form in which equivalent types of information are provided for a set of social
or political roles, presented in a well-defined sequence.
Guaman Poma illustrates and describes the sequence of Inca rulers, followed by the
sequence of Quya rulers, and the sequence of Captains. The twelfth to fifteenth Captains
are the four male leaders of Tahuantinsuyu, followed by their four Ladies. The Spanish
terms “Capitan,” “Caballero” and “Señora” appear to be used by Guaman Poma to refer
to high status men and women, awki and palla in the Inca descent groups, kuraka if
holding a leadership position in another Andean polity. These roles are soon contested
in the colonial system, and the use of Spanish terms may be linked to Andean claims
to elite status in Spanish political terms. Within each social category, the types of
information presented for all individuals are approximately equivalent, as is the level
of detail. Such an even-handed approach is not characteristic of any early chronicle, but
70
does resemble Cobo’s later narrative based on his interview with Alonso Tupa Atau, an
elderly kuraka of the Cusco region. Both may be examples of a synthetic narrative genre
broadly disseminated among Inca allies, though Cobo’s narrative only includes the types
of information presented by Guaman Poma for each male Inca ruler.
For each Qhapaq Apu Inca and Quya, Guaman Poma presents brief information on
physical appearance, character, accomplishments, marriage, children, death and legacy.
For each Captain of the awkikuna, he presents a summary of military accomplishments in
relationship to those of his father and brothers, and sometimes his death, without further
personal data. Guaman Poma’s texts on men’s accomplishments and legacies appear to be
abbreviated versions of the types of narratives compiled earlier by Spaniards like Cieza,
Betanzos, Polo, and Sarmiento. His information on physical appearance, character, and
family is brief, but more systematic than that recorded by other chroniclers. Entirely
independent from historic accuracy or consistency with other accounts, what is important
about these narratives is their close link to khipu-based data. The texts are of a summary
nature and probably have been compiled from more extensive records. Rather than being
imbedded in the perspective of a particular ayllu or panaqa linked to descent from a
ruling couple, this version of the Inca dynasty was probably an abbreviated version of the
type of official narrative that Cieza asserts was developed after the death of each ruler by
a group of elders and khipu masters.
The presence of equivalent data categories for the Quya rulers is of particular
importance, because this information was seldom recorded by the Spaniards, despite the
importance of Inca women as a source for Cieza and Betanzos. Quya accomplishments
(or lack thereof) are briefly cited in the realms of social networking, organization of
public events, and hospitality–vital contributions to governability in Cusco and beyond.
Unfortunately, Guaman Poma is our principal source for this type of information, and
he does not go on to record women’s roles in his descriptions of social leadership in the
Colonial period. Moreover, Guaman Poma characterizes the building of political alliances
through diplomacy, hospitality, and marriage exchange as “doing nothing,” in contrast
to early Spanish accounts of the importance of these activities, particularly prominent
in the initial growth of Inca power and linked to the Quya’s realm of authority. Political
strategies of alliance building through feasting and gift exchange continued to be central
to Inca construction of empire, and ambivalent political encounters that lead to feasting
or combat are described in Inca narratives of imperial expansion and Spanish narratives
Ann H. Peters
Visions of the Inca Dynasty.
Narrative Styles, Emblematic Dress and the Power of Ancestors
71
of first encounter. The roles of the Quya, the pallakuna, the “Ladies” leading other Andean
polities and their female cohort in organizing and provisioning this aspect of imperial
relationships is not well documented in early Spanish chronicles and virtually disappears
in later colonial discourse. Therefore, the levels of detail provided by Guaman Poma in
the early 17th century probably do not directly correspond to the documentary genres of
a century earlier.
Subtle differences in the style and tone of Guaman Poma’s narrative indicate where
categories of information may have been compiled from different sources. His narratives
linking the character and actions of each ruling couple to their legacy are simultaneously
dispassionate and judgmental. Marked shifts in tone are linked to his descriptions of the
physical appearance of each Qhapaq Apu Inca and Quya, including dress and regalia. His
narrative style is dryer, less judgmental, and focused on accuracy of detail. He appears to
be drawing on a different kind of source for one section of his text on each Qhapaq Apu
Inca and Quya, as well as certain details in the accompanying illustration. Note the shifts
in tone in Guaman Poma’s descriptions of the second and third generation.
Two Rulers of Hurin Cusco.
Guaman Poma describes long-distance conquest much earlier in the Inca dynasty than
do the more detailed narratives compiled by Spaniards, which assert that long distance
conquest was initiated by the tenth Inca ruler, Inca Yupanki, known as Pachakuti. Guaman
Poma includes the names Inca Yupanki and Pachakuti in the list of sons of the first
Inca, Manqu Qhapaq, making them brothers of Sinchi Ruqa. This may be a genealogical
assertion to construct an internally consistent mythic history. Guaman Poma here
depicts the Captain removing the eyes of a Qulla kuraka, wearing emblematic dress like
that of the Captain of Qulla Suyu and his image of a Qulla burial rite ([ca. 1615] 1980,
pp. 148-149, 268-269). The accuracy of his depiction can be confirmed archaeologically,
as similar tunics, neck ornaments, and headdresses have been recovered in high status
burials from the circum-Titicaca region, including the qhapaq hucha mountaintop
sacrifice of a child (ibid., p. 239) on Cerro Plomo, a snow-capped peak in central Chile
(Mostny 1957-1959).
Figure 1a 2nd Qhapaq Apu Inga: Sinchi Ruqa
“A passionate and well mannered man. He had his llautu [headband] of red and his feather tassel
[quitasol], and his tunic red plain weave above, and in the middle three rows of tukapo [ine woven
designs] and below pink, and his mantle light scarlet and in his right hand his kunka kuchuna
[axe] and in his left his stone ring and chanpi [club], and on his feet the four ties. He was a very
gentleman, with a ierce brown face [. . .] This Inca killed the irst legitimate Inca, descendant of
Adam and Eve and of the Wari Wira Qucha Runa, the irst king Tocay Capac, Pinau Capac Inga.”
The original color terms are colorado, rrozado, colorado, and encarnado claro.
Figure: The Royal Library, Copenhagen, GKS 2232 4º: Guaman Poma, Nueva corónica y buen
gobierno (1615), [p.88], [Drawing 26][Segundo Inga, Chinche Roca Inga]
Figure 1b 2nd Quia: Chinbo Urma
“She was very beautiful and brown like [. . .]
her mother. And she was slim, fond of having
bouquets and owers, inkillkuna, in her hands
and having a ower garden. And she was very
peaceable with her subjects.” “And she had her
lliklla [woman‘s mantle] of yellow, and in the
middle dark blue and her aqsu [wrap-around
dress] Maras crimson, and her chumpi [wide
belt] of very deep green.”
The original color terms are amarilla, azul
escuro, encarnado de Maras, and uerde muy
entonada.
Figure: The Royal Library, Copenhagen, GKS
2232 4º: Guaman Poma, Nueva corónica y buen
gobierno (1615), [p.122], [Drawing 40]
[La segunda Coya; Chinbo Urma]
Figure 1c 2nd Captain: Thupa Amaru Inga, and the rest.
“They were brave captains. They conquered and killed and took out the eyes of their enemies,
the leaders of the Qulla Suyo [. . .] He wrought great destruction from Xasxa Uana to Quiqui Xana,
to the Chillques, Acos, and died in the war. And his brother Wari Titu Inca, a ierce captain […]
They fought with the irst Inca Tocay Qhapaq and Pinau Qhapaq Inca, who killed the said brothers
Thupa Amaru, Wari Titu Inca.”
Figure: The Royal Library, Copenhagen, GKS 2232 4º: Guaman Poma, Nueva corónica y buen
gobierno (1615), [p.147], [Drawing 52][El segundo Capitán, Topa Amaro Inga]
73
Figure 2a 4th Qhapaq Apu Inka: Mayta Qhapaq Inca.
“He had his arms and his helmet uma chuco of blue yanas p’aqra [black in appearance], his makha
paycha [royal fringe] and kunka kuchuna [axe], walqanqa [shield], and his mantle [is] scarlet, his
tunic with the upper part blue, in the middle three rows of tukapu [inely woven patterns]; and below
[the] kasane [nested squares pattern] with white and green and red, and four ties on his feet.”
“And he was a very ugly man, in face, feet, hands, and body, very thin, cold, very stingy. Along with
all this, he was very ierce, melancholic.”
The original color terms are azul escuro yanas pacra, encarnado, azul, blanco, uerde, and colorado.
Figure: The Royal Library, Copenhagen, GKS 2232 4º: Guaman Poma, Nueva corónica y buen gobierno
(1615), [p.98], [Drawing 30][El cuarto Inga, Maita Capac Inga]
Figure 2b 4th Quya: Chinbo Mama Yachi Urma.
“She was a bit ugly and brown. She had white
eyes, but her body was splendid and graceful,
an honorable woman, fond of going out to visit
other ruling women and converse with them and
entertain herself with music and dining [. . . ]”
“And her lliklla [woman’s mantle] was orange
and the middle part tokapu [inely woven
patterns] on a red ground, and her aqsu
[wrap-around dress] dark blue.”
he original color terms are naranjado, colorado,
and azul escuro.
Figure: The Royal Library, Copenhagen, GKS
2232 4º: Guaman Poma, Nueva corónica y buen
gobierno (1615), [p.126], [Drawing 42]
[La cuarta Coya, Chinbo Mama Iachi Urma]
Figure 2c 4th Captains: Apu Maytaq Inca, and Willkaq Ynga.
“They were great brave captains, and conquered according to their father’s commands [. . .]
all the province of Charca and Chuquiyapo, Chuquisaca and Potosí, the silver mines and the gold
mines of Kallawaya [. . .] They caused destruction and killed very many people, and destroyed and
established great idols and sacriices, and had temples built. And they had from the city of Cuzco
to the kingdom of Quillau subjected and demarcated. And so ended these captains.”
Figure: The Royal Library, Copenhagen, GKS 2232 4º: Guaman Poma, Nueva corónica y buen
gobierno (1615), [p.151], [Drawing 54][El cuarto Capitán, Apo Maitac Inga]
74
In Guaman Poma’s images, generic Inca dress does not display particular tukapu designs
and layout, as do the specific costume and accoutrements described and illustrated for
each Qhapaq Apu Inca and Quya and depicted, but not described, for the Captains. Generic
Inca dress is archaeologically recorded in burials of men interpreted as having served in
military campaigns or a lower level of the administrative hierarchy (Frame et al. 2004), and of
women (Katterman 2007), some interpreted as aqllakuna or sacrificed women (Ceruti, 2015
[this volume]; Tiballi 2010). Miniature clothing that dresses Inca figurines is one of our best
sources, as it usually reproduces details of color, proportions, and finishes, is well preserved,
and, like the style and ears of the figurines, is an emblematic representation of the Inca.
Non-Inca peoples are depicted with dress closely corresponding to Guaman Poma’s images
of the Captains of each of the four suyus and matching regional references in the narrative.
However, high status male and female dress recovered archaeologically in each of the
four suyus is far more diverse (Frame 2010a; Rowe 2014). This suggests that Guaman
Poma’s illustrations were derived from textual sources and emblematic representations
of Inca and regional dress rather than from images of individuals. Spaniards, including
Cieza, Betanzos, and Sarmiento, describe the Quyas of the second and third generation
as daughters of kurakas from other Inca polities in the Cusco region. Despite Guaman
Poma’s insistence in the literal interpretation of sister marriage, he shows the Quya in the
second generation wearing a dress of Maras crimson, emblematic of the polity associated
with the rival Inca Tocay Pinau Qhapaq.
José Luis Martínez (1995) has analyzed many of the “attributes of the Lord” associated
with Inca rulers, such as the right to sit on a ritual stool (tiyana), to be carried in a
litter or hammock, to hold court throughout the realm, or to be addressed with highly
codified deference based on a higher or lower physical position, burden-bearing, and
the mocha gesture. Martínez shows that these are attributes of leaders throughout the
central Andes and attributes of powerful beings in Andean myths. However, he does not
discuss dress and regalia. Guaman Poma depicts and describes all of these attributes,
but they are not an explicit aspect of his narrative about the sequence of Inca rulers.
The regalia emblematic of male Inca rulers are defined by Rowe (1946, p. 258) as the
braided headband (llautu) and red fringe (maskha paycha), together with the large ear
spools inserted into stretched earlobes. The suntur paucar is a feathered staff tipped
with three large feathers. Guaman Poma shows a fringe and three feathers in varying
Ann H. Peters
Visions of the Inca Dynasty.
Narrative Styles, Emblematic Dress and the Power of Ancestors
75
positions, for example, attached to an Inca warrior’s helmet and weapons. He describes
and depicts a warrior’s club (champi), axe (kunka kuchuna) and shield (walqanqa) in the
hands of most male rulers, and a sling (warak’a) wielded by Pachakuti. A feathered staff
labeled in Spanish as a parasol (quitasol) is shown in connection with the first ruling
couple and four of the later Quyas.
Guaman Poma does not describe or depict the “royal banner or standard” described by
Cobo as:
“a small square pennant, about five or twelve palms around the edge, made
of cotton or wool cloth. It was fixed on the end of a long pole so as to stand
out stiffly and not wave in the wind. Each king had his arms and emblems
painted on it, as each Inca chose different ones, although the most usual for
the Inca lineage were the rainbow and two serpents stretched out the length
of it, parallel with the fringe that served as a crown. To this, each king would
normally add as his emblem and symbol whatever figures he liked, such as a
lion [puma] an eagle and other things. For a fringe this standard had certain
long feathers placed at intervals” (Cobo [1653] 1979, p. 246).
The Murúa document includes an image, apparently drawn by Guaman Poma (Adorno
and Boserup 2008) of the symbols described on this standard for each generation, but
associates it with the Quya.
The regalia, tunic patterns, and the colors of tunic and cloak depicted with each Inca are
specified by Guaman Poma’s text, and in most cases the same associations are depicted in
color in the Murúa document (Monteverde, 2013). The exception is Wayna Qhapaq’s tunic,
specified by Guaman Poma as “green and orange from the middle up, and below blue and
white checkered” but depicted as fully covered with the tukapu motif termed by archaeologists the “Inca key” ([ca. 1615] 1980, pp. 92-93). The corresponding illustration in the
Murúa document (Codex Galvin) has a blurry green tunic unlike the specific forms depicted
for other Inca rulers. Guaman Poma’s description of each Quya’s dress does not include her
headdress, present in some drawings, and does not specify the objects held in her hands,
though they illustrate preferences and activities described in the associated text. The dress
of the Captains is not described in the text, but Guaman Poma illustrates particular Inca
tunic types similar to some archaeologically recovered Late Horizon tunics (Rowe 1979).
76
Mayta Qhapaq wears dress consistent with his warrior character, described in anecdotal
detail by the Spanish chroniclers. The kasana tunic design also is associated in Guaman
Poma’s illustrations with the eighth Captain (son of Pachakuti) and the Auqa Runa, the
male head of household expected to contribute military service to the Incas. The yanas
p’aqra helmet appears as a warrior attribute associated with the earlier bellicose age
of the Auqa Runa as well as Incas engaged in military conquest. Like most of the Quya
rulers, Chinbo Urma is depicted in the company of others not described in the text.
Usually women serve and accompany the Quya, but in this case an elder man carries a
coca bag like that held by the ninth and tenth Quya rulers. This highlights their role in
cultivating social relationships, as well as the importance of coca leaves in Inca ritual,
attributed to the later conquest of Anti Suyo by Inca Ruqa. Once again, Guaman Poma
seems less concerned with depicting historic sequence than principles of rule.
It is likely that the firmly stated, highly codified descriptions of the physique, character,
achievements, consort and heirs of each Qhapaq Apu Inca and each Quya were
memorized in a sequence coded in a khipu. However, Guaman Poma’s account of the Inca
dynasty appears to be based on a summarized version in which logical coherence with
the principles of Inca rule has been achieved at the cost of historic accuracy. Perhaps a
sort of textbook account broadly disseminated among Inca allies, it was reproduced over
decades and its elements may have been condensed, reinterpreted, and reorganized in
that process. The distinctive tone of Guaman Poma’s descriptions of dress and regalia
indicate that these descriptions are drawn from a different kind of narrative, coded on
a different khipu, or perhaps another system, possibly a kind of record also used in
the Colonial period to facilitate the large-scale production in the Andes of religious and
historic imagery according to European conventions and methods.
Are Guaman Poma’s images based on earlier images of the Inca rulers? Painted panels
depicting the Inca and Quya rulers were prepared by orders of Viceroy Toledo, presented
by Sarmiento as part of his consultation with Inca descendants in 1572, and sent to Felipe
II (Markham, in: Sarmiento [1572] 1999, p. ix). Probably, the descriptions of each Inca and
Quya cited by Guaman Poma and used as a basis for the Murúa document also were used
to prepare those panels. Figurative and narrative painting incorporating images of Andean
actors was developed as members of Andean elite families were trained as artists for the
reproduction and dissemination of religious imagery, resulting in the Cusco School of art,
and rites and processions depict Inca descendants in Colonial versions of Inca dress and
Ann H. Peters
Visions of the Inca Dynasty.
Narrative Styles, Emblematic Dress and the Power of Ancestors
77
regalia (Cummins 1991; Dean 1999; Rowe 1979). Emblematic dress associated with each
Inca ruler was preserved and reproduced by the panaqa descent groups in the Colonial
period. Guaman Poma’s depiction of the rulers show some influence from Colonial styles,
particularly in the long dresses represented on each Quya and her attendants.
Sarmiento mentions painted wooden tablets developed by Pachakuti, kept in the house of
the Sun where the principal ritual specialist was also called head storyteller (willaq uma),
and linked to the production of narratives about the lives of the rulers. He stresses that
such narratives were memorized and reproduced within each descent group, including
numeric data coded in khipu form. These panels might represent a form of representation
distinct from all other forms known for the Incas, or might have been composed of the
square tukapu symbols prominent in the dress of each Inca ruler. Brokaw (2014) associates
all with the concept of qillqay, which he understands as a conventional semiotic system
including color and design, translated in early dictionaries as “writing” (Domingo de
Santo Tomás [1560] 2006; Gonzalez Holguín [1608] 1989). Historic narratives associated
with tukapu symbols probably noted their association with each Inca ruler and their use
in emblematic clothing, ceramics and architecture. The highly symbolic nature of Inca art
signals its relationship to verbal referents, connected to principles whose aspects and
connotations would have been explored in narratives of mythic history. So while Guaman
Poma’s drawing were developed in the European representative tradition, he probably
drew on khipu-coded narratives linked to tukapu symbols and designed to facilitate the
reproduction of visual data.
However, the existence of a recording method for visual data does not explain which
details are reproduced in the image of each Qhapaq Apu Inca and each Quya. There is a
difference between the illustration of selected, salient features of the official narrative,
as occurs in the images of the Captains in action, or of the persons, objects, animals,
and plants surrounding the Quya, and the reproduction of named details of dress and
regalia matching an accompanying text. The Inca is said to receive unlimited quantities
of the finest garments as tribute from throughout the realm of Tawantinsuyu and to have
constantly changed his dress, both on ritual occasions and in everyday use. So why would
each Qhapaq Apu Inca be described as wearing a particular color of manto and unku with
a certain tukapu layout, and the Quya be described as wearing a particular aqsu dress
color and lliklla shawl design?
78
A logical possibility is that these sections of narrative refer to the preserved Inca
mummies, wearing emblematic dress developed for them at the time of death. Mallkis are
the physical remains of significant ancestors, preserved, adorned and treated properly
by the representatives of a social group for whom they are important. The seizure and
(probable) destruction of the mummy bundles of Inca rulers by Spanish administrator
Polo de Ondegardo in the 1560s was key to dismantling the continuing power of Inca
descendants in the early colonial period. Under the Extirpation of Idolatry, this destruction
was extended to the ancestors preserved by other Andean regional polities.
Inca and Andean Mummies and the Western Portrait Tradition
When Huayna Capac and his consort Raua Ocllo had died in Quito of an epidemic from
Europe, described as smallpox or measles, they were transported to Cusco seated on a
litter “as if they were alive”, to stave off rebellion. Guaman Poma depicts the deceased
rulers preserved in a lifelike form, fully dressed and with the customary accoutrements
([ca. 1615] 1980, pp. 350-351). His description of Inca burial includes preservation of
both the Inca and his retinue:
They embalmed the body without disturbing it and put the eyes and the face
as if it were alive, and they dressed him in rich garments. They called the
[recently] dead man yllapa [lightning bolt] and the other dead aya [deceased,
ancestor] and they buried them with a great deal of gold and silver. And they
killed all the pages and attendants and women that he was fond of and the
most beloved woman he took to be the lady Quya. They were all embalmed and
placed at his sides. . . ([ca. 1615] 1980, pp. 262-263).
The depiction of a later procession of the body of the honored deceased in the Aya
Marq’ay Killa ceremonies in November shows that a lifelike visaje was not preserved, but
the seated position and sumptuous dress is intact (ibid., pp. 230-231). Guaman Poma may
have seen such a procession as a child, though these customs were not accepted in the
Christian circles in which he later lived and worked. Similarities between the prehispanic
Andean processions and Christian processions of the fully dressed wooden statues of the
Virgin and the saints indicate the complexities of syncretic religion and historic memory.
79
Figure 3a Figure: The Royal Library,
Copenhagen, GKS 2232 4º: Guaman Poma,
Nueva corónica y buen gobierno (1615),
[p.377(379)], [Drawing 151][Defunto Guaina
Capac Inga, Illapa]
Figure 3b Figure: The Royal Library,
Copenhagen, GKS 2232 4º: Guaman Poma,
Nueva corónica y buen gobierno (1615),
[p.287(289)], [Drawing 112][ Capítulo Primero,
Entiero del Inga, Inca Illapa Aia, Defunto]
Figure 3c Figure: The Royal Library,
Copenhagen, GKS 2232 4º: Guaman Poma,
Nueva corónica y buen gobierno (1615),
[p.256(258)], [Drawing 100]
[Nobienbre, Aia Marcai]
80
Guaman Poma would not have seen processions of the mallkis of the Inca rulers, as they
were hidden by the panacas shortly after the conquest until Polo de Ondegardo located
and seized them. In 1560, in Cusco, Inca Garcilaso saw three male and two female bodies
of rulers captured by Polo de Ondegardo in 1560. He was able to view them without
protective wrappings and describes them in the same condition and position depicted by
Guaman Poma:
The bodies were perfectly preserved without the loss of a hair of the head or
brow or an eyelash. They were dressed as they had been in life, with llautus
on their heads but no other ornaments or royal insignia. They were buried in
a sitting position, in a posture often assumed by Indian men and women: their
hands were crossed across their breast, the left over the right, and their eyes
lowered, as if looking at the ground (Garcilaso de la Vega [1609] 1989 [1966],
pt 1, bk 5, ch. 29, p. 307).
The portrait traditions of Mediterranean antiquity are linked to the preservation of the
dead. In Egypt, the preserved body of a ruler was hidden within idealized sarcophagus
images that prioritized the semiotic of rule rather than the particularity of the individual
within. Greek images likewise depicted an ideal, but in contrast the lifelike, individuated
portraits of Rome have their antecedent in the imagines, death masks of wax preserved
by the descendants of a noble family (Flower 1996). Roman painted likenesses spread
in the Ptolemaic period to Egypt, and went on to be characteristic of Christian Coptic
sarcophagi. The development of portrait busts, their use for the dissemination of the
symbolic presence and historic memory of Roman emperors, and the later development
of the oil portrait of the royalty, nobles, and bourgeoisie of Europe created a physical
presence for powerful individuals when they were elsewhere, as well as after death.
The Inca mallkis and the wawqi “brother” image appear to have played an analogous
role. The “idol” described as a counterpart or representative of the Inca has no physical
resemblance to the ruler, and in some cases was a stone carved in the form of a bird,
fish, or serpent. The physical form and its symbolic associations were connected to that
Inca through the indexical significance (Gell 1998) accumulated in the object’s history.
Both the preserved body and the wawqi incorporated physical substance of the ruler,
like a reliquary imbued with the indexical significance of the fragmentary remains of a
sacred or powerful individual, the social associations of the history of custody of those
Ann H. Peters
Visions of the Inca Dynasty.
Narrative Styles, Emblematic Dress and the Power of Ancestors
81
remains and the creation of an ornamental container. A review of the preservation of
seated mallkis in the central Andes demonstrates that the tradition can be traced over
hundreds of years in Paracas, Nasca, Lima, Wari, Ychma, and other regional polities later
conquered by the Incas. 4
Tello’s 1927-28 excavation of the Paracas Necropolis has provided the most completely
recovered, relatively well-documented cemetery population of the Central Andes, with
a large proportion of high status burials (Tello 1959; Tello et al. 2012). Many of the
mortuary bundles looked like huge seated figures, hunched, with mantles draped around
their “shoulders”, and headdresses adorning a “false head.” The scale and organization of
Andean polities changed greatly between Paracas times and the spread of Inca hegemony.
The powerful leaders buried at the Paracas Necropolis were not heads of state per se,
but may correspond to “ethnic lords”, leaders of kinship-based corporate social groups,
analogous to the kuraka, but at this period not imbedded within a state or empire (Peters
2009). The men were buried with weapons, lances, clubs, and feather-ornamented staffs,
different in form from those depicted with each Qhapaq Apu Inca, but similar in function.
High status Paracas women were not buried with tools symbolic of their role in production,
but high status men and women were both adorned with feather, shell, and sheet gold
ornaments that appear to indicate ritual roles in life as well as after death.
4
Extended burials also occur throughout
the central Andes in all historic periods, and
are typical of some polities of the central and
north coast. Mortuary traditions with seated
burials often include artifacts appropriate to
receive oferings.
Watercolor illustrations have been published
in Tello 1959 and Tello et al. 2012, as well as
black and white photographs.
While there is no evidence that Paracas bodies were embalmed, they were carefully
prepared in a seated position and their faces adorned with sheet gold ornaments and
protected by a pad of cotton fiber covered with a cotton cloth. Then the shrouded body
was dressed in a headdress appropriate to its gender and social group–men in tunics,
loincloths, and large mantles, and women in dresses and small mantles. For elders, more
layers were added over time. The outermost layer is dressed with a complex headdress
and one or more mantles, and, for men, a special open-sided tunic, feathered fan, staffs,
and weapons. After the first phase of post-mortem rites, the individual was not visible;
instead he or she was physically preserved by the layers of textiles, and represented
symbolically in the outer visible layer. The Paracas Necropolis mortuary bundle is, at
the same time, a sacred relic, a preserved likeness, and an idealized ancestral image,
analogous on several levels to early Mediterranean portraits (Peters 2010).
In the central Andes, Middle Horizon mortuary bundles were constructed to resemble
seated individuals, topped by wooden masks with shell eyes and headdresses (Flores 2013;
82
Reiss and Stübel 1880-1887). The body of the deceased person is hidden deep within an
oblong, heavily padded bundle. Fine tunics in a Wari style, or a high status regional style,
may be placed over the entire textile bundle to dress an individual in an emblem of their
relationship to that state and empire. Beneath, garments and other fine textiles typically
reflect more local or personal aspects of identity. The south central Andes provides an
excellent record of well-preserved seated mallkis, such as individuals from San Pedro de
Atacama wearing emblematic Tiwanaku tunics and headdresses directly over elements
of regional dress (Rodman 1992). The extraordinarily well-preserved individuals of
the Chiribaya “culture” or regional polity are seated and dressed very much as in life
(Guillén 2003). In one burial, a high-ranking man and male child are dressed in identical
emblematic garments, reminiscent of Guaman Poma’s description and depiction of Inca
Ruqa (Guaman Poma [ca. 1615] 1980, pp. 82-83). These dressed and seated mummies were
ultimately buried within a relatively simple outer layer of wrapping cloths, providing the
nearest analogy to the way the aya of the Incas are depicted by Guaman Poma.
Most Inca-related burials have been found within a multilayer mortuary bundle and a
netlike binding of cordage (Stothert 1979), or an oblong bundle with a well stitched outer
wrapping (Bjerregaard and Von Hagen, 2007; Frame et al., 2004), but the Inca imperial
mortuary tradition appears to be more similar to the examples from earlier societies of
Qulla Suyu and Kunti Suyu. An important group of relatively well-documented contexts
come from qhapaq hucha child sacrifices on snow-capped mountaintops of the Qulla
Suyu and Kunti Suyu regions. The children who have been studied are not Inca in ethnic
origin, but rather appear to be the children of regional Andean kurakas, “ethnic lords”
who have offered their sons and daughters as part of exchange relationships that knotted
a web of political alliances that created and sustained the empire. The children wear
regional dress and have emblematic Inca tunics or other garments on top or folded and
placed alongside (Reinhard and Ceruti 2000; Schobinger 2001). Some of these garments
are honorific or sacrificial, as they may be the wrong gender or size for the child. Male
and female figurines wearing miniature Inca garments are placed nearby, along with
Inca serving vessels and other offerings. These sacrificial burials, preserved in glacial
conditions, come closest to the description of the Inca mallkis.
While archaeologists may never find or identify the bodies of the Inca rulers, it is likely
that the highly codified, consistent descriptions and representations provided by
Guaman Poma of garments, official regalia, and perhaps even Inca Ruqa’s son, refer to
Ann H. Peters
Visions of the Inca Dynasty.
Narrative Styles, Emblematic Dress and the Power of Ancestors
83
the way the Incas were seen and formally described as ancestral mummies rather than
their constantly transforming appearance in life. Textually codified descriptions of Inca
mummies very likely predated their seizure by Polo de Ondegardo, and may also predate
the Spanish invasion and conquest. Guaman Poma’s descriptions and illustrations present
a similar level of detail for Thupa Inca Yupanki, with whom Guaman Poma’s grandfather
had allied, but whose mummy had been reduced to ashes in the dynastic war just before
the Spanish arrived (Guaman Poma [ca. 1615] 1980, pp. 90-91). On the other hand,
absence of systematic description for the Captains suggests that their physical remains
may have been treated differently, and indicates that no documentation was developed
and preserved.
The ruling Inca and Quya, the mallkis actively engaged in the social and political life
of their descendant community, were preserved and dressed like living persons. Based
on the archaeological evidence, other members of the Inca dynasty received similar
treatment to varying degrees, being adorned with emblematic clothing and regalia prior
to being wrapped for storage. Despite an Inca discourse that stressed their distinction
from their close relatives in polities near Cusco and the institutions and customs of sociopolitical leadership in the Central Andes, the preservation of the bodies of Inca rulers,
and the role their finely dressed mortuary bundles played in the lives and politics of
subsequent generations appear rather consistent with the practices of contemporary and
earlier Andean elites. The principles of leadership and rule, as well as the way Qhapaq
Apu Inca and kuraka leaders are remembered, described, and represented, have deep
roots in the south central Andes that predate the development of state institutions and
the more tenuous alliances of empire.
Acknowledgements
I congratulate the organizers of New Perspectives on the Inca for a wonderful conference.
I thank Rodolfo Monteverde Sotil for his observations on cloth, garments, and color in in
the works of Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala and Martín de Murúa, which inspired me to
explore possible motives for the similarities and differences in their representations of
the Inca dynasty.
84
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Visions of the Inca Dynasty.
Narrative Styles, Emblematic Dress and the Power of Ancestors
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88
MONICA BARNES
H O W D I D H U Á N U C O PA M PA B E C O M E A R U I N ?
F R O M T H R I V I N G S E T T L E M E N T TO D I S A P P E A R I N G WA L L S
Monica Barnes
How Did Huánuco Pampa Become a Ruin?
From Thriving Settlement to Disappearing Walls
89
Introduction
Although taphonomy is crucial to the formation of the archaeological record, we can
seldom reconstruct its vectors in detail. However, in rare instances, by employing a
variety of historical and archaeological techniques, we can discover what happened to
an archaeological site from its abandonment until the present. In this article I focus
on a large Inca provincial installation, Huánuco Pampa. I emphasize the processes by
which Huánuco Pampa went from being a thriving Inca imperial center on the main
highland road to a remote ruin disappearing from the landscape. Understanding what
happened to the site in the centuries since its occupation by the Inca is essential to the
reconstruction of its states, functions, and meanings at various points in the past, and
at present.
In 1965 anthropologist John Victor Murra made many changes at Huánuco Pampa with
the help of Peruvian archaeologist Luis Barreda Murillo, North American archaeology
graduate students E. Craig Morris and Daniel E. Shea, Peace Corps volunteers, and local
farmers, including Delfín Zúñiga Díaz who became Craig Morris’s long-term assistant
and companion. These alterations have been under-reported (Murra and Hadden 1966),
but a record of them exists in the archives of the American Museum of Natural History
(AMNH) (Barnes 2013c). The realization that Murra had substantially altered the site
before the independent project of Craig Morris in the 1970s, and subsequent excavations
directed by José Pino Matos, and by Carlo José Alonso Ordóñez Inga motivates my
search for written records and illustrations of Huánuco Pampa that have accumulated
from the 1530s to the 1960s, when John Murra changed it forever. These are sufficiently
numerous and fine–grained to allow me to reconstruct how Huánuco Pampa, once
a great city, has, to a large and increasing extent, been reduced to attenuated piles
of stone.
1
In colonial and early republican times,
Huánuco Pampa was not isolated. It remained
on the main road linking Cusco and Quito,
and was a stop on the Correos, the oicial
mail route (Sobreviela 1790).
Ironically, given the many modifications that Huánuco Pampa has undergone, perhaps
because of its present-day isolation, it has the reputation of being pristine. For example,
John Hemming claimed that, “The tumbled grey stones of the city’s houses and platform
temples lie disturbed only by the deterioration of time . . .” (Hemming 1970, p. 68). Would
that it were so. 1
90
Huánuco Pampa in Inca and Early Colonial Times
In the early 1530s, during the Spanish invasion of the Andes, Huánuco Pampa was a
“new Cusco”, that is, a site with many of the features of Cusco itself, including a sun
temple. This is most likely the structure formerly known as the “Castillo”, which has
been recognized as an ushnu or ritual platform that also functioned as an astronomical
observatory. Serving the sun temple was a large group of acclla, consecrated virgins.
Male priests were also associated with the temple. Sacrifices were made of children, gold,
silver, clothing, feathers, chicha, and food. There was an Inca palace including a ritual
bath. Exceptionally large plazas and numerous great halls (kallankas) were the venues
for grand feasts. Major tambo facilities included accommodation for travelers, corrals
for their llamas, and food and water for both humans and beasts of burden. Huánuco
Pampa was a hub of redistribution. Supplies paid as taxes to the Incas were warehoused
in the hundreds of collcas (storehouses) at and near the site. In addition, Huánuco Pampa
seems to have been a textile production center. All this implies the presence of high
administrators, the military, and chaskis, in addition to the priests and sacred virgins
(Albornoz [1581-1585] 1989, p. 176; Barnes 2013a; Cieza de León [1553] 1962, Chapter
LXXX, p. 229; Guaman Poma de Ayala [ca. 1615] 1980, pp. 161-162, 267, 241, 320, 295,
336, 308, 1087; Morris and Thompson 1985, p. 83-108; Pino M. 2005; Vázquez de Espinosa
[1628] 1972, item 1361, p. 486, item 1565, p. 582).
Huánuco Pampa stands at approximately 3900 meters above sea level, on an extensive
cold plain. It is surrounded by pastures, but is at the upper level for tuber cultivation.
For reasons that had to do with the collapse of the Inca religious, political, economic, and
military systems, Huánuco Pampa was abandoned by most of its indigenous inhabitants
almost immediately upon the arrival of the conquistadores. Although the Iberians tried
to reestablish it as a Spanish town, that effort quickly failed, and the community moved
to the present site of Huánuco some 150 kilometers away. By the early 1600s, cattle
and sheep grazed in and around the ruins and only a hacienda, a minor tambo, and
perhaps a bath were maintained on the site (Vazquez de Espinosa 1942 [1628], item 1361,
p. 486). This was managed by a few families, a situation that continued until recently.
Today, in addition to being a ranch, and a wildlife sanctuary, Huánuco Pampa is a famous
archaeological site, and is once again an active festival center.
Monica Barnes
How Did Huánuco Pampa Become a Ruin?
From Thriving Settlement to Disappearing Walls
91
Figure 1 Fiesta of people from
Chinchaysuyu as celebrated at
Huánuco Pampa and Paucar Pampa.
From Guaman Poma de Ayala (ca.
1615), The Royal Library Copenhagen,
GKS 2232 4º, [p.320(322)], [Drawing
125] [Fiesta de los Chincai Suyo,
Uaucu Taqui, Vacon].
The Destruction of Huánuco Pampa
Among the last people to see Huánuco Pampa in its full Inca splendor were the members
of a joint party led by Atahualpa’s commander Chillicuchima and Hernando Pizarro.
While traveling to Cajamarca, the expedition stopped at Huánuco Pampa, arriving on 28
March 1553 and departing on 31 March. At Huánuco they were entertained splendidly by
Pumahanchis, the center’s lord (Xerez [1534] 1917, pp. 98-99). Celebrations at Huánuco
Pampa were still remembered almost eighty years later when Guaman Poma de Ayala
illustrated a festival dance called Wawku as it was performed there (Guaman Poma
[ca. 1615] 1980, pp. 294-296) (Figure 1). Massive celebrations have been confirmed by
archaeology (Morris et al. 2011, p. 213; Morris and Thompson 1985, pp. 90-91).
92
Warfare
Huánuco Pampa’s position on the main Inca highland road, coupled with its abundance
of stone walls, insured that it was often the site of military action. Significant damage to
the site occurred through warfare, especially in the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries.
This began in the 1530s when Spanish forces pursued Quisquis, one of Atahuallpa’s
generals (Hemming 1970, p. 141). Throughout the 1530s, Spaniards on the Pampa de
Huánuco were harassed by Illathupa, an indigenous warlord (Varallanos 1959, p. 125132). According to Guaman Poma, Huánuco Pampa was burnt during the Spanish Civil
Wars that erupted immediately after the conquest ([ca. 1615] 1980, pp. 441, 390). Indeed,
in some of their excavations Craig Morris and Daniel E. Shea found evidence of burning
around this time, but were unable to date it specifically (Morris 1980, pp. 210-211; Shea
1966, p. 116, 1968, pp. 20, 24-25).
In the Inca palace section of the site, centered around slits and doorways, there is the
kind of spalling of the stonework that would most likely occur if riflemen were trying to
eliminate snipers protected by the palace (see Barnes 2013a for an illustration of this
damage). In addition, a lintel of one of the aligned portals leading to the ushnu plaza
has had a large piece knocked out of it since sometime before 1905 Fig. 15.3 (Paz Soldàn
1906, plate 4; see also Figure 7). This is the kind of damage one would expect from
cannon shot. The fracture planes indicate that the cannon was within the palace, firing
outward in the direction of the ushnu. Artillery damage can, in fact, be seen on the ushnu
walls (Figure 2). Analysis of the battle scars on the stones of Huánuco Pampa should allow
us to plot the positions of the combatants.
When could artillery fire have left its marks on Huánuco Pampa? We have mentioned
the resistance to the Spanish conquest, and the Civil Wars of the mid-16th century.
However, the damage most likely occurred during the nineteenth century. It could have
been sustained at the time of the Indian uprising known as the Revolution of 1812, when
forces opposing Spanish rule were pursued from the city of Huánuco to the area west
of Huánuco Pampa. The site could also have been damaged in 1824 during the Peruvian
War of Independence, when Simon Bolivar marched through Aguamiro (now known as La
Unión), the nearest town to Huánuco Pampa (Varallanos 1959, p. 517).
Monica Barnes
How Did Huánuco Pampa Become a Ruin?
From Thriving Settlement to Disappearing Walls
93
Figure 2 East wall of ushnu, Huánuco
Pampa. August 1965. Gordon Hadden
cuts and burns vegetation growing
on the wall, in preparation for
reconstruction. Pock marks on wall
may have been made by artillery ire.
Photo by John Victor Murra, Rollo 7,
foto 8, John Victor Murra Archive,
Junius Bird Laboratory of South
American Archaeology, Division of
Anthropology, American Museum
of Natural History.
2
Huánuco Pampa is not the only important
archaeological site to have served as a modern battleground. For example, during World
War II, beginning on 9 September 1943, the
ancient Greek colony at Paestum, Italy was
the center of the American sector during the
landing of the Allies in and around the city
of Salerno. Fighting continued for nine days.
One of its temples was used as an American
ield hospital.
http://nuke.montecassinotour.com/OPERA
TIONAVALANCHETHELANDINGATSALERNO/
tabid/86/Default.aspx (accessed 22 April
2015).
I believe, however, that the artillery damage to Huánuco Pampa occurred during the War
of the Pacific when more than six thousand Chilean soldiers pursued Peruvian resistance
fighters from the city of Huánuco, towards Huarás (Varallanos 1959, p. 565). At dawn
on 10 June 1883 the Chileans attacked the Peruvians who had spent the night on the
Pampa de Huánuco. I believe that they sheltered in the ruins of Huánuco Pampa, the most
defensible position in the area. In additional to rifles, cannons and dynamite were used
in the struggle. When the battle was over at about 3:30 P.M. one hundred Peruvians were
dead. Many others were wounded and all the survivors were taken as prisoners to La
Unión where they were executed (Varallanos 1959, p. 562-570). 2
94
Battlefield archaeology, such as that conducted at Little Big Horn in North America
(http://www.friendslittlebighorn.com/Archaeology.htm, accessed 22 March 2015) would
normally be able to test my interpretation. Unfortunately, deposits around the
monumental gateways were removed in 1965, apparently without sieving or detailed
recording, thus limiting the possibilities for future research in areas key to the battle. In
addition, the finds from the 1965 excavations have been lost (Barnes et al. 2012, p. 268,
note 3). Daniel Shea’s discovery of “a piece of gold braid as if from a uniform” during
his excavation of a structure immediately to the southwest of the ushnu is an intriguing
hint (Shea 1968, p. 20).
Figure 3 Aerial photograph of the
central portion of Huánuco Pampa,
c. 1965 [?]. Magenta arrows indicate
buildings in the central plaza which
do not appear on plans of Huánuco
Pampa. Photograph courtesy
of the Servicio Aerofotográico
Nacional (SAN), Perú and the
Junius Bird Laboratory of South
American Archaeology, Division of
Anthropology, American Museum
of Natural History.
Monica Barnes
How Did Huánuco Pampa Become a Ruin?
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Quarrying
Since its abandonment by the Incas, Huánuco Pampa has served as a source of stone.
When Spanish settlers built their new town there, they seem to have done so mostly in
the ushnu plaza. This is usually depicted as empty, but, in fact, there are some thirtyeight standing buildings within it (Morris 1980, p. 211; Morris et al. 2011, p. 62, figure
3.1). In addition, there are other structures that appear on air photographs but which are
apparently not visible from the ground (Figure 3). Although it has never been categorically
demonstrated in excavations (Barnes 2013b; Shea 1968) that these buildings were
Figure 4 Chapel at Huánuco Pampa.
Note Inca ashlars that make up its
foundation and atrium wall. Rollo 3,
foto 11, John Victor Murra Archive,
Junius Bird Laboratory of South
American Archaeology, Division of
Anthropology, American Museum of
Natural History.
96
constructed by the Spanish, Spanish use has been confirmed and the visible structures are
generally understood to represent the first steps towards the establishment of a Spanish
urban grid (Harth-terré 1964, pp. 2, 16, 17; Morris 1980, pp. 211, 213, figures 1, 2; Morris
et al. 2011, pp. 61-77). Assuming this is the case, the Spaniards seem to have looted
stones from the site to build their own houses, rather than simply moving into extant
buildings. Thus, the use of Huánuco Pampa as a quarry began almost immediately upon
its abandonment by the Incas.
This continued through the eighteenth century as indicated by a measured plan executed
by Padre Manuel Sobreviela and Alonso de la Sierra in 1786. Sobreviela and Sierra depict
walls that had disappeared or become very hard to discern by the mid-twentieth century,
but they also show Huánuco Pampa in a ruinous state with roofless and incomplete
buildings (Barnes 2013a, Abb. 15.6). However, north of the Inca palace, there is a cluster
of structures indicated as in use when the plan was made. These include the hacienda
chapel, a building that still exists and which bears a date of 1714 (Figure 4). The chapel
foundation and atrium wall of Inca stones have remained apparently unaltered, except
for some growth of sod around them. Some very long stones are incorporated into the
wall. These seem to be indicated on Sobreviela and Sierra’s plan. Almost certainly they are
lintels removed from Inca buildings at Huánuco Pampa.
The mining of Huánuco Pampa for construction stones can also be seen with the main
stairway to the ushnu platform. In the late eighteenth century, Tadeo Haenke described
the staircase as “. . . de una proporción tan agradable que parece hecha con el mayor arte”
(Haenke [1799] 1901, p. 201). This does not accord with the crudely made steps to the
top of the platform that are evident in John Murra’s earliest photographs, nor with George
Squier’s depiction of what he called “an inclined plane” that fell short of its goal (Squier
1887, p. 217-218).
A study of photographs made by ornithologist John Todd Zimmer in December 1922 and
housed in Chicago’s Field Museum, combined with 1964 field notes by John L. Cotter
and by Donald E. Thompson, reveal what happened to the staircase. A local man, Zósimo
Loyola, reported that in his father’s time the stairs were removed to make a cross for the
Señor de Mayo celebration. Cotter comments that “there is a pile of stone, some cut, at
the southeast corner of the castillo platform, but if this was the site of the ‘cross’ there
are not enough stones to account for the steps” (Cotter 1964, p. 1, cited in Barnes 2013b,
Monica Barnes
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p. 293; see also Thompson 1964, p. 5). However, Zimmer’s photograph of that corner
of the ushnu platform shows a large pile of ashlars supporting a small cross (Barnes
2013b, figure 2). The staircase was further altered during excavation and reconstruction
by Daniel Shea in 1965 (Shea 1966) and by excavations decades later by archaeologists
working for Peru’s Ministerio de Cultura.
The looting of Huánuco Pampa proceeded during the twentieth century. Peruvian engineer
Eduardo Paz Soldàn, who visited the site on 5 June 1905, and who was apparently the
first to publish photographs taken there, stated that many stones had been removed
from buildings in the eastern sector by muleteers who used them to construct corrals for
their animals (Paz Soldàn 1906, p. 100). At the time, mule trains were the only means of
transporting goods across the Andes, and the damage they may have done is considerable.
Peruvian architect Emilio Harth-terré took photographs of the site and made a plan of
the central portion that he published in 1964. He decried the steady damage from his
first visit in 1934 to his fifth in 1960 (Harth-terré 1964). Sadly, a comparison of the many
photographs taken by John Murra and his team in the mid-1960s with what still exists
at the site today makes it clear that much stone has been removed since Harth-terré and
Murra observed it.
Treasure Hunting
In spite of its present remoteness, like almost all major precolumbian sites, Huánuco
Pampa has been damaged by anonymous persons excavating for gold or other treasures.
Perhaps this has been unwittingly encouraged by writers such as Antonio Raimondi who
speculated that Huánuco Pampa contained a system of underground tunnels (Raimondi
1902). Some of the damage occurred prior to 1922 when John Todd Zimmer photographed
the site. A keyhole-shaped gap in the east wall of the ushnu that appears in later photos
had already been made (Figure 5). Daniel Shea observed that Squier’s mid-nineteenth
century illustration of the ushnu is so accurate that it shows a stone missing in the bottom
of the east entrance to the top, but the hole in the wall is not visible (Shea 1968, p. 11).
We can, thus, tentatively date the creation of the breech to after the 1860s, when Squier
saw the ushnu, but before 1922.
98
Figure 5 Hole in the masonry of
the east wall of the ushnu platform
of Huánuco Pampa as it appeared in
August 1965 before being repaired
by John Murra’s team. Rollo 16, foto
7(A), John Victor Murra Archive,
Junius Bird Laboratory of South
American Archaeology, Division of
Anthropology, American Museum of
Natural History.
Much of the huaquero damage to the site is not as obvious today as it is in old photographs,
because it was visually repaired by John Murra’s team in 1965. It is, therefore, difficult
to assess the extent of looting, but Murra’s photos and an unpublished plan by Daniel
Shea, incorporated into his master’s thesis (Shea 1968, figure 10) and preserved as a
copy in the Junius Bird Laboratory in the AMNH indicate some areas where it took place
(Figure 6).
Figure 6 Plan of ushnu, Huánuco
Pampa, showing Daniel E. Shea’s 1965
excavations. Plan courtesy of Jennifer
Shea and the John Victor Murra
Archive, Junius Bird Laboratory of
South American Archaeology, Division
of Anthropology, American Museum of
Natural History.
100
Extirpation of idolatry
Among the most emblematic features of Huánuco Pampa are animals carved on stones
placed in key architectural positions. These include three sets of two facing one another in
profile, executed in bas relief on stones near the lintels of three of the aligned monumental
portals that lead westward from the Inca palace to the ushnu Plaza. The animals are
stylized, and may have been unfinished at the time the site was abandoned. They are,
therefore, hard to identify specifically, but they share features with felines, lizards, and
monkeys. One of these pairs has been literally defaced, with the heads chipped off. This
damage had already been done by 1923 when Zimmer photographed the site (Figure 7).
Other portals in the series are missing stones where figures may once have been.
Four pairs of animals stand butt-to-butt atop the cap-stones flanking the twin entrances
to the top of the ushnu platform. Although wind erosion on these figures at first glance
appears to have been severe, it can be estimated by comparing the earliest known accurate
illustrations with their present state. In 1880, in his book Perou et Bolivie, Charles Wiener
published frontal and lateral views of pairs of these animals. Wiener’s engravings do not
depict clear features on these sculptures, suggesting that they were not crisp when he
made his observations. In 1902, Antonio Raimondi described the animals as “casi destruido
por la intemperie” (Raimondi 1902, p. 400). Photographs of the sculpture were taken by
John Todd Zimmer in 1922, by Donald Collier in 1937, by Pedro Rojas Ponce in 1958,
and by various members of John Murra’s team in the 1960s. 3 Very little erosion appears
to have occurred from the 1880s to the 1960s. A recent photograph shows a healthy
lichen growth, apparently uninhibited by wind. Furthermore, tool marks are visible on
the bodies of the animals. This seems to indicate that their indistinct appearance is not
due to erosion. However, at least one of the animals appears to have had its face knocked
off, perhaps deliberately.
Why would some of these carvings have been damaged, seemingly on purpose? Although
simple vandalism or destruction during warfare is possible, I suggest that the defacement
may have been done during the extirpation of idolatries campaigns carried out in the
Andes in early colonial times. Cristóbal de Albornoz, a prominent cleric who led such
campaigns in Peru in the 1560s and 70s, mentioned the ushnu at Huánuco el Viejo
(Huánuco Pampa) in a context that implies its general importance. He states that it was to
be destroyed (Albornoz [1581-1585] 1989, p. 176). However, it would have been difficult
3
Photos by Collier, Rojas, and Murra’s
team are housed in the Junius Bird Laboratory, AMNH.
Monica Barnes
Figure 7 Portal, Huánuco Pampa
in 1923. Note that a piece of the
lintel has been knocked out.
Photograph CSA4644 by John Todd
Zimmer courtesy of the Field Museum
of Natural History.
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to utterly eliminate the ushnu in an era when this could only have been done by tearing it
down stone-by-stone, or by exploding it with a massive amount of expensive gunpowder.
I suggest that by literally defacing their distinctive, and mostly likely sacred sculptures,
the ushnu and processional route of Huánuco Pampa could have been considered
neutralized.
102
Ranching and farming
From at least the early seventeenth century, until the 1960s, the great halls known as the
North and South Kallankas were used as cattle pens (Vazquez de Espinosa [1628] 1942,
item 1361, p. 486). Deposits within buildings in the Inca Palace section of the site were
exceptionally thick until removed by Murra’s workers, perhaps due to this use.
Because potatoes can be cultivated at Huánuco Pampa, ploughing has disturbed deposits
in many parts of the site. This can be seen in John Murra’s photographs housed in
the Junius Bird Laboratory and photographs by Victor Van Hagen in the AMNH library.
The areas within, and adjacent to, ancient and modern walls are particularly vulnerable
because they are sheltered, and thus make cultivation more feasible.
Figure 8 Pirwa, a storage bundle of
straw, rope, and foodstufs found in
one of the collcas excavated by Craig
Morris in 1965. Photograph by Mahlon
A. Barash.
Monica Barnes
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Although Huánuco Pampa’s famous collcas have been roofless since at least the eighteenth
century, they retained some of their functionality as first described by Craig Morris in
his doctoral dissertation (Morris 1967). Their position on a cool, windy hillside, and
features such as drainage canals, prompted their continued use for storage at least until
the middle of the twentieth century, in spite of their ruinous condition. Within the collcas
Morris observed both ancient and modern pirwas, storage bundles consisting of potatoes
separated and wrapped with straw and fastened with rope. (Morris 1967, pp. 92-93, 9697) (Figure 8). Morris did not clarify how he distinguished between Inca and modern
bundles, but samples of potatoes, maize, and straw from the collcas are housed in the
Junius Bird Laboratory and their ages could, perhaps, be tested by radiocarbon dating.
In July 1964, in one of the collcas that is square in plan, Donald E. Thompson observed a
sort of modern sod hut in which seed potatoes were stored (John Murra Archive, Junius
Bird Laboratory of South American Archaeology, Division of Anthropology, American
Museum of Natural History, Roll 18, photo 4). With this adaptation the Huánuco Pampa
storehouses could continue to be used. The modern storage practices mentioned by
Morris and Thompson provide a means by which recent organic material may have been
introduced into the archaeological site.
Another way in which modern foodstuffs can enter the archaeological record is through
pachamancas, literally “earth pots”. During these traditional Andean picnics, pits are dug
in the ground, lined with straw, filled with meat and tubers, covered with straw and hot
stones or coals, and allowed to cook gradually. Huánuco Pampa has long been a favorite
spot for pachamancas (Shea 1968, p. 23) and continues to be so today.
Archaeological Excavation and Architectural Reconstruction
One the greatest reshapings of Huánuco Pampa occurred in 1965 when, under the overall
direction of John Victor Murra, major portions of the monumental sectors were rapidly
excavated and reconstructed. Work was supported by a grant from the Patronato Nacional
de Arqueología, the Peruvian government entity then responsible for the country’s
prehispanic sites. An evaluation of this work has already been published (Barnes 2013c),
so it will only be summarized here. Excavations and reconstructions occurred in and
104
around the ushnu platform, in the area of the aligned portals, in the bath, in the so-called
“Unfinished Temple”, and in the North Kallanka. Murra’s team also reconstructed and reroofed the best preserved of the storehouses on the Hill of the Collcas, an early project
in experimental archaeology (Barnes 2013a, Abb. 15.9). In addition to reconstructing the
stone walls of Huánuco Pampa, John Murra’s team undertook what he called “limpieza”
or “cleaning” of deposits he thought to be “overburden”. That is, anything from the
ground surface, to what Murra considered to be pristine Inca floors, was removed and
deposited on spoil heaps. Ironically, Murra’s workers were removing and destroying the
very evidence of Inca occupation he hoped to find. Reconstruction and excavation of
Huánuco Pampa continues today under the auspices of Peru’s Ministerio de Cultura (Perú,
Ministerio de Cultura 2014).
Miscellaneous uses of Huánuco Pampa
Over the years Huánuco Pampa has been put to many miscellaneous uses in addition to
the ones already mentioned. Although ranching and tuber cultivation prevent it from
being a pristine natural environment, the area encompassing the site has contributed to
our knowledge of the highland Peruvian flora and fauna. In the 1790s it was visited both
by botanist Tadeo Haenke of the Malaspina Expedition (Haenke [1799] 1901), and by the
Franco-Spanish botanical expedition led by Hipólito Ruíz López and José Antonio Pavón
y Jiménez (Barnes 2008, p. 619). Ornithologist John Todd Zimmer was at the site in 1922
under the auspices of the Captain Marshall Field Expeditions, a broad endeavor in natural
history sponsored by the Field Museum. Huánuco Pampa is still recognized as a wildlife
sanctuary (Perú, Ministerio de Cultura, Qhapaq Ñan ca. 2013).
The main ushnu platform was used in the twentieth century as a cemetery for unbaptized
infants because it was “blessed” (Thompson 1964, p. 5). That is, it was not ground hallowed
officially by the Catholic Church, but it was, nevertheless, viewed as sacred. Therefore, it
is a fit resting place for those who died before they could become Christians. Huánuco is
also the site of traditional offerings. These are deposited in two places, Jirkagarakuna, a
spring, (“Garakuna” means the place where one give gifts) and in the Kushipata, the bath
plaza (ibid.). Huánuco Pampa being a “new Cusco”, perhaps the rites performed there
mirror those of Cusco’s Cusipata.
Monica Barnes
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Clearing of stones from the surface of Huánuco Pampa by John Murra’s team allowed the
site’s vast open spaces to be used as soccer pitches. It has served as a campsite and its
stones have even been used in ad hoc vehicle repairs. No doubt the site has had other
uses that have escaped my scrutiny.
Festivals
As mentioned above, the first known illustration of Huánuco Pampa is by Guaman Poma
de Ayala and depicts a ritual dance. The site remains a venue for celebrations. Peru’s
Ministry of Culture encourages local people to take symbolic ownership by holding
events there (Figure 9). The ritual year is rather full. In May the Señor de Mayo fiesta, the
Feast of the Holy Cross, is celebrated at Huánuco Pampa (personal communication, Carlo
José Alonso Ordóñez Inga, 21 May 2013) as it has been since at least the early twentieth
century (Barnes 2013b).
Every June, for the past seven years, the Ministerio de Cultura’s Qhapaq Ñan project
has sponsored an Encuentro de la Cultura Autóctona de Chinchaysuyu (Meeting of the
Autochthonous Culture of Chinchaysuyu) at Huánuco Pampa. On the first day there are
“Actividades Ancestrales”, traditional tasks held as competitions. On the second day of
the Encuentro there are costumed dances (Perú, Ministerio de Cultura, Qhapaq Ñan 2013).
An Inti Raymi celebration has been re-invented for Huánuco Pampa, following the
reintroduction of that fiesta in Cusco during the early twentieth century. At Huánuco
Pampa this is occurs not during the actual June Solstice, but during the Fiestas Patrias,
Peru’s major national patriotic holiday, July 28 and 29.
In addition to these, every December 8-10, the feast of La Purísima, the Virgin of the
Immaculate Conception, has been celebrated both on the ushnu, and in and around the
colonial chapel, since sometime prior to 1965 when Donald Thompson was told that it was
sponsored by the owner of the hacienda encompassing Huánuco Pampa (Thompson1964,
Sunday, July 12, p. 4). In all of the celebrations held at Huánuco Pampa neo-pagan
elements are incorporated into Christian feasts and Christian elements are blended into
neo-pagan festivals (Figure 9).
106
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107
Conclusion
In a very real sense Huánuco Pampa has regained its position as a place where large
gatherings occur. It has gone from being a thriving ritual center, to a ruin, and then to a
ruin which is, nevertheless, a thriving ritual center. In the meantime, much of its form
has been altered, and even destroyed. It is important to keep this in mind when thinking
about the site as it was in Inca times. The changes Huánuco Pampa has undergone are
paradigmatic of those at other Andean sites whose colonial and republican histories
we cannot reconstruct in such detail. Although Huánuco Pampa is often described as
pristine, over the centuries the site has not remained untouched by time, human hands,
and bovine feet. It has always had its uses for those inhabitants who did not desert the
Pampa de Huánuco, as well as for people, such as soldiers, muleteers, archaeologists,
re-enactors, and tourists who have come to it for short periods of time.
Ackknowledgements
I am grateful to Mahlon A. Barash for sharing photographs taken at Huánuco Pampa from
1965 to the present. Many of my insights were obtained through a close study of the
visual material he produced. I also thank Sumru Aricanli for her help with my research
on John Victor Murra’s “A Study of Provincial Inca Life” project, and Jennifer Shea for her
permission to publish aspects of her late husband’s work.
Figure 9 Inti Raymi, Huánuco
Pampa, 2013. Photograph by Mahlon
A. Barash.
108
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110
K Y L I E E . Q UAV E I R . A L A N C O V E Y
T H E M AT E R I A L R E M A I N S O F I N C A P O W E R
AMONG IMPERIAL HEARTLAND COMMUNITIES
Kylie E. Quave / R. Alan Covey
The Material Remains of Inca Power
among Imperial Heartland Communities
111
By the end of the 13th century CE, campaigns to extend the power of the Inca state began to target local communities outside the Cusco Valley. A century or so of state conquests and administrative intensification in the Cusco region set the stage for generations of rapid imperial growth
that commenced around 1400 CE. The subordination of neighboring populations reduced external military threats to the Inca state, while simultaneously concentrating more productive
land and labor tribute in the hands of the Inca elite. Royal Inca control over rural landscapes
in the Cusco region intensified during the imperial period, but the ways that this affected local
societies varied from place to place. By the time of the Spanish conquest in the 1530s, some
parts of the Cusco region had undergone significant changes in their settlement patterns and
subsistence economies, whereas others experienced a less transformative relationship with the
Inca state and its ruling elite. In this paper, we use regional archaeological data from survey
projects (Bauer 2004; Covey 2006; Covey [ed.] 2014) as a context for comparing our archaeological excavations from three sites near Cusco (Ak’awillay, Cheqoq, and Pukara Pantillijlla) to
discuss the impact of Inca empire building on the everyday lives of local farmers and herders.
Our results speak to the variability found within the Inca heartland and the uneven distribution
of Inca material culture at the level of communities and households. Our excavations at sites
with both pre-Inca and Inca occupations permit us to develop long-term perspectives on local
populations and their interactions with, and responses to, the growing Inca state.
Figure 1 Locations of Ak’awillay,
Cheqoq, and Pukara Pantillijlla, three
rural sites near the Inca capital in
regions that experienced diferent
patterns of interaction with the Inca
state. Map by Lia Tsesmeli.
112
Research Sites
Our three research sites are in areas with distinct ecological characteristics, settlement
histories, and contacts with the Inca state. Ak’awillay is the closest to Cusco in many
senses. The site lies just over 20 km to the west of the Inca capital, and its placement–on
alluvial terraces just above farmland where maize can be cultivated–resembles the preferred location for villages in the Cusco Valley (Bauer 2004). Early Colonial documents
describe some people living in the surrounding Xaquixaguana Valley as early Inca allies,
royal marriage partners, and honorary recipients of Inca status (Bauer and Covey 2002;
Covey 2006, 2014b). Regional settlement patterns indicate considerable settlement continuity in the Xaquixaguana Valley from pre-Inca times into the imperial period. Ak’awillay,
however, may not have shared the same affinities with the early Incas as its neighbors,
since surface collections of the 15 hectare occupation from the Late Intermediate Period
(ca. 1000-1400 CE, henceforth LIP) yielded lower percentages of Killke style pottery from
the Cusco Valley. During imperial times, Ak’awillay shrank to 6.5 hectares as populations
shifted closer to new Inca terrace complexes and facilities on the imperial highway from
Cusco to the Chinchaysuyu province (Covey 2014b). In 2012, we excavated 21 square
meters of test units at Ak’awillay with Vicentina Galiano Blanco as co-director. We focus
here on two units (TR-10, TR-11) with evidence of LIP and Inca period domestic activity,
as well as a third unit (TR-12) in use only in the Inca period
About 10 km to the north of Ak’awillay, Cheqoq and the surrounding Maras area show evidence of more extensive changes to local and regional settlements (Covey 2014a, 2014b).
LIP settlement in this area was concentrated in a network of undefended villages surrounding Yunkaray, a 20 hectare town. Within a two-hour walk of Yunkaray lie 120 hectares of
LIP settlement, as well as terraced low elevation fields, salt pans, and pasture lands. Surface collections at Maras area LIP sites yielded almost no Inca imperial pottery, indicating
widespread abandonment of the local settlement system in the imperial period. Cheqoq
represents the sole exception to this decline–the site grew to 22 hectares in the imperial
period as noble descent groups extended their economic interests into the area (Quave
2012). According to archival documents, the country estate of the emperor Huayna Capac
appropriated resources in the Maras area and settled a diverse provincial retainer population to herd, farm, and produce craft goods (e.g., Archivo Regional del Cusco, Urubamba,
Leg. 1, 1594-95; Toledo [1571] 1940, p. 108). The first author directed excavations at Cheqoq in 2009 and 2010, with René Pilco Vargas and Stephanie Pierce Terry as co-directors.
Kylie E. Quave / R. Alan Covey
The Material Remains of Inca Power
among Imperial Heartland Communities
113
From a total excavated area of 252 m2 we focus here on contexts used during the LIP and
Inca periods, including a storage structure (Area F), six households of different statuses
(Areas G, H, M, N, Q, and R), and an Inca pottery production context (Area U).
Although Pukara Pantillijlla is less than 25 km to the northeast of Cusco, its location on
a high ridgetop to the north of the Vilcanota-Urubamba River makes it much more difficult to access than Ak’awillay or Cheqoq. The site lies above 3900 meters, at the transition between tuber horticulture and herding. Other pre-Inca sites in the Chongo Basin
resemble settlements found elsewhere in the Andean highlands: modest-sized villages
were built on prominent hills between lower rain-fed tuber lands and higher grasslands
favorable for camelids (Covey 2006). Inca incorporation of the Chongo Basin appears to
have stimulated the growth of Pukara Pantillijlla to about 10 hectares before state administration shifted to the royal estate of Pisaq, located near new maize lands on the floor
of the Vilcanota-Urubamba Valley. In 2000, Alan Covey excavated more than 200 m2 at the
site with Wilfredo Yépez Valdez as co-director, encountering LIP and Inca occupations in
interior and exterior units associated with houses and public buildings. Units analyzed
here include the structures R-1, R-3, R-4, R-6, R-9, R-10-13, and R-15, as well as several
test units.
Imperial Canons across the Heartland Region
Archaeologists can infer interactions between the Incas and neighboring groups through
material remains, which offer multiple lines of evidence for cultural identity and status
differences. Although some scholars interpret the local appearance of state-style architecture, ceramics, and other artifacts as evidence of state power, we do not always observe
increased frequency or visibility of Inca architecture and ceramics in areas where the
historical record describes greater Inca dominance over a local population. Furthermore,
we find variable patterns in the distribution of canonical Inca architecture within sites,
suggesting that there were multiple ways that Inca power and influence could be experienced within a single rural community. Although Inca elites deployed imperial architecture strategically to communicate their power, state styles of architecture and craft
goods also created opportunities for local people to assert status and identity within their
communities and in relation to their interactions with the state.
114
The challenges in using state canons to reconstruct power relationships are not unique
to the Inca case. State societies develop through interactions between elites, the institutions to which they have disproportionate access, and non-elite populations (e.g., Giddens 1984). These interactions build and distribute networks of social power of different
kinds (Mann 1984). Often, scholars have considered the presence of Inca-style goods tantamount to Inca power and influence (e.g., Acuto 2010; D’Altroy et al. 2007; Meyers 2007;
Santoro et al. 2010). However, to reconstruct the development of a state society with its
elites, state institutions, and subject populations, as seen in the Cusco region, we must
employ models of the distribution of different classes of material culture that emphasize
the diverse and multidirectional flows of social power. Mann’s category of ideological power illustrates the complexities of conducting such analysis, as it encompasses the norms
of everyday life, elite pronouncements of ultimate meaning, as well as the aesthetic and
ritual programs that elites and state institutions might use to attempt to alter and control
norms (Mann 1984). Such an approach can tie ideological power to the material record,
but it calls for a multi-scalar evaluation that considers (1) the power of state elites in
creating and promoting new aesthetic and social practices; (2) the power of individuals to
access, deploy, or alter such elite programs to establish or enhance their own elite status;
and (3) the relative ability of non-elites to maintain established practices of everyday life.
This means that it is necessary to identify architecture in the imperial canon and reconstruct its distribution pattern within broader material contexts.
For this study, we focus on the definition of “Inca” architecture and ceramic styles, and
the ways that they link imperial elites with non-elite populations in Cusco’s rural hinterland. These imperial Inca types are juxtaposed with materials that diverge from the
canonical. Our discussion of the distribution of these canonical materials emphasizes
that while some contexts exhibit higher fidelity to Inca ceramics and architecture, there
are important variations in regional and intrasite distribution patterns, and Inca canonical forms did not displace local norms to a significant degree at many sites. Local people
in rural communities appear to have produced, modified, and accepted Inca canons (or
not) for multiple reasons, not all of which imply adherence to Inca state ideologies and
enthusiastic participation in empire building.
Kylie E. Quave / R. Alan Covey
The Material Remains of Inca Power
among Imperial Heartland Communities
115
Administrative, Ceremonial, and Domestic Architecture
Under the Inca, new forms of public and ceremonial architecture appeared in rural contexts (Table 1). At the regional level, rectangular buildings became more common in imperial times, some of which are composed of ashlar masonry and feature other Inca construction elements, such as trapezoidal niches and doorways and large, cut-stone lintels
(Gasparini and Margolies 1980; Kendall 1985). Inca rulers and their wives established
rural estates in all of our study areas, constructing new agricultural infrastructure and
country palaces. New terracing and architectural remains associated with elite residences
are present around Zurite, Yucay, and Pisaq, a few hours’ walk from each of our excavation sites (Covey 2006, 2014b, 2014c; Farrington 1992; Farrington and Zapata 2003; Niles
1999). The Incas also built new storage facilities for a variety of elite and administrative
functions, usually establishing new complexes outside of existing villages and introducing new building forms and construction techniques (see Covey et al. [n.d.]). Way-stations supporting the imperial highway network introduced other manifestations of the
Inca architectural canon to some parts of the rural landscape.
Table 1
Building Type
Xaquixaguana Valley
Maras area
Chongo Basin area
Examples of new Inca imperial
architecture located close to
the excavation sites
Terracing
Zurite
Yucay
Pisaq
Rural palace
Tambokancha
Quispiwanka
Pisaq
Storage
Xaquixaguana
Cheqoq
Iglesiayuq
Way-station
Xaquixaguana
VS-188 (?)
There is evidence that the Inca architectural canon was extended to local settlements to
varying degrees. In place of the round or semicircular structures seen in many LIP settlements, some imperial sites feature square and rectangular houses, which may or may not
be laid out in patio groups or associated with long halls (Covey 2009). Our excavations at
Cheqoq and Pukara Pantillijlla offer significant contrasts in the prevalence of rectangular
forms and their adherence to imperial Inca canons. Inca-style architecture is widespread
at Cheqoq, where settlement grew after the disruption of the local settlement system.
Inca masonry was used to construct houses, to face domestic and agricultural terraces, and to build massive retaining walls connecting large storage structures (Figure 2).
Rectangular single-room structures are common in the residential areas, and these
116
Reconstructed storehouses
Area Q, Inca domestic structures in patio arrangement
Figure 2 Architecture at Cheqoq.
Images by Kylie Quave.
Area H, semi-circular Inca domestic structure
Kylie E. Quave / R. Alan Covey
The Material Remains of Inca Power
among Imperial Heartland Communities
117
feature a single doorway on one side and thick walls made with cut stone and mortar.
Some of these are arranged in canonical Inca quadrangular patio groups (e.g., Area Q).
Quave’s excavations encountered these Inca-style structures, as well as an anomalous
domestic building: Area H, a 3-m diameter semi-circular structure built with a combination of rough-cut stones and fine ashlars. Although the semi-circular form is typical for
LIP domestic architecture, the use of Inca-style ashlars and preponderance of Inca and
Inca-related decorated pottery (94 percent of the assemblage) indicated that it was occupied in the Inca period.
Architecture at Pukara Pantillijlla differed from Cheqoq, in part because of the site’s more
continuous occupation from the LIP (Figure 3). Pre-Inca constructions included small above-ground mortuary structures and domestic terraces. Local households that continued to
be occupied into the Inca period consisted of single-room semi-circular structures (<50 m2)
of fieldstone and mud mortar. Their interiors were mud-plastered and had small, rectangular niches and windows that contrast with trapezoidal Inca forms. There is no clear status
distinction between houses in terms of size or construction materials, and Covey’s excavations found that status goods were either uniformly rare or evenly distributed across
households. Houses were not grouped into larger patio groups, although some buildings
had smaller structures adjacent to them that might represent household-level food storage.
Figure 3
Architecture at Pukara Pantillijlla.
Map by R. Alan Covey.
118
Around 1300 CE, several important changes occurred that were associated with an increased prevalence of Inca canons at Pukara Pantillijlla (Covey 2006). Central parts of the site
were leveled and expanded for new domestic terraces, while some of the larger houses in
the upper part of the ridge were abandoned. The site size increased to approximately ten
hectares, almost double the size of the largest early LIP settlement in the Chongo Basin.
As the site grew, residential and public architectural forms appeared that bore a resemblance to Inca types (Figure 4). These include rectangular, square, and rounded-corner square
structures, as well as some elongated structures (Covey 2006). The artifact assemblages
within these buildings support their identification as both ritual/public buildings and residential spaces. One unexcavated compound (R-10-13) comprised two small structures and
two larger structures roughly the size of the semi-circular house structures. One of the
larger structures had a trapezoidal doorway–diagnostic of Inca architecture–and the other
had a wide doorway (1.6 m) along with interior Inca-style niches. The coordinated layout of
the unit in an “L” shape on a single domestic terrace may represent an approximation of the
Inca kancha enclosure, which typically is laid out around a patio.
Non-domestic rectangular structures at Pukara Pantillijlla included one non-Inca public
building (R-5) and one Inca ritual structure (R-15) (Covey 2006). R-5 is a large square
structure (~7.5 x 7.5 m in its interior) with meter-thick walls and a single, wide doorway
opening onto a small plaza. It has four windows, 14 rectangular interior niches, and
a paved interior floor. R-15 is an elongated rectangular structure (10 by 4 m) made of
fieldstones and mud mortar, with a rear wall built into the bedrock of a natural outcrop.
Its interior has at least three niches and three windows. Although R-15 possesses some
elements of the Inca architectural canon, it is smaller, less solidly built, and less centrally
located than R-5, which does not conform to the Inca style.
The architectural evidence from Cheqoq and Pukara Pantillijlla offers some important contrasts. Pukara Pantillijlla’s experience with Inca power occurred early on, and reflects a very
limited representation of Inca architectural canons. Inca cut-stone masonry was not used
during the expansion of occupation at Pukara Pantillijlla, and the proliferation of rectilinear
forms does not indicate the faithful replication of Inca building types or the coordination of
domestic compounds. Although this site has been interpreted as an early Inca administrative center (Covey 2006), it is not clear that the construction of rectilinear architecture was
directed by the Inca state or carried out at the behest of people from Cusco. By contrast,
Cheqoq, which expanded during a later and more direct relationship with Inca state elites,
Kylie E. Quave / R. Alan Covey
The Material Remains of Inca Power
among Imperial Heartland Communities
Plan of R-3, non-Inca
semicircular domestic
structure
R-5, non-Inca public structure
Figure 4 Types of architecture
at Pukara Pantillijlla. Images by
R. Alan Covey.
Excavations in R-15,
Inca-style ritual structure
119
120
shows widespread use of Inca masonry, multiple structures that show high fidelity to Inca
building types, and patterns of residential and storage compound layouts that are identifiably Inca. The imprimatur of the Inca style pervades all parts of the site, including economic
activity areas, though there are non-Inca features as well.
Inca Polychrome Pottery
Compared with LIP styles from the Cusco Region, Inca ceramics are more standardized in
form, decoration, paste, and temper. Inca polychrome pottery features geometric designs
in mostly buff, red, black, and white, with a common suite of vessel forms found across
the Cusco Region (Pardo 1939; Rowe 1944). In provincial contexts, researchers often infer Inca dominance from the presence of Cusco-Inca pottery, whereas hybrid, “local,” or
“provincial” forms of the Cusco-Inca types are considered to represent a lower degree of
Inca control and influence.
Our excavations encountered significant variations in the proportion of decorated Inca
pottery within and between sites. Some of these differences can be attributed to the
relative degree of Inca influence in a given household or site, but it is important to
observe that occupational histories of these sites and the nature of the Inca transition
also affect the constitution of the decorated ceramic assemblage. At Pukara Pantillijlla,
just 18 percent of all decorated sherds in domestic contexts were Inca polychromes. At
Ak’awillay, 23.6 percent were Inca polychrome, and at Cheqoq, a much greater portion
of 80 percent were Inca polychrome when accounting for all decorated sherds (Quave
2012) (Figure 5). Within sites, there was also great variation. The proportion of Inca
pottery in the three excavated houses at Pukara Pantillijlla ranged from 9.3 percent to
34.1 percent Inca, which might represent modest differences in status or building use,
subtle differences in the occupation chronologies of houses, or a combination of these.
There are lower rates of Inca pottery in houses near the promontory and mortuary area
at Pukara Pantillijlla, and higher rates near the compound of rectangular buildings discussed above. At Cheqoq, the percentages of Inca decorated pottery ranged from 56.6
percent (Area G) to 93.5 percent (Area N). Households with the highest percentages also
yielded greater frequencies of decorated serving vessels and exotic and high-status
food items (Quave 2012). The proportion of Inca polychromes in the decorated sherds
121
Figure 5 Examples of Cusco-Inca
pottery excavated at Cheqoq.
Images by Kylie Quave.
122
from the Ak’awillay test excavations ranged from 12.3 percent (TR-11) to 33.8 percent
(TR-10).
In non-domestic contexts at Cheqoq and Pukara Pantillijlla, we found similar frequencies
of Inca to other decorated wares. The storage structure at Cheqoq yielded 36.8 percent
Inca polychromes (Quave 2012). At Pukara Pantillijlla, a presumed ritual structure (R-15)
had 16.4 percent Inca decorated sherds, but R-5 and R-6, the non-Inca public building
and its out-building, yielded 2.8 percent and 2.5 percent, respectively (Covey n.d.). Excavations at Cheqoq encountered a ceramic workshop in which Inca polychromes comprised 99.7 percent of the decorated pottery, including 622 wasters (3.6 percent of sherds)
(Quave 2012). Whereas Inca-style pottery appears to have reached Pukara Pantillijlla and
Ak’awillay through exchange networks, the expansion of the Inca occupation at Cheqoq
was associated with the construction of a facility to produce the style.
The distribution of Cusco-Inca polychrome pottery suggests that there was heterogeneity
in both the imposition of Inca power, as well as the local adoption of Inca material culture
across the Cusco Region. The earlier date for the Inca occupation at Pukara Pantillijlla
and the marginalization of the site during the imperial period both contribute to the low
percentage of decorated Inca pottery at the site. By comparison, the preliminary data
from Ak’awillay seem to indicate a site with a similar occupation profile that had better
access to imperial wares, or a population more inclined to acquire and use Inca material.
Cheqoq offers a significant contrast, in terms of the abrupt imposition of the Inca occupation, the ubiquity of the Inca style across the site, and the establishment of facilities
to produce elements of Inca canons locally. Documentary sources associate Cheqoq with
non-local populations brought by Inca royals to staff their country estates, whereas the
people of Ak’awillay and Pukara Pantillijlla are thought to be locals with different degrees
of participation in Inca ethnic and political identities (Covey 2014b, 2014c).
Our excavation data suggest uneven distribution of the canonical Inca ceramics, with
limited local adoption of Inca production techniques, vessel forms, and iconography.
There are some limitations in the use of imperial ceramic frequencies to assess imperial
power, however, as site occupation chronology and the nature of the local Inca transition
can confound the archaeological record of Inca influence. This limitation provides further
impetus for decoupling studies of Inca power from purely materialist analyses of architectural and artifact style and frequency. More intensive studies of LIP and Inca ceramics
Kylie E. Quave / R. Alan Covey
The Material Remains of Inca Power
among Imperial Heartland Communities
123
are needed to reconstruct patterns of production and distribution fully, but the evidence
does allow us to reject a vision of the Inca imperial heartland as a region where all populations used imperial ceramics in their daily life.
Inca Power and Local Communities
Our focus on regional and site-level manifestations of Inca canons reveals some important differences in the distribution of fixed and portable material culture. The archaeological record is shaped by the expression of power and status on the part of individuals and
households with disparate agendas, including state officials, producers of craft goods,
and rural consumers of different statuses. By correlating regional distributions of Inca
pottery and architecture with multiple local assemblages, we are able to bridge the efforts
of the Inca elite to exert power over rural subjects and the evidence for continuity and
change in local communities and households. Having noted some of the distributional
differences between the architecture and ceramics, we recommend that future studies
of Inca state power develop a broader range of markers of Inca influence. Ak’awillay, for
example, has a similar ceramic assemblage to Pukara Pantillijlla, with a lower frequency
of Inca polychromes, but our test excavations yielded greater evidence of wealth goods
such as worked shell and gold adornments. Moving beyond architecture and pottery may
subsequently require taking account of non-ceramic personal wealth items, as well as
production of Inca-style goods such as pottery and cloth.
The sites analyzed here present us with unexpected patterns compared to what was predicted for these culturally and geographically near and distant communities. We anticipated that Ak’awillay would serve as a baseline for how much Inca material culture should
be present in a community allied with Cusco. However, Ak’awillay’s ceramic patterns are
more similar to Pukara Pantillijlla than to nearby Cheqoq, which should yield greater frequencies of Inca material culture due to its proximity to Cusco and its important role in
the royal estate economy. More specifically, both Ak’awillay and Pukara Pantillijlla present
lower frequencies of Inca goods than the royal estate installation of Cheqoq.
At Pukara Pantillijlla, Inca expansion encountered communities with distinct subsistence and social practices. Settlement at Pukara Pantillijlla expanded during the Inca
124
incorporation of the area, and the site remained occupied even as the local administrative
focus shifted to the valley-bottom royal estate at Pisaq. The growth of the site included
construction of a small Inca-style temple and an administrative compound, although the
amount of Inca material culture in households only increased slightly over time. The
evidence suggests only modest changes to social life as the Inca state grew. The construction of state architecture does not, in this case, accompany the exertion of state power
in other visible ways, which challenges some of the assumptions we tend to make about
Inca monumental architecture in the provinces and heartland.
Notably, the situation at Pukara Pantillijlla contrasts with nearby Pisaq. At that royal palace complex, Inca state power was clearly visible and employed the Inca canon, including
ritual compounds, baths, very large terraces, a canalized valley bottom, storehouses, fine
ashlars, and prominent finely carved doorways along walking paths (Covey 2006). Royal
estate sites such as Pisaq underscore an additional problem with how archaeologists map
out Inca influence through architecture; namely, the material that scholars identify as elements of the state canon in the provinces is actually based upon royal estate architecture
and religious monuments in the Cusco Region. We should thus reconsider whether Inca
material culture–as distributed in the heartland–is the best template for Inca provincial
power.
Cheqoq–an estate facility–resembles Pisaq more than Pukara Pantillijlla in many ways.
There are high frequencies of Inca goods that surpass those observed at Pukara Pantillijlla and Ak’awillay. However, there are no (as yet recovered) temples or administrative
buildings. Instead, Cheqoq has a highly visible group of at least two dozen large storage
structures (~4.5 m in width and 35-45 m in length). Additionally, the site itself was extensive, especially for an economic installation: 8 hectares of storage, 14 hectares of domestic terracing, and a terrace devoted to Inca polychrome ceramic production. Perhaps
the most visible aspect of Inca power was the emplacement of the multiethnic population
of retainers there: retainers who specialized in storage administration, Inca-style pottery
production, and other occupations (see Quave 2012).
Overall, Inca state expansion within the Cusco Region was heterogeneous and resulted
in irregular and discontinuous material patterns of state power. The material remains of
Inca imperial power do not co-vary with historically-based differences in Inca influence
at these three sites. We do not find greater quantities of Inca remains where the Inca had
Kylie E. Quave / R. Alan Covey
The Material Remains of Inca Power
among Imperial Heartland Communities
125
greater cultural affinity or influence (the honorary Incas of the Xaquixaguana Valley), nor
do we find greater quantities of Inca remains where the Incas enforced their authority
over a population of non-Inca upland people (Pukara Pantillijlla). Instead we find that
perhaps the people who would consider themselves to be the least like the Incas–forced
migrants such as the Cañaris of Ecuador and the Chachapoyas (see Covey and Amado
2008, Covey and Elson 2007) who served as retainers on royal estates–might in fact be the
most regular consumers of goods in the Inca canon. Overall, this analysis demonstrates
that our models of continuous Inca state power will not suffice for understanding how
a group of people from the Cusco Basin successfully transformed the lives of millions
of subjects in the Central Andes. Instead, we must focus on high-resolution excavated
assemblages to re-assess these models in the provinces and heartland to create more
localized explanations for how communities interacted with a developing empire.
126
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128
C É S A R W. A S T U H UA M Á N G O N Z Á L E S
T H E I N C A TA K E O V E R O F T H E A N C I E N T C E N T E R S
IN THE HIGHLANDS OF PIURA
César W. Astuhuamán Gonzáles
T h e I n c a Ta k e o v e r o f t h e A n c i e n t C e n t e r s
in the Highlands of Piura
129
Ancient empires and pre-capitalist societies have considered their landscape to be much
more than an economic resource and, in many societies, portions of landscape are believed
to be sacred. Landscape can be considered a cultural and social construction; it is a perceived and symbolized space (Gil 2001, pp. 63, 66-67). The nature of sacred landscapes
(e.g. mountains), involves religious and symbolic meaning expressed in ritual and cultic
practices around natural features of the landscape that assumed a sacred character for peoples in the past (Bradley 2002). Cult is defined as “A particular form or system of religious
worship or veneration, especially as expressed in ceremony or ritual directed towards a
specified figure or object” (Oxford English Dictionary, on-line version, s.v.).
Andean peoples developed concepts of sacred landscapes where ancestor cults and rituals
were conducted and controlled by indigenous empires. Various authors discuss religious
sites called huacas, frequently linked to ancestor cults, which are also exemplified by
natural features of the landscape such as lakes, mountains, rock formations, springs,
caves, ancient buildings, and monoliths (e.g. Bauer 2004; Gose 1993; Hyslop 1990).
In relation to the Inca empire, ethnohistorical and archaeological research has given some
consideration to the role of religion, ideology, and state institutions during the period
of expansion (Conrad and Demarest 1988; Conrad and Demarest [eds.] 1992; Gose 1993;
Patterson 1985; Rostworowski 1983; Topic et al. 2002; Ziólkowski 1999). Ancestor cults
and rituals were associated with the control of water sources, and they defined the entire
political culture upon which the Inca State emerged and controlled Tawantinsuyu (Gose
1993, pp. 486-488).
In this article, I will consider the proposition that the socio-political order in Andean
societies may have been partly developed around sacred landscapes, in particular networks of shrines. I will explore the relationships between indigenous Andean ideologies
of sacred landscapes and the Inca imperial rule, and assess the significance of landscape
features that assumed a sacred character before the Inca conquest, and were further elaborated as a feature of Inca rule. Thus, I will assess the following hypothesis:
Indigenous rituals and cults may have involved ancient local centers that may
have assumed a sacred character before the Inca conquest of the Highlands of
Piura. During Inca times these places were probably chosen as the sites of major
centers, and incorporated within subsequent Inca state religion and ritual, as a
130
César W. Astuhuamán Gonzáles
Figure 1 Study area. The red
rectangle encloses the Highlands of
Piura, © César Astuhuamán.
T h e I n c a Ta k e o v e r o f t h e A n c i e n t C e n t e r s
in the Highlands of Piura
131
major feature of the Inca rule of the provinces. Inca state ceremonies and rituals
were also performed in the newly constructed state buildings at Inca centers.
This research is primarily focused on the Highlands of Piura, close to the modern border
of Peru and Ecuador. The land lies between 800 and 3990 meters above sea level, and is
formed by the two longitudinal ridges of the Cordillera de los Andes which defines the
high portions of the Quiroz, Alto Piura, Huancabamba, and Alto Chinchipe River Basins
(Hocquenghem 1989, p. 11). It is a multi-frontier region, in both political and ecological
terms, located between the central and northern Andes, and flanked by the Amazonian
rain forest and the large coastal plain. It is a transitional zone between the puna and
paramo eco-regions.
Figure 2 Location of Aypate,
© Ministerio de Cultura,
Proyecto Qhapaq Ñan.
Site name
Suggested function
Lomo del Huacho
La Huaca*
Aypate
Caxas
Mitupampa
Ovejería
El Gentil
Lagunas
Lanche
Piura La Vieja
San Isidro
Tambo Florecer
Las Pircas
La Laguna de Mijal
Tambo de Jicate 1
Tambo de Jicate 2
Huancacarpa
El Tambo
Socchabamba
Yanta
Cima del Cerro Lingan*
Cerro San Isidro
Cerro San Miguel
Yantuma
Cerro Culuguero
Huancabamba
Residential
Cult
Ceremonial-administrative
Ceremonial-administrative
Ceremonial-administrative
Storage-administrative
Residential
Residential
Ceremonial-administrative
Ceremonial-administrative
Storage-administrative
Storage-administrative
Storage-administrative
Storage-administrative
Residential
Residential
Military-storage
Residential
Storage-administrative
Residential
Cult
Production
Residential
Residential
Cult
Ceremonial-administrative
LATE HORIZON
(ca. 1400 - 1532 AD)
Cerro de Lagunas
Cerro Pan de Azucar
Cerro Casitas
Gentiles de Portachuelo
Cerro Granadillo
Cerro Chichacomo-Cima
Cerro Santa Rosa
Residential
Residential
Ceremonial-administrative
Residential
Ceremonial-administrative
Cult
Cult
LATE INTERMEDIATE
PERIOD
(ca. 1000 - 1400 AD)
Pueblo Viejo
Fortaleza
Cerro Yambur
Ceremonial-administrative
Ceremonial-administrative
Cult
MIDDLE HORIZON
(600 - 1000 AD)
Cerro Chala 2*
Cerro Chala 3*
Cerro Portachuelo de Culucan
Loma de los Barriales
Cerro Palo Parado
Cerro Vizcacha
Cerron Balcón
Cerro Golondrina
Cult
Cult
Cult
Cult
Cult
Cult
Cult
Cult
Table 1.
Suggested functions and
chronology of settlements
in the Highlands of Piura
INITIAL
PERIOD
(1800 - 800 BC)
* Inca pottery is associated with site.
César W. Astuhuamán Gonzáles
T h e I n c a Ta k e o v e r o f t h e A n c i e n t C e n t e r s
in the Highlands of Piura
133
During the 20th century, research was conducted in the Highlands of Piura by Julio C. Tello (1916a, 1916b), Mario Polia (1972, 1973) and myself (Astuhuamán 1998). Generally,
reconnaissance was done following ancient routes and at major Inca centers. During the
early 21st century, I continued archaeological research there (Astuhuamán 2008a, 2009),
recently at the site of Aypate, as part of the Qhapaq Ñan Project of Peru’s Ministry of Culture
(Figure 2). This paper reports the results of the Aypate Integral Project (2012-2014).
Inca sites recorded within the Highlands of Piura to evaluate the cultic hypothesis, I elaborated a typology of settlements for the study area, based on the form and possible
function of buildings within them, discerning levels of hierarchy among settlements of
the same period (see Table 1).
From an archaeological point of view, the four largest Inca sites identified in the
study area as ceremonial-administrative centers (Aypate, Caxas, Huancabamba, and
Mitupampa) are characterized by a wide range of Inca building types (e.g. platformushnu, kallanka [great hall], plaza, acllawasi [house of chosen women], temple of the
Sun). These sites were probably the centers of Inca jurisdictions because the presence
of several Inca buildings is evidence of the architecture of power, a feature of the major
Inca imperial centers (Gasparini and Margolies 1977). Table 2 shows the presence of
these buildings at the major Inca centers of the study area.
Table 2 demonstrates the recurrent presence of several Inca building forms which were
common to the Inca centers of the study area. I have identified these as having the
following functions: acllawasi, temple of the Sun, plaza (trapezoidal or rectangular), and
platform-ushnu. These four building forms appear to be the key structures that identify
and differentiate Inca provincial centers from other sites. However, there are other, minor
Inca sites, which were different from these major Inca centers and which may have had
different functions at the provincial level (e.g. Tambo de Jicate, Huancacarpa).
In addition to Inca sites, several pre-Inca sites were also recorded along the Inca road or
near to it. I will focus on these because they were ancient centers:
The site of Cerro Chala consists of three sectors built on three hilltops. They share similar
architectural patterns (Polia 1995, pp. 240-241). In the lowest sector, a long and irregular
rectangular structure was found, as well as alignments of rocks going in east-west and
134
Suggested building
function
Bridge
Gateway control
Storage
Cultic/temple
Cultic/monolithic
Ceremonial fountain
Acllawasi
Kallanka
Rectangular plaza
Residential
Residential/administrative
Ceremonial/administrative
Palace
Another acllawasi
Temple of the Sun
Trapezoidal plaza
Platform-ushnu
Access control
Metal workshop
Agricultural terrace
Drying structure (tendal)
Funerary (chullpas)
Unclear
Aypate sectors
Caxas sectors
1
2
1
12
Mitupampa Huancabamba
sectors
sectors
2
5, 6
16
14
3
17
5
6
7
4, 13, 14, 15, 22, 30, 35, 36
9
10
11
16
19
20
21
32
33
27
8, 27, 28, 30, 31, 35
17-37
18, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29, 34, 37
15
13
8
4
9
3
2
7
11
10, 12
10
3
9
9
1, 2, 4
5
5
8
7
2, 3
1, 2, 3, 5
4
6, 11
north-south directions, and a great plaza with a central axis running from the northwest
to the southeast. Stairs were built to access the next sector, and another square, flanked
by rock alignments, was recorded. Another low wall surrounded the hilltop of this sector.
Twenty-four pottery sherds were collected there and provide evidence of Inca presence.
These architectural features, and the proximity of the Inca road running between Tondopa
Bridge and Aypate, suggest that this site was used during Inca times (Astuhuamán 2008a).
Table 2.
Functions of Inca buildings at
the major Inca centers within
the Highlands of Piura.
Historic sources have been used
for buildings now under modern
Huancabamba. These are: Cieza
de León ([1551] 1973), p. 154;
Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1967),
pp. 84-87; Humboldt ([1802] 1991),
pp. 20-14; Tello (1916a, 1916b);
Xerez ([1534] 1968), p. 212.
César W. Astuhuamán Gonzáles
T h e I n c a Ta k e o v e r o f t h e A n c i e n t C e n t e r s
in the Highlands of Piura
135
Cerro Portachuelo de Culucán is a site located in a pass, close to the Inca road between
Tondopa Bridge and Aypate, on a flat area part way up the hill slope. It has a clear view of
the surrounding area, particularly towards the Aypate hilltop. Monumental architecture
has been recorded there (Astuhuamán 2008a; Polia 1995, pp. 241-246). It is shaped by
two stepped platforms (one larger and the other smaller) surrounding a sunken ovoid
yard, and oriented from west to east. The axis of the largest platform is orientated to the
Cerro Aypate hilltop, to the east.
Loma de los Barriales is shaped by two stepped platforms (one larger and the other smaller) facing a central yard. Both were built on stepped terraces. Loma de los Barriales shares architectural features with Cerro Portachuelo de Culucan and Cerro Chala. All these
sites are near an ancient road that later became the Inca road. I suggest that these sites,
with similar monumental architecture, were the loci of early local cults.
Between Loma de los Barriales and Cerro Vizcacha no further early hill top cult sites were
recorded along the Inca road that links Tondopa Bridge and Aypate. Cerro Vizcacha, located
on a hilltop, is shaped by four superimposed stepped platforms linked by ramps. Atop
the superimposed platforms two platforms face a central yard. The axis of the stepped
platforms and ramps is north 15º west. At the east side of the building, stairs allow
access from the associated yard to the largest stepped platform. An ancient road
linked the yard and Aypate. It is the modern boundary between two farming communities,
Olleros and Cujaca. On the same mountain as the site Cerro Vizcacha, but located on the
top, is Aypate (Figure 3). Aypate’s hilltop has been artificially modified. The hilltop is
stepped, and on the ground the remains of a platform were recorded. This modification
allows a complete panoramic view and observations along long distances.
Towards the North of Aypate, and near the Inca road, is the site of Cerro Balcón. It consists of four stepped platforms built on the hilltop and linked by ramps. The highest
sector is a long and flat platform. The axis of the stepped platforms and ramps is north
22º west. Along the same mountain, but located at the bottom, Cerro Golondrina, a small
early site, was recorded. Here, a hilltop was also artificially modified.
These early settlements with similar architectural features (e.g. terraced hilltops and
monumental architecture) are evidence of the emergence of Andean civilization in the
Highlands of Piura and the early interaction between societies during the Initial Period
136
Figure 3 Inca buildings at Aypate,
© César Astuhuamán and Cristian
Campos.
(1800–800 BC) in Northern Peru. These are close to the Inca road and may have been considered to have been huacas or sacred places by late indigenous and Inca populations,
like huacas that have been recorded at other sites including the Islands of the Moon and
the Sun at Lake Titicaca (cf. Bauer and Stanish 2003), Pachacamac (Cornejo 2000), Chavín
de Huantar (Lumbreras 1989), Raqchi (Sillar and Dean 2002), Catequil (Topic 2008), and
the Pumapunku pyramid at Tiwanaku (Yaeger and Lopez 2004).
I recorded pre-Inca settlements that could be related to the late indigenous population.
I will describe briefly and discuss two cases. The first is Cerro Casitas, in the present-day
Yamango District (Morropón) on the border between the Quiroz and Piura River Basins.
César W. Astuhuamán Gonzáles
T h e I n c a Ta k e o v e r o f t h e A n c i e n t C e n t e r s
in the Highlands of Piura
137
It consists of approximately 100 small rectangular structures (each about 17 by 8 meters
in length and width) below and around the top of Cerro Casitas. They are distributed
along 800 meters with many lateral parts spread on terraces. The main sector is on the
hilltop, and other sectors are located below it and accord with topographic features.
The architectural pattern is the following: a stone wall enclosure of rectangular shape
with a central division and a yard in front, with many similar structures distributed in a
row. From some sherds of Chimu pottery recorded, Cerro Casitas can be assigned to the
Late Intermediate Period. It was the main pre-Inca site recorded at the southern portion
of the Quiroz River Basin. The Inca road is below Cerro Casitas towards Confesionarios,
a present day town.
The second case is the late occupation of Cerro Balcón, located below the early occupation of Cerro Balcón. It was the main pre-Inca site recorded in the northern portion of the
Quiroz River Basin. Cerro Balcón shares the same architectural features as Cerro Casitas.
However, late structures were not recorded on its hilltop.
These two cases show that the late local population of Cerro Balcón continued to occupy
an early site, and that the late local population of Cerro Casitas did not choose the site of
an early occupation to build its main settlement.
Ethnohistoric and Ethnographical Sources about Ritual Sites in the Landscape
The Anonymous Jesuit, in his Instrucción, discusses religious organization in Tawantinsuyu and the hierarchy of the Inca State cult. One of the ten Inca priests that had jurisdiction over a number of provinces of Tawantinsuyu was installed in Ayahuaca province
(Anonymous Jesuit [1600] 1992, p. 70) rather than at Huancabamba or Caxas.
In the Instrucción para descubrir las todas las huacas del Peru . . ., Cristóbal de Albornoz
recorded several names of ancient prehispanic shrines in the Central Andes. For the Cajamarca province, close to the Highlands of Piura, he wrote: “Yanay guanca, guaca prencipal
de los indios caxamalcas. Es una piedra en un cerro grande questá junto al pueblo de
Quinua. Apoparato, guaca de los indios caxamalcas del ayllo Caxas, es un bolcán que está
cerca al pueblo de Caxas” (Albornoz [1585] 1989, p. 186).
138
I suggest that Yanay guanca or Yana wanka was a major shrine in the Huancabamba region,
because ethnographic research conducted in 1916 recorded legends relating to a feared
and powerful deity located in Yana wanka (Tello 1916a, p. 16). The hill is currently called
Cerro Lavatorio and is at the watershed between Huancabamba and Piura River Basins.
After Yanay guanca, the next shrine in the Albornoz’s list is Apoparato. A hill named
Paraton is located in the Huancabamba Region along the Inca road towards Huarmaca.
There, Samuel Scott visited a prehispanic silver mine in 1890 (Scott 1902, p. 185). The
relationship between Andean deities and mines has been highlighted, in particular in the
case of the silver mine of Porco and its huaca (Platt et al. 2006, pp. 136-181). Apu or Apo
was an exalted title “. . . that applied to apical ancestors who linked together many such
localized lines of descendent across a region. . .” (Gose 2006, p. 33). I suggest that Paraton
was the Apoparato cited in Albornoz’s Relacion or was one related to that. Concerning this
point, it is relevant to assess the distribution of place names related to Apo Parato along
the Central Andes.
During the campaign against Andean idolatries, a woman named Juana Icha in the Highlands of Junín (Yauli) was accused of having pacts with Apo Parato. He was a mountain
divinity that Juana worshipped and fed. A description of his silver idol was provided during an idolatry case at Old Canta in 1650 (Silverblatt 1987, p. 33). Another Cerro Paraton
is located near northern Querocotillo in the Cajamarca Region (Perú, INC [1983], p. 13-f).
Thus, I suggest that Apo Parato was an ancestor worshipped originally in the Highlands
of Lima and that his cult was extended towards the north of Peru and was recorded in Albornoz’s Instrucción and also in the names of hilltops (Paraton) found on maps (Gonzáles
and Astuhuamán 2012). The case of Apo Paraton is similar to that of Pariacaca.
The Huarochiri Manuscript, written in the early 17th century in the Highlands of Lima (Sierra de Lima), presents the history of Pariacaca. He was worshipped by the people of the Sierra de Lima and beyond: “Nuestro padre Pariacaca, en todos los confines del Chinchaysuyo
tiene hombres a su disposición. . .” (Taylor 1987, p. 279). Some evidence of the expansion
of the Pariacaca cult towards northern Peru is provided by place names, as well as by ethnohistorical sources. For example, I recorded Pariacaca lands in the Huándaro Annex, Sumbilca District, Huaral Province in the Lima Region. In the Huánuco Region, a village named
Pariagaga (Dos de Mayo Province, Jesús District) was recorded by Germán Stiglich (1922,
p. 789). In the Ancash Region, Pariacaca and Pariagaga were recorded at four districts.
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I suggest that the places recorded above were related to the Pariacaca deity. Andean communities in northern Peru probably sent maize, coca, and ritual offerings to the shrine of
Pariacaca in the Highlands of Lima (Taylor 2001, p. 89). In 1656, during a case of idolatry
at Ancash, one Domingo Nuna Chaupis told a Spanish priest about an ancestor cult related to Pariacaca (Duviols 1986, p. 12).
One of the findings that attracted the attention of Tello in 1916 in Huancabamba was a hill called
Pariacaca. Tello wrote “El cerro rojo de Wankabamba se llama Paria-Kaka” (Tello 1916b, p. 1).
In the Huancabamba Region, another priest, Miguel Ramírez, registered a conflict between deities located on two mountains named Pariacaca and Guitiligun (Ramírez 1966,
pp. 31-34). According to myth, the red hill of Pariacaca was linked to heat and fire. He
was identified as a foreigner and as a supporter of the Inca. Guitiligun was linked to cold
and the color white and he was an ally of the Spanish conquerors (Camino 1992, pp. 104110). According to ethnohistoric and ethnographic sources, Pariacaca was a major huaca
worshiped in Huancabamba (Ramírez 1966, pp. 21). The Llacuaz ethnic group established
in Huarmaca (south of the Huancabamba Region), probably before Inca times, also worshiped Pariacaca (Espinoza Soriano 2006, p. 59).
From the evidence presented above, I suggest that the Inca promoted the cult of Pariacaca
and other deities in Chinchaysuyo (e.g. Paraton) to support the Inca annexation through
mitimaes [colonists], encouraging local people that inhabited the Highlands of Piura to
worship the allied huacas of the Inca state (cf. Astuhuamán 2008b). I further suggest that
this recurrence of place names could be the remains of a religious archipelago of Andean
shrines or sacred places at mountains and lands under Inca rule that were linked to ancestor cults. This, in turn, suggests a scattered distribution of ritual sites along the Andean
landscape shaping a network of sacred places.
Testing the Cultic Hypothesis
A common feature of the main Inca centers in the highlands of Piura within my survey
area is that each of them is located close to a dominant hilltop. Aypate is one such site,
and it was also terraced with some buildings on the terraces. Caxas is in a valley, but is
surrounded by mountains and Huancabamba is also in a valley between two mountains
140
Figure 4 Inca buildings at Caxas,
© César Astuhuamán and Cristian
Campos.
Figure 5 Inca buildings at Mitupampa,
© César Astuhuamán and
Cristian Campos.
César W. Astuhuamán Gonzáles
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named Pariacaca and Witilingun. Mitupampa faces Cerro Negro. Several Inca burials were
recorded in Pariacaca and Cerro Negro (Polia et al. 1993; Tello 1916b). In Mitupampa, funerary towers (chullpas) facing Mt. Paraton were recorded (Astuhuamán 2008b; Polia et al.
1993). Polia recorded pre-Inca cemeteries in Olleros around Mt. Aypate, with some of the
burials facing its hilltop (Polia 1995, p. 291).
In the area around Aypate, the cultic hypothesis could be used to explain the recorded
evidence of hilltop shrines with stepped terraces. Around Caxas, the archaeological record suggests an emphasis on economic (storage and agricultural terraces) and military
activities, as well cultic ones. Caxas and its ancillary sites show a much greater degree of
investment and control, suggesting a more direct incorporation into the Inca empire. The
different types of remains could be a result of the different strategies used by the Incas in
different portions of the same region during successive stages of occupation.
The reporting of an important Inca priest at Ayahuaca, raises the question: why did the
Inca put him in Ayahuaca? Possibly they did this because there was an important ceremonial center at Ayahuaca before Inca rule and the Inca tried to gain control of this ceremonial center and the region by replacing the local hierarchy with a new ritual center
and an Inca priest. Another question that has arisen from this research is: what was the
religious hierarchical order in Caxas? Similarities and differences in the form and size
of Inca buildings at provincial centers could help to explain the different strategies of
control exercised in the provinces under Inca rule in the Quiroz Basin. When comparing
the probable Temple of the Sun in Caxas, a large stepped platform, with another stepped
platform at Aypate, the Caxas platform is larger than the Aypate platform. Another stepped platform is the Inca ushnu; some variants observed at the ushnus of Aypate and Caxas
are as follows: the small lateral stairs (Aypate), the proximity to Rey Inca River (Caxas), a
greater size at Aypate than at Caxas. Thus, the Temple of the Sun at Caxas has greater dimensions than that of Aypate, although the pyramidal terrace (ushnu) of Aypate is greater
and more complex than that of Caxas.
On the basis of the hierarchy of site sizes and typology of buildings, it was suggested
that Caxas was the most extensive site in the Quiroz Basin, covering an area close to 240
hectares, and having the greatest range of buildings. Caxas is also located strategically at
a sacred place (a carved stone called El Baño del Inca) and faces a concentric, stepped set
of platforms around a hill (Cerro Rosca) related to pre-Inca times. An Inca group installed
there may have conducted diplomatic and ceremonial activities to gain local support.
142
The cultic hypothesis was largely identified on the basis of surviving material evidence
in Caxas Province. However ethnohistorical sources are largely silent in relation to this
aspect of Inca life. Pre-Inca ritual places along ancient routes were incorporated within
the Inca state cult as a major feature of the Inca rule of Caxas. Inca state ceremonies and
rituals were also performed in the state buildings of Caxas to reproduce and extend the
state cult and religious ideology among subjects.
Discussion
All the main Inca centers (and elite Inca burials) in the study area are next to local pre-Inca
cult sites and sacred hills. This provides one explanation as to why the Inca state centers
are not necessarily located evenly over the landscape. I suggest that this symbolic occupation of local cultic places by the Inca was used to expand and control their dominions;
for this reason the extensive cult of mountain deities was important. Such local cults were
respected by the Inca, who promoted and took advantage of them to consolidate their dominion of the Piura Region through the construction of ceremonial architecture in relation to some locally prominent modified hilltops. In my opinion, architectural evidence on
hilltops reflects a long tradition of cultic worship rendered to the gods of the mountains,
beginning 3000 years before Incas’ arrival.
The Inca centers in the Highlands of Piura have more similarities than differences. In
particular, these similarities include the location of the main Inca centers close to local
cult sites, and the functions of state buildings. There are insufficient formal differences
between these sites to suggest that they were individually or uniquely created in relation
to local circumstances. They were centers where standard Inca architectural canons were
applied. However, the extant, pre-Inca local features conditioned the location of the Inca
centers. One reason for this could be that the control of local cults, and the imposition of
Inca cults, was the underlying strategy for the Inca state’s political and economic control
of the indigenous population here.
It is probable that the main Inca settlements with state buildings were used as provincial
centers and/or as ceremonial centers during different periods of the historical process
of Inca conquest and provincial consolidation. A consideration of stages within the his-
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torical process of the annexation of the Highlands of Piura into the Inca empire and the
gradual installation of Inca centers and infrastructure could help to explain the record of
four major Inca centers and the provincial organization of the region. In addition, some
features suggest that Mitupampa may predate Caxas and Aypate, although, at present, it
is not possible to provide precise dating or correlation between the phases at the sites.
To deal with the chronological problem, I propose two stages for the Inca provincial
organization in the study area: early (Topa Inca’s conquest) and late (Huayna Qhapaq’s
consolidation).
Mitupampa, the smallest center built in the study area to include a full range of Inca buildings (e.g. platform-ushnu, kallanka, plaza) may have been the first Inca provincial center
Figure 6 Two carved stone felines
recorded under the late ushnu-platform
of Mitupampa, © César Astuhuamán.
144
built in the Highlands of Piura. This can be suggested because its southern location is
likely to have been annexed early. In addition, some features of the Inca buildings suggest
that Mitupampa pre-dates Caxas and Aypate. Further evidence for the early Inca presence at Mitupampa is the occupation sequence of the ushnu; I suggest that the two carved
stone felines were probably made by the Incas as a foundation act at Mitupampa before
they were covered by a first ushnu of one platform, followed by a subsequent modification which defines the final and late stage of the stepped ushnu of two platforms with its
axis oriented to Cerro Negro. Representational carvings of felines (pumas or jaguars) and
single ushnu platforms are associated with Topa Inca’s rule (Kendall 1985, pp. 272-275).
Both, the presence of the felines and the sequential remodeling of the ushnu imply a long
Inca occupation sequence at this site. Thus, I suggest that Mitupampa was the earliest
Inca center built in the Highlands of Piura.
The early Inca occupation of Mitupampa began with a ceremonial compound, where offerings to mountain gods may have been made on the platform where the carved stone
felines oriented to Cerro Negro were placed. Probably in a second stage, Mitupampa became the earliest Inca center built in the Highlands of Piura with typical Inca buildings (e.g.
a small kallanka and an ushnu-platform).
Limited excavations in the acllawasi of Caxas revealed two phases of Inca occupation.
It is likely that the early occupation of Caxas started with ceremonial and military compounds. Probably, the capture of the local ritual center at Caxas allowed the manipulation
of an ethnic identifier. This appears to be a feature of provincial organization because
other Inca sites along the Inca road in this zone were placed around some portions of the
sacred landscape. For instance, there is a monolith (wanka) partially surrounded by a stone wall, oval in plan, at Laguna de Mijal. There is also an unaltered group of tall monoliths
near Huancacarpa, and a carved stone (the Baño del Inca) at Caxas. I suggest that Caxas
became a new Inca provincial center after the capture of this local cult place.
Regarding Aypate, during fieldwork conducted in 2012 and 2013, an early Inca road (Ñaupa Ñan) surrounding Aypate was recorded. It is different in form from the later Inca road
(Qhapaq Ñan) previously identified, being narrow, sunken, and paved. The Ñaupa Ñan is
associated with orthogonal Inca compounds (kanchas). By contrast, the Qhapaq Ñan is
associated with compounds of trapezoidal layout. Between the entry to Aypate and the
monumental zone, the two roads run in parallel. During the restoration process conduc-
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ted during 1994-1998 at the acllawasi (Sector 13), two Inca stages of occupation were
identified. These remains are evidence of an early Inca presence related to the conquest
of Aypate.
A comparative analysis of Inca centers suggests that the initial Inca control of the study
area and the early organization of provinces during the rule of Topa Inca Yupanqui was
through mixed military presence and cultic strategies in the Huancabamba Region (e.g.
the long occupation sequence at the platform-ushnu of Mitupampa) and in the Quiroz
Basin. During the first stage, Mitupampa was a provincial center and included a range of
Inca buildings (e.g. one platform-ushnu, one small kallanka, and one rectangular plaza).
Inca centers in the study region were primarily ritual sites during this early stage.
During the Huayna Qhapaq period (ca. 1493-1525), the study area was secured and transformed, and this stable situation allowed the re-construction of three major Inca centers
(e.g. Caxas, Huancabamba, and Aypate). However, this implied the diminution or demise
of the jurisdiction of the earlier Inca centers (e.g. Mitupampa) and changes in its initial
roles under new Inca politics and strategies; this would help to explain why there was
no mention of Mitupampa in any of the Spanish colonial accounts. Some buildings at the
old Inca center of Mitupampa were rebuilt (e.g. the ushnu) according to Huayna Qhapaq’s
architectural canons.
I suggest that Caxas and Aypate were transformed during the late stage of provincial
organization under Huayna Qhapaq’s rule. Probably it was during this stage that Caxas
reached its largest extension. Caxas was a provincial administrative center whereas Aypate may have been more significant as cult and ritual center. This conclusion is based on
an analysis of state buildings and ethnohistorical references suggesting that the strategic
position of Aypate was more closely related to pre-Inca cults. The Inca used two different
strategies during the annexation and administration of the indigenous population (Guayacundos) in the Quiroz Basin.
The Inca buildings with similar architectural layout and size may have been built or
rebuilt during the same stage of Inca expansion, and may have had a similar level of
importance or function in relation to a particular aspect of Inca provincial organization,
for instance at a political and ceremonial level. The findings in the ushnu of Mitupampa
suggest that there were at least two types of ushnu and three stages of Inca construction.
146
The first one was a small platform, and the second one was two larger stepped platforms
which covered the first. In addition, the ushnus of Caxas and Mitupampa have similar
dimensions and architectural features.
The size of the temple of the Sun may, in part, depend on the importance of pre-Inca
local cult centers and their role within the Inca strategies of conquest. For instance,
in the case of Huancabamba, its large size suggests that the Inca completely imposed
their state cult in this region. The same occurs at Caxas where the four largest stepped
terraces form a very impressive temple. However, the smallest temples of the Sun were
located at Aypate and Mitupampa where ancient and important ceremonial centers predated the Inca occupation. At both of these sites, the Inca built small temples during
their initial conquest of the region, when the Inca state identity was negotiated in relation to local ceremonial centers, possibly as a strategy to engage with local elites. The
Inca takeover of these regions occurred by placing Inca priests at pre-Inca shrines, such
as was proposed for the Ayahuaca province by Anonymous Jesuit.
Differences between the temples of the Sun at Aypate and Caxas may suggest that this
State cult was conducted differentially in both centers. The Sun cult appears to have
been more elaborate at Caxas, where a larger and more complex structure was built, than
at Aypate where local cults were dominant. According to ethnohistoric sources (Cieza
de León [1551] 1973, p. 154; Xerez [1534] 1968, pp. 212, 154), a large “fortress” built
at Huancabamba (interpreted by me as a temple of the Sun), and the recorded material
evidence in its modern church, suggest that this temple was larger than those of Caxas,
Aypate, and Mitupampa.
Size and architectural complexity of temples of the Sun in the Inca centers of the study
area are accurate indicators of the relationships between local and Inca cults, which may
have been negotiated by elites. Thus, where major local cult centers were strong and prestigious, then the Inca temples of the Sun were smaller (e.g. at Aypate and Mitupampa),
and where local cult centers were subordinated, particularly at major state administrative
sites, then the Inca temples of the Sun were larger (e.g. at Caxas and Huancabamba). It
should be noted that this relates to the final stage of provincial organization in the region, and may reflect a change in Inca strategy with a greater emphasis on state sponsored
rituals and the cult of the Sun at major administrative centers. However, the cult of the
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rest of the Inca pantheon was less variable in the Inca centers of the study area, where
the presence of seven rooms in each one of the recorded acllawasi suggest that the cult
to the Inca pantheon was conducted in these centers. This imperial sponsored cult required similar disposition of spaces (e.g. seven rooms, a yard, and a ritual fountain inside a
room) to perform the cult rituals.
I suggest two proposals that offer slightly different perspectives on how distinct approaches to state organization could each have resulted in similar material remains relating to
this second stage of Inca occupation in the Highlands of Piura. In the first, each province
had a single provincial center and the size of its administrative jurisdiction was related
to the size of its center. Thus, the jurisdictions of Huancabamba, Caxas, Aypate, and Mitupampa were different in size, but the character of their jurisdictions was similar.
In the second proposal, the Inca centers were part of parallel systems with juxtaposed,
but separate administrative and religious jurisdictions. Thus, while Huancabamba and
Caxas were more focused on economic and social administrative aspects, Aypate and
Mitupampa were related to religious aspects and were primarily ritual sites, although
they may have maintained some administrative aspects common to each Inca center. At
present, the archaeological record for the region does not allow me to resolve which of
these two interpretations is most viable. However, following the models of Pachacamac
and the Isla del Sol, I suggest that a better understanding of the relationship between Inca
religious institutions (based at acllawasi, temples of the Sun, and ushnus) and pre-Inca
cults is key to identifying where Inca religious (as opposed to administrative) centers
were constructed. Within the Quiroz Basin, Aypate may have been primarily a major ritual site and secondarily an administrative center and Caxas may have been primarily an
administrative center and secondarily a cult center. Similarly, in the Huancabamba River
Basin, Huancabamba could have been primarily an administrative center with Mitupampa
primarily a cult center or lower order administrative center. All major Inca centers were
part of the Inca religious and administrative systems with juxtaposed jurisdictions.
148
Conclusion: Sacred Landscapes and Imperial Strategies
The ideological role of the Inca infrastructure has been highlighted in previous research.
It transmitted the Inca concepts of society and cosmos to local lords and their subjects.
Religious ideology had a key role in the way Inca provinces were organized and where
main centers were placed and built. The choice of the location of the major Inca centers
in some regions was primarily based on the proximity of ancient local shrines within
the study area, rather than economic or military reasoning. It was an efficient strategy
used by the Inca empire where local cults were prestigious and had regional dimensions.
I suggest that on this basis the Inca created few, but large, religious jurisdictions which
overlapped and paralleled minor administrative jurisdictions.
In many cases, sacred landscapes have been a constant of the Andean world. They were
important to local populations before the Inca, and their priests continued to command
veneration after the fall of Inca empire and the Spanish extirpation of idolatries. In the
case of Aypate, its cult was transformed during colonial times, and today the large pilgrimage to Señor Cautivo de Ayavaca is the main cult center in Northern Peru and beyond.
Sacred landscapes were a major feature of Inca provincial organization. It was this relationship between human beings and some features of their local topography and ancestor
cults that gave people an affiliation and identity with their territory. The Inca recognized
this, and sought to integrate sacred sites and their followers into their religious and social strategies for imperial control.
César W. Astuhuamán Gonzáles
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D AV I D O S H I G E A D A M S
L A S M OT I VA C I O N E S E C O N Ó M I C A S Y R E L I G I O S A S
D E L A E X PA N S I Ó N I N C A I C A H A C I A L A C U E N C A
DEL LAGO TITICACA
David Oshige Adams
Las motivaciones económicas y religiosas de la
expansión incaica hacia la cuenca del lago Titicaca
153
Luego de dominar a los demás grupos del Cusco y las cuencas vecinas, los incas iniciaron
la expansión que años más tarde les convertiría en el estado más importante y grande
de América del Sur. Su primer objetivo yacía hacia el sur en la cuenca del lago Titicaca
(Collasuyo). Hay, a nuestro entender, dos razones muy poderosas para ello que se
encuentran interconectadas: la variedad y cantidad de recursos económicos de la región,
a los que accedían a través de intercambios, y las cuestiones religiosas e ideológicas.
A pesar de las dificultades climáticas, algunos botánicos sostienen que esta región fue el
centro de domesticación más probable de la papa (Solanum tuberosum) (Hawkes 1967,
p. 297; Pickersgill y Heiser 1977, p. 820). En esta cuenca o sus alrededores también
se habrían domesticado la quinua (Chenopodium quinoa) y la cañihua (Chenopodium
pallidicaule) (Heiser y Nelson 1974). También fue uno de los centros de domesticación
de los camélidos y el lugar donde los españoles hallaron la mayor cantidad de estos
animales.
Por otro lado, los incas utilizaron la manipulación ideológica para controlar a los pueblos
en los lugares más diversos de los Andes. Arkush (2005, p. 209) señala que hubo una
política de incorporación religiosa de las provincias asimilando a las divinidades locales.
Los pobladores fueron asimismo involucrados en rituales incaicos realizados en centros
de peregrinación o fiestas estatales en el Cusco. Pero la relevancia religiosa del lago
Titicaca era tan grande que los incas lo convirtieron en uno de los lugares más sagrados
de todo el Tahuantinsuyo.
Esta condición de máxima sacralidad se manifiesta en el hecho que fue uno de los lugares
de peregrinaje más importantes, junto con el Cusco y Pachacamac. De este modo los incas
hábilmente incorporaron al lago Titicaca como uno de sus lugares ancestrales de origen,
para así legitimar su dominio en la región. Como señala Hernández Astete (2012, p. 267),
al identificar los lugares de origen con aquellos en donde sus primeros antepasados
aparecieron, se justificaba su identificación con los territorios y su explotación. Para ello
tuvieron que vincularse míticamente con la región y alterar el entorno, para así crear
evidencias físicas que le prestaran un soporte a la nueva ideología.
Los incas crearon un nuevo paisaje cultural en las orillas del lago pero sobre todo en dos
islas, la del Sol (o Titicaca) y la de la Luna (o Coati). De este modo lograron imponer la
idea que sus ancestros eran originarios de ese lugar. Stanish y Bauer (2011, pp. 26-27)
154
anotan que “…conquistando, incorporando y realzando los adoratorios de las islas, los
Incas consiguieron de manera consciente varios objetivos ideológicos.”
La importancia de los camélidos y las caravanas comerciales
Bernabé Cobo ([1653] 1979, lib. II, cap. 29, p. 216) anotó que las reservas vivas de llamas
eran una de las más grandes riquezas que los indios tenían. La lana era colocada en
almacenes y se la separaba según fuera para los rituales, el Inca o la comunidad. Con esta
lana se fabricaban tejidos, especialmente cumbi, y había artesanos que elaboraban estos
tejidos finos a los cuales se llamaba cumbi camayos.
En esta dirección apunta Pease (2007, pp. 78-79), al anotar que el pastoreo y la utilización
de los recursos de los camélidos fueron uno de los aspectos más importantes de la
economía andina, y que cuando el Inca se desplazaba a otros lugares en tiempos de paz o
de guerra, no faltaban los repartos de ropa hecha principalmente con lana de las alpacas
del Titicaca.
Estos repartos de ropa fueron un mecanismo central en las negociaciones que los
incas celebraban con los gobernantes locales para establecer alianzas. Por parte de los
cusqueños, estas alianzas se proponían para evitar el conflicto militar, esto es como una
forma diplomática de petición de subordinación. Sin embargo, es claro que la principal
forma de conquista fue mediante la fuerza, para así apropiarse de los territorios y recursos
de otros pueblos y neutralizar posibles enemigos (Stanish 2003, p. 236).
Cieza ([1553] 1984, cap. XCIX, fol. 124v., pp. 271-272), por su parte, menciona que la
región de los collas era la más grande y la más poblada, y que las planicies estaban llenas
de ganado silvestre y de pastos. También añadió que antiguamente esta zona fue muy
poblada y que hubo grandes pueblos. Murúa ([1614] 2001, cap. XXVI, p. 542) también
sostuvo que esta región era plana, grande, llena y rica; debido a los grandes rebaños
de camélidos que pudo ver señaló, además, que era la provincia en donde se hallaban
los pueblos más grandes y donde vivían los indios más ricos y poderosos del Perú. Una
anotación interesante es que agregó que con estos animales se transportaba vino, hojas
de coca, azúcar, harina y maíz, entre otros productos.
David Oshige Adams
Las motivaciones económicas y religiosas de la
expansión incaica hacia la cuenca del lago Titicaca
155
Es que los camélidos le proporcionan al hombre no sólo carne, lana, grasa y combustible.
Uno de los mayores beneficios que brindan es la posibilidad de servir como medio de
transporte a grandes distancias. Las caravanas de llamas son de suma importancia en la
economía de las sociedades altiplánicas y en la interacción y articulación con diversas
regiones. Estas caravanas iban y venían transportando productos e ideologías a lo largo
de unas rutas comerciales que se remontaban a tiempos muy antiguos. Cieza ([1553]
1984, pp. 272-273) ilustra este tráfico cuando señala que en la región del Collao no faltaba
comida porque “nunca dexan de traer cargas de mayz, coca, y fructas de todo género, y
cantidad de miel. . . .” Núñez y Nielsen (2011, p. 14) señalan que en ciertas rutas ya había
camélidos de carga que formaban parte de las relaciones de tráfico interregional desde la
época del Periodo Arcaico Tardío, es decir aproximadamente hacia 2000 a.C. Esto quiere
decir que el tráfico de caravanas de llamas es una tradición comercial en esta región de
muy larga duración; por lo tanto, tendría unos circuitos bien establecidos y conocidos y
su fama habría ido creciendo con el paso de los años. En consecuencia, quien llegase a
controlar estas rutas comerciales, obtendría el acceso a una gran variedad de productos
y bienes de lugares bastante diversos. Así, por ejemplo, podían conseguir pescados del
Océano Pacífico, ají y coca de los valles de la vertiente occidental de los Andes, piedras
preciosas y semipreciosas del sur de la cuenca, maíz y otros productos de los valles
cálidos del Cusco, y plumas y medicinas en la Amazonía. La adecuada gestión de estos
bienes y productos en grandes fiestas y banquetes junto con ceremonias cargadas de
religiosidad, habrían sido los pilares del prestigio y poder de las elites de la cuenca del
lago Titicaca.
Este proceso de captación de seguidores y de mano de obra se habría iniciado al menos
desde el Periodo Formativo Medio (circa 1300-500 a.C.), época en la cual se establecieron
las primeras sociedades con diferencias de rango (Stanish 2003, p. 109). No es de extrañar,
pues, que los incas hayan querido aprovechar el control de este tráfico caravanero, que
para la época de su primera expansión habría tenido ya aproximadamente 3,500 años de
funcionamiento.
Alan Covey (2006, p. 136) argumenta que luego de la formación del estado inca y de
que las elites reorganizaran la cuenca de Cusco, el acceso a los bienes de prestigio pasó
a ser una prioridad en la estrategia de expansión. Esto se debía a que los gobernantes
consumían y redistribuían bienes exóticos, en tanto que las elites usaban los banquetes y
regalos de ropa, coca y metales preciosos como reciprocidad por los servicios recibidos.
156
Por estas razones, el estado en desarrollo realizó conquistas territoriales a lo largo de las
rutas de las caravanas para asegurarse el acceso directo a recursos no locales. Además
de ello estableció y formalizó contactos diplomáticos de larga distancia (esto es, con
santuarios como Pachacamac, en la costa central del Perú, o con las entidades políticas
de la cuenca del Titicaca; Covey 2006, p. 137). En esta época el altiplano vivía un periodo
seco durante el cual el nivel del agua del lago Titicaca se redujo hasta en 17 metros
(Arkush 2012, p. 296). Debido a estas circunstancias la agricultura en los campos elevados
o camellones se redujo drásticamente, al igual que en los campos de secano debido a la
inestabilidad de las lluvias. Así, durante el Periodo Intermedio Tardío o Periodo Altiplano,
las sociedades tenían una economía agropecuaria con un fuerte énfasis en el manejo
de grandes rebaños de camélidos. Bauer y Stanish (2003, pp. 59-60) sostienen que para
conservar los grandes rebaños se intensificó el uso de los pastizales de puna y se creó un
sistema de asentamientos más disperso.
Esto quiere decir que en la época anterior a la llegada de los incas, el pastoreo de
camélidos se estaba desarrollando con mayor intensidad en el altiplano. Estos animales
habrían servido como fuente de alimento y de materia prima para textiles y ropas, pero
también para seguir desarrollando, mediante caravanas, a las rutas de intercambio, las
cuales habrían sufrido modificaciones luego del colapso del estado en Tiahuanaco.
En este sentido es importante señalar que Stanish (2003, p. 271; 2012, p. 377) sugiere que
el área de Moquegua estuvo controlada por los collas durante el Periodo Intermedio Tardío,
o que éstos al menos controlaban las relaciones de intercambio. Luego, como señalan
Núñez y Dillehay (1995, pp. 128-129), una vez que los incas se hicieron del control de la
parte central de la cuenca del Titicaca, asimilaron también las rutas preexistentes entre
las tierras altas y bajas. Lograron esto mediante el dominio directo, esto es la presión
cultural, tecnológica, social, religiosa y económica, o a través del dominio indirecto, como
por ejemplo manipulando las instituciones. Pero estos autores también anotan que se
ampliaron las rutas y que por primera vez en la historia de la región se puso en práctica
un tipo de administración diferente.
Esta gestión administrativa funcionaba centralizando los bienes en movimiento y
proveyendo recursos e ideologías según viejos acuerdos de reciprocidad, armonía
social y participación social. Así, el nuevo modelo de penetración se fundamentó en
la redistribución de la tierra y en la explotación de recursos que no se desarrollaban
localmente (Núñez y Dillehay 1995, pp. 129-130).
David Oshige Adams
Las motivaciones económicas y religiosas de la
expansión incaica hacia la cuenca del lago Titicaca
157
La conquista del Collao por parte de los incas
Las fuentes históricas son ambiguas en lo que respecta al momento en que la región del
Titicaca fue incorporada al estado inca (Stanish y Bauer 2011, p. 38). Algunos cronistas
refieren que fue Viracocha Inca quien conquistó la región del lago Titicaca, mientras que
otros señalan que este evento se produjo durante el reinado de Pachacuti. Pero a pesar de
estos problemas, parece estar claro que el estado inca inició su expansión hacia el Collao –o
al menos realizó su primera incursión–durante el gobierno de Viracocha Inca (BouysseCassagne 2004, p. 80).
El propio Cieza ([1533] 1984, cap. C, fol. 125v., p. 274) escribió que antes de la llegada de
los incas había en el Collao dos grandes señores, Zapana y Cari, los gobernantes de los
collas y los lupacas, respectivamente. Ambos estaban enfrascados en constantes luchas y
procuraban ganarse la amistad y el favor de “Viracocha Inga”, quien reinaba en el Cusco, e
incluso le enviaron “embajadores”, a lo que Viracocha respondió consultando al oráculo,
tras lo cual decidió apoyar a Cari (Cieza [1553] 2000, cap. XLII, pp. 134-135).
En este sentido, los incas fueron sumamente hábiles para manejar en provecho propio
los conflictos entre los diferentes grupos o etnias de los territorios que les interesaba
anexar; por ejemplo, también gestionaron una alianza con los canas contra los canchis
(ambas etnias asentadas en la región que se extiende entre el Cusco y el Collao). Pero
no sólo anexaron territorios aprovechando las rivalidades existentes entre grupos o
etnias. Como señala Covey (2006, p. 191), los incas primero trasladaban su gran ejército
y luego intentaban convencer a las elites locales de que establecieran una alianza de
subordinación.
La vía diplomática comprendía el ofrecimiento de regalos (como los metales preciosos y
los finos tejidos) y alianzas matrimoniales. Pero una vez agotada esta negociación y al no
tener una respuesta positiva, los incas procedían entonces a usar la fuerza. Cobo ([1653]
1979, lib. II, cap. 13, p. 149) recogió la versión según la cual el Inca Pachacuti envió
su ejército al Collao y que su rey salió a hacerle frente. El combate habría sido feroz y
prolongado, pero la mayor experiencia guerrera de los incas hizo que finalmente fueran
los vencedores.
158
En castigo, el Inca destruyó el pueblo de Ayaviri y luego persiguió al Colla Capac, a quien
volvió a enfrentar en el pueblo de Pucará. En este lugar el Inca volvió a vencer y el “rey”
colla fue tomado prisionero. Su suerte estaba decidida al haber osado enfrentar al Inca.
Sarmiento (1988, p. 105) anota que luego del triunfo cusqueño, todos los pueblos que
obedecían al Colla Capac llegaron para rendir pleitesía a Pachacuti, quien los esperaba
en Hatuncolla, llevándole oro, plata y ropas. El Inca regresó luego al Cusco con el Chuchi
Capac (Colla Capac) como prisionero y le hizo decapitar.
Murúa ([1614] 2001, cap. XX, pp. 66-67) a su vez nos dice que Pachacuti mandó levantar
la Casa del Sol (Coricancha) en el Cusco, y que en el transcurso de su construcción salió
a la conquista del Collasuyo. A su paso por los territorios conquistados iba dejando
caciques, señores y capitanes y cuando volvió triunfante al Cusco llevaba consigo gran
cantidad de oro y plata, y sacrificó a Colla Capac en honor al Sol. Las diferencias en el
trato dispensado a collas y lupacas son asimismo muy claras, tal como sucedió en otras
zonas donde los incas también premiaron con generosidad a los grupos o etnias que
aceptaron subordinarse y/o establecer alianzas, y castigaron duramente a quienes se
alzaron en armas contra ellos.
Así, mientras que algunas “elites” collas fueron trasladadas al área nuclear incaica como
trabajadores, los miembros de las “elites” lupacas recibieron honores por parte del Inca,
los que incluyeron tejidos finos, conchas de spondylus y el derecho a viajar en litera
(Covey 2006). Stanish (2003, p. 271; 2012, p. 377) asimismo sugiere que los intercambios
comerciales con el valle de Moquegua, que los collas controlaban, cambiaron ahora de
“dueño”. Con la derrota militar sufrida en el altiplano por los collas a manos de los incas,
éstos pasaron a dominar dicho flujo comercial. No sólo esto, sino que en su reemplazo se
colocó a los lupacas como administradores de la zona.
Frye (2005, pp. 198-199) agrega, además, que por haberse rebelado y resistido al dominio
inca, la región colla fue organizada y dividida territorialmente de manera tal que fuese
más sencillo controlarla militarmente. Este hecho es muy interesante, puesto que la
situación difiere por completo de la organización de otras regiones de la cuenca del lago
Titicaca. Esta rebeldía de los collas es también visible en un canto documentado por Juan
de Santa Cruz Pachacuti Yamqui Salcamaygua ([1630] 1995, 18 r., pp. 56-57; consúltese
también Itier 1993, pp. 146-147; Julien 2004, p. 20; Rostworowski 1993, p. 10):
David Oshige Adams
Las motivaciones económicas y religiosas de la
expansión incaica hacia la cuenca del lago Titicaca
159
Tú, rey de Cuzco, yo rey de Colla
Beberemos, comeremos, hablaremos
Que nadie hable
Yo me siento en plata, tú te sientas en oro
Tú adoras a Viracocha Creador de Mundo,
Yo adoro al sol
Este canto habría sido entonado por el jefe o señor más importante de los colla llamado
Zapana, Rukisapana, Chucgi Qhapaq o Colla Qhapaq (Arkush 2011, p. 38) durante las
festividades organizadas por el matrimonio y coronación del Inca Viracocha. Pachacuti
Yamqui agrega que el señor de los collas llegó en andas, con elegancia y guardaespaldas,
trayendo además consigo a su ídolo, el cual estaba muy adornado. Es interesante anotar
que Sarmiento de Gamboa ([1572] 1988, p. 104) señala que el “rey” colla tenía tanto poder
que se hacía llamar Inca Capac.
Este canto guarda una información muy importante a pesar que su autenticidad no es
clara, puesto que nos transmite la intención de mostrar al jefe colla como un señor de
tal importancia que estaba al mismo nivel que el Inca. Sin embargo, debemos resaltar
que arqueológicamente no se han recogido evidencias de que los collas hayan tenido
una organización política y social, o que hayan estado unificados bajo un solo líder o
“rey”. Aparentemente hay una discrepancia entre el registro arqueológico y los datos
etnohistóricos en lo que se refiere a este tema (Arkush 2011, pp. 220-221, 2012, p. 315;
Frye 2005, p. 198).
La misma cuestión surge con respecto a la complejidad social y el dominio territorial
atribuidos a los lupacas en los documentos etnohistóricos (Frye y de la Vega 2005, p.
184). Los datos sugieren una gran fragmentación y un periodo de conflictos y guerras,
a juzgar por la gran cantidad de sitios fortificados en la cima de los cerros (pukaras). Es
posible que en determinados momentos, los diferentes grupos collas o lupacas hayan
establecido alianzas o “sistemas sociales de redes cooperativas” en lugares defensivos
y que controlaban áreas locales (Arkush 2012, p. 314). En estos momentos se habría
producido una especie de confederación que habría tenido algunas cabezas visibles
y quizá un jefe o curaca único temporal, el cual habría sido tomado por los cronistas
españoles como el “rey” o “gobernante”.
160
Las fuentes escritas y los mitos de origen de los incas
La representación del ancestro fundador como un extranjero o un extraño es común en
los mitos de origen de los reinos y estados antiguos del mundo. Además este fundador
usualmente tiene poderes sobrenaturales o cuenta con una tecnología avanzada, y
deambula de un lugar a otro hasta llegar al lugar donde está destinado a gobernar (Urton
1990, p. 1). En el caso de los incas este héroe fundador se llama Manco Cápac, quien es
mencionado en un mito de origen que tiene como escenario los alrededores del Cusco
(Pacariqtambo).
Sin embargo, los cronistas combinaron este mito de origen con otro que incorporaba
al escenario del Titicaca. Como mencionan Stanish y Bauer (2011, p. 14), con esto los
ideólogos incas lograron asociar a la elite gobernante del Cusco con el principal centro de
adoración de una de las más importantes provincias de las tierras altas. Así por ejemplo,
para Garcilaso, Manco Cápac viajó del lago Titicaca al Cusco a través de Pacariqtambo y
los descendientes de este fundador mítico se convirtieron en los Incas de sangre real (en
Bauer 1996, p. 51; consúltese también Pease 1985, pp. 58-59).
Cobo ([1653] 1979, cap. 8, p. 103) a su vez recogió información según la cual los Incas
llegaron al Cusco desde el lago Titicaca con las orejas perforadas y con aretes de oro.
También se decía que luego de crear las cosas en Tiahuanaco, el creador del mundo
(Huiracocha o Ticciviracocha) le ordenó al Sol, la Luna y las Estrellas que se dirigieran a
la isla de Titicaca (la isla del Sol) y que de allí subieran al cielo. Cuando el Sol estaba listo
para partir en forma de un hombre brillante y esplendoroso, habló con Manco Cápac y le
dijo que él y sus descendientes iban a dominar muchos territorios y pueblos; y además
que iban a ser grandes gobernantes y que siempre lo adoraran como su padre (Cobo
[1653] 1979, lib. II, cap. 3, p. 105).
Cristóbal de Molina ([1578] 2011, pp. 4-5) presenta una versión híbrida que combina
ambos mitos de origen incaicos con elementos cristianos. Molina sostiene que Manco
Cápac fue el primer Inca y que a partir de él comenzaron a llamarse “Hijos del Sol”. Sin
embargo, luego menciona que hubo un gran diluvio y que todos murieron salvo por un
hombre y una mujer, a los cuales el viento echó después de tiempo en Tiahuanaco. En este
lugar habría vivido el dios Huiracocha (también denominado Hacedor), quien creó al sol,
la luna y las estrellas, y puso fin a la oscuridad que allí imperaba.
David Oshige Adams
Las motivaciones económicas y religiosas de la
expansión incaica hacia la cuenca del lago Titicaca
161
Después de que el “creador” formara a todos los hombres y mujeres y las naciones en
Tiahuanaco, les ordenó que descendieran por debajo de la tierra y que luego emergieran
en los lugares donde él ordenase como cuevas, cerros, manantiales, lagos, árboles y así
sucesivamente. De este modo los linajes tuvieron su origen en aquellos lugares en donde
se convertirían en huacas. Es interesante mencionar aquí cómo los cronistas españoles
mezclaron las historias que recogieron con elementos de su propia religión. Pero esta
manipulación incluye la propia información acerca de las divinidades indígenas.
Por su parte, César Itier (2013, p. 83) señala que estos cronistas, junto con los
evangelizadores, construyeron una imagen de Huiracocha que podía ser análoga a la del
Dios cristiano, creador de todas las cosas. Añade además que el verdadero significado
o sentido de esta divinidad sería el océano o su “espíritu”, el cual sostiene a la tierra
y asciende a la superficie a través de lagunas y manantiales. De este modo no sería un
creador universal sino la deidad que le dio el “ánima” a los ancestros fundadores de los
grupos de agricultores, así como también al sol, la luna y el trueno.
Por estos motivos, Huiracocha estaría ligado de modo sumamente íntimo con el lago
Titicaca y la ideología de sus pobladores. A pesar de esta manipulación inicial por parte
de los cronistas y su confusión a la hora de entender el sistema de creencias de los
habitantes del Collao, debemos señalar algo muy importante: en las narraciones hay una
referencia recurrente al lago Titicaca, sus islas y el sitio de Tiahuanaco como los lugares
donde los incas y sus divinidades más importantes tuvieron su origen mítico.
La larga importancia religiosa de los santuarios en el lago Titicaca
Martti Pärssinen (2003, pp. 260-261) menciona que los incas admiraban a Tiahuanaco. Mas
a pesar de las referencias que indican que este lugar les era importante, no hay evidencias
arquitectónicas relevantes de ello. Por dicho motivo Pärssinen señala tentativamente a
Copacabana como el nuevo Tiahuanaco, en el mismo sentido que algunos centros incaicos
eran considerados como “el nuevo Cusco”. Los incas emprendieron una reforma religiosa
en Copacabana y las islas donde aún vivían los descendientes de Tiahuanaco, quienes
seguían venerando los lugares sagrados (Bouysse-Cassagne 2004, p. 80).
162
Covey (2006, p. 192) añade que los incas cooptaron el poder ideológico y religioso al
promover un sistema de peregrinación y establecer una finca real en Tiahuanaco. Es
importante mencionar que el primer gran sitio en la Isla del Sol se construyó durante el
periodo del estado homónimo. Éste se erigió en la zona en la cual los incas posteriormente
adujeron que había nacido el Sol (la Roca Sagrada). En esta época ya se realizaban rituales
de peregrinación hacia este lugar, y en la isla de la Luna también se realizaron ceremonias
religiosas (Bauer, Covey y Terry 2004, p. 61). Estos autores añaden que dichas islas fueron
incorporadas al estado tiahuanaco hacia mediados del primer milenio después de Cristo.
Es interesante señalar que tras el colapso del estado tiahuanaco, en tiempos de los
lupacas, estos sitios aparentemente no siguieron siendo lugares de peregrinación.
Stanish y Bauer (2004, p. 39) proponen que fueron abandonados y que ya no tuvieron
importancia regional. Sin embargo, muchos años después, la elite inca muy posiblemente
intentó vincularse con el antiguo estado tiahuanaco (Stanish y Bauer 2011, p. 27). Esto
probablemente se debió a que su prestigio e importancia ritual perduraron en la memoria
colectiva de la gente, no obstante el tiempo transcurrido.
De este modo los incas convirtieron un adoratorio de importancia regional en el lugar
de nacimiento del cosmos y del origen del linaje fundador del Tahuantinsuyo (Stanish y
Bauer 2011, p. 63). El área de la Roca Sagrada sufrió una serie de modificaciones. Ramos
Gavilán ([1621] 1988, lib. 1, cap. 26, p. 164) anotó que se trataba de un gran afloramiento
de piedra que tenía una pequeña oquedad, en donde se creía que el Sol había surgido;
asimismo señaló que su parte posterior descendía hacia las aguas del lago y que estaba
cubierta con los más finos textiles (cumbi).
La otra cara de la roca, por su parte, estaba cubierta con planchas de oro y plata, y tenía
un espacio en donde se echaban ofrendas (Ramos Gavilán [1621] 1988, lib. 1, cap. 17,
pp. 115-116, lib. 1, cap. 24, p. 150). Cobo ([1653] 1990, bk. 1, cap. 18, pp. 96-97) agrega
que en el templo se adoraba al Sol, pero también estaban la imagen del Trueno y de otras
divinidades; menciona, además, que en las ventanas y nichos se colocaron ídolos de
figuras humanas, llamas, aves y otros animales de cobre, plata y oro. Esto quiere decir
que es posible que en el templo de la Roca Sagrada se hayan celebrado algunos rituales
parecidos a los que se llevaban a cabo en el Coricancha, en Cusco.
David Oshige Adams
Las motivaciones económicas y religiosas de la
expansión incaica hacia la cuenca del lago Titicaca
163
La importancia religiosa de la cuenca del lago Titicaca queda demostrada también
cuando Murúa (2004 [1616], fol. 67v., pp. 148-149) señala que en el Collao había una
mayor cantidad de huacas que en las restantes provincias, y además que “Titicaca” era la
principal y a donde acudían de todo el reino. Esta última parte reafirma la importancia
que esta isla tuvo como lugar de peregrinación. Esta ruta de peregrinaje estuvo asociada
a las instalaciones estatales contruidas en el camino hacia las islas y en ellas, las cuales
fueron diseñadas con el fin de apropiarse de la legitimidad ideológica propia de la elite
local (Stanish y Bauer 2011, pp. 26-27).
Los incas, entonces, llegaron a esta región con el afán de anexar un territorio que albergaba
a muchas personas, una gran cantidad de rebaños de camélidos y el usufructo de las
rutas comerciales. Pero esta zona también atesoraba cultos e ideologías muy poderosos
donde la figura divina de Huiracocha era preponderante; esto debido a que su naturaleza
lo vinculaba con el agua y la fertilidad pero a la vez con el sol, la luna y los truenos. Así
que los incas tuvieron un interés económico e ideológico, y cumplieron sus objetivos de
dominación mediante la fuerza o la negociación diplomática. Por último, para legitimar
su dominio manipularon al paisaje y la historia para vincularse míticamente con el lago,
y cooptaron el poder religioso local.
164
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166
C O N S TA N Z A C E R U T I
I N C A O F F E R I N G S A S S O C I AT E D W I T H
T H E F R O Z E N M U M M I E S F R O M M O U N T L LU L L A I L L A C O
Constanza Ceruti
Inca Offerings Associated with the Frozen Mummies
from Mount Llullaillaco
167
Inca Offerings Associated with the Frozen Mummies from Mount Llullaillaco
Five centuries ago, the highest Andean mountains were climbed by Inca priests for the
ritual performance of sacrifices, and the subsequent burial of human victims and associated offering assemblages. Spanish chroniclers wrote about the ceremonies of Capacocha
during which young women and children–usually the sons and daughters of local rulers–
were offered to the imperial deities together with a diverse assortment of symbolic items,
such as gold and silver figurines, shell necklaces, high quality textiles, pottery, food, and
firewood, for the good fortune of a recently crowned Inca emperor, and to ensure the
fertility of the crops and llamas. In this paper I discuss the assemblages of offerings associated with the three frozen Inca mummies discovered during archaeological research
conducted by Johan Reinhard and myself on the summit of Mount Llullaillaco, a volcano
in northwestern Argentina. By correlating the archaeological evidence with the historical
sources, interpretations will be presented regarding the role of mortuary offering assemblages associated with Inca mummies on sacred Andean peaks.
Introduction
Three frozen bodies belonging to a young woman and two children were found at an
altitude of 6,715 meters above sea level (22,031 feet) during scientific excavations
funded by the National Geographic Society and directed by Johan Reinhard and myself.
The Inca shrine on the summit of the Llullaillaco volcano is believed to be the highest
archaeological site in the world. The three mummies discovered there are those of children who were sacrificed five hundred years ago, under the rule of the Inca empire, as
part of a state ceremony known as Capacocha.
According to the historical sources written during and shortly after the Hispanic
conquest of the central Andes, the practice of human sacrifice was restricted among
the Incas to rare occasions such as natural catastrophes or the death of an emperor
(Cobo [1653] 1990, p. 151). Selected children were taken in processions to the highest
summits and symbolically sent as messengers into the world of the ancestral spirits
to appease the mountain deities, ensure fertility, and bring about the well-being of the
recently crowned new emperor (Ceruti 2004).
168
The Inca frozen bodies from Mount Llullaillaco are those of a fifteen year old girl, a
seven year old boy, and a six year old girl. The older female is known as the “maiden”
because she had probably been incorporated into the system of “chosen women” or
acllakuna, who were kept secluded and in a virginal condition until they were in their
mid-teens (Acosta [1590] 1962). The younger female and the boy may have been offered
by their presumably noble parents to partake in the Capacocha ceremony as part of
political strategies that allowed local rulers to strengthen their links with a new Inca
monarch, as narrated in the chronicles (Hernández Principe [1621] 1986).
The Llullaillaco individuals are among the best preserved mummies ever recovered. The
scientific study of these bodies was coordinated for five years at the Institute of High
Mountain Research at the Catholic University of Salta. Important results were obtained
in the fields of paleoradiology (Previgliano et al. 2003, 2005), dental studies (Arias Aráoz
et al. 2002), hair analysis (Cartmell 2001; Wilson et al. 2013), ancient DNA (Reinhard and
Ceruti 2010, pp. 103-104), as well as contributions to the archaeology and ethnohistory
of the ritual life of the Incas (Ceruti 1999, 2003, 2005, 2002-2005; Reinhard and Ceruti
2006, 2010).
The Llullaillaco mummies were buried about 1.7 meters deep in individual pits inside a
funerary platform, approximately ten by six meters in length and width (Reinhard and
Ceruti 2000). They had been buried together with a total of more than one hundred
sumptuary objects that included textiles, gold and silver statues, pottery, food, and
feathered headdresses. According to the chroniclers’ accounts these were conceived as
supplies for the journey into the world of the ancestors as well as propitiatory offerings
to be presented to the imperial deities and the local mountain spirits. This paper focuses
on the social use and the symbolic meaning of such pieces of associated offerings,
based on scientific analysis, as well as ethnohistorical and ethnographic references.
Constanza Ceruti
Inca Offerings Associated with the Frozen Mummies
from Mount Llullaillaco
169
Description and Interpretation of the Offerings Associated with the Llullaillaco Mummies
The sacrificial victims of Inca Capacocha ceremonies were buried in textile bundles with
assemblages of offerings in accordance with their sex and age. Gender-specific offerings
such as male and female figurines are generally found to be associated with sacrificial
victims of the same sex represented by the statues (Schobinger 2001, pp. 266-301;
Reinhard and Ceruti 2010, p. 16). Pottery offerings are more widely represented in female
burials, although certain types such as arybalos and plates can also be found in male
burials. It appears that the offerings are more numerous and more varied in the case of
female victims than they are in the case of male victims.
Metal and Seashell Figurines
Small anthropomorphic and zoomorphic figurines made of metal were placed in
close association with the bodies of the Llullaillaco mummies. Chroniclers note that
precious metals such as gold (qori in Quechua) and silver (collqe in Quechua) were not
only appreciated for their economic value, but were actually worshiped as symbolic
manifestations of the divinity of the sun and the moon (Murúa [1590] 1946, p. 278).
In the Llullaillaco funerary contexts, statues were aligned to form a row and were deposited
on the opposite side of the body from where the pottery and textile offerings were placed.
Three female figurines made of gold, silver, and Spondylus were aligned on the left side
of the Llullaillaco maiden’s mummy. Another set of three female figurines was found near
her burial. Four female figurines were placed in a row inside the burial of the young girl of
Llullaillaco. One anthropomorphic masculine figurine, and one representing a llama, were
recovered in direct association with the mummy of the Llullaillaco boy, whereas several
groups of the same kinds of figurines were found in separate assemblages scattered
nearby in the platform fill (Reinhard and Ceruti 2000, 2010).
Chroniclers provide a few explanations for the symbolic meanings of the metal and
seashell figurines that were placed as grave goods or that formed separate offering
assemblages. The male and female statues may have represented deities (Anónimo [1590]
1968, p. 160; Murúa [1590] 1946, p. 257) or members of the Inca royal elite (Albornoz
170
[1583] 1984, p.194; Betanzos [1557] 1996, p. 48). Alternative hypotheses include human
figurines representing substitutes for actual human sacrifices (Schobinger 1966, p. 207),
female victims being symbolically transformed into votive figurines (Farrington 1998),
Spondylus seashell statues representing mountain deities in control of weather and
fertility (Reinhard 1985), or assemblages representing a miniature of the Inca emperor´s
cosmos, with statues standing in for those subjected to his rule. In my opinion, male gold
figurines are likely to represent Inca ritual experts or priests, because noble attributes
such as elongated and pierced earlobes are clearly represented. Female figurines are likely
to represent the acllakuna or “chosen women”, based on the similarity of the miniature
feather headdresses found on the figurines and the full size feather headdresses
associated with young female victims of Capacocha ceremonies (see Ceruti 2003).
The figurines representing llamas may have been intended to increase the fertility of
herds (Arriaga [1621] 1984). The symbolic link between zoomorphic figurines and fertility
is widely accepted, enhanced by the fact that metal statues have clear representations of
erect phalluses. An interesting pattern of association between human male and llama
figurines was identified in the offering assemblages distributed around the burial of the
boy on the summit of Llullaillaco. Formed by two male human figurines and two or three
zoomorphic statues representing camelids, they had been placed in a row, the human
figurines ahead and the llama figurines following them (Reinhard and Ceruti 2000).
Human male and llama figurines were also associated with the burial of the mummy from
Mount Aconcagua, in western Argentina (Schobinger 2001, pp. 266-301) and in the burials
from Mount Misti, near Arequipa, in Peru (Ceruti 2013, pp. 359-372; Reinhard and Ceruti
2010, pp. 16-18).
The repetition of this pattern in mountaintop offering assemblages, as well as the
importance of miniature figurines representing camelids in ritual ethnographic contexts
(Manzo and Raviña 1996, p. 9; Reinhard 1985, p. 313), suggest that these assemblages
of figurines on Llullaillaco may have been meant to ensure the fertility of the flocks or
the prosperity of the caravans (Reinhard and Ceruti 2010, pp. 16-18). As a matter of fact,
chroniclers referred to arrays of statues representing “sheep” (llamas) and their “herders”
that were displayed in the gardens of Coricancha, the Sun Temple, at the capital city
of Cusco (Cieza [1553] 1959, p. 147). An alternative interpretation is that the rows of
human male and llama statues could have been meant to represent the very procession of
Capacocha, which according to the written sources, was led by priests and accompanied
by llamas loaded with offerings (Molina [1553] 1959, p. 96).
Constanza Ceruti
Inca Offerings Associated with the Frozen Mummies
from Mount Llullaillaco
171
Pottery and Wooden Objects
Sets of pottery items were recorded from inside the burials of the two females from
Llullaillaco. There was one arybalo, one jar, one pedestal pot, and two or three pairs of
plates, and a pair of bowls in the burial of the younger female. A pair of miniature wooden
vases or keros was buried with the Llullaillaco maiden, whereas a pair of full size keros
was found in association with the younger girl. An arybalo was also found in association
with the burial of the Llullaillaco boy. It was fractured, with the base detached from the
rest of the vessel. Compositional analysis of paste samples extracted from diverse pottery
items was performed, with the intention of identifying the area where the Llullaillaco
pieces had been originally manufactured (Bray et al. 2005). Ceramics present appear to
have originated in Cusco, in the Lake Titicaca region, and locally (ibid., tables 4, 5).
Pottery offerings are more widely represented in female burials, although certain types,
such as arybalos and plates, can also be found in male burials. Arybalos and bottles
are functionally related to the transportation, storage, and distribution of chicha,
whereas ollas are devoted to cooking, and plates and bowls to the consumption of food.
Sometimes the pieces are miniatures, whose primary function is symbolic rather than
utilitarian. According to the chronicles, miniature pots in the burials of female sacrificial
victims symbolically represented the housewares of married women (Betanzos [1557]
1996, p. 77).
Certain objects, such as plates, bowls, and wooden keros, have usually been found in
pairs at mountaintop burials. The pairing of the plates and vases can be related to the
Andean etiquette of ritually sharing food and drink (Randall 1992, p. 75). Ritual drinking
with two vases is described in the earliest Spanish sources (Betanzos [1557] 1996, p. 67)
and is also represented in drawings of the mestizo chronicler Guaman Poma de Ayala
(Guaman Poma [ca. 1615] 1987, pp. 143, 285).
It has been suggested that the Inca sacrificial victims were buried with the same vases in
which they had been given their last drink (Linares Málaga 1968, p. 115). The fact that
children were given plenty of food and alcoholic beverages prior to their sacrifice has
been explained as an attempt to help them go contentedly to the presence of the Maker
(Molina [1575] 1959, p. 93). Nonetheless, there were practical reasons, because alcohol
was also intended to dull the senses at the moment of death (Cobo [1590] 1996, p. 236;
172
Ramos Gavilán [1621], p. 81). In my doctoral dissertation (Ceruti 2003, p. 101), based on
the position of the bodies and the bundling techniques of the Llullaillaco mummies, I
suggested that the maiden and the girl probably died at the summit shrine, whereas the
boy could have accidentally died on the way to the summit, due to complications caused
by the extreme altitude. With his torso and flexed legs tightly wrapped with a rope it
would have been easier to carry his body during the final stages of the climb. In addition,
the artefactual evidence seems to support this hypothesis: Unlike the two females, the
boy did not have a pair of wooden keros in his burial. In addition, the arybalo placed near
his body is the only one that was found with visible remains of chicha, indicating that it
was never actually drunk during the ceremony on the summit.
Food Items and Coca Leaves
Food items contained in textile bags and placed in the burials of Llullaillaco included
corn, peanuts, dried potatoes, and dried meat (charqui in Quechua). Food items may have
been symbolically intended to sustain the children in the afterlife, or they may have been
meant as food to be offered to the spirits of the mountains and ancestors (Cobo [1653]
1990, p. 115).
Chroniclers describe pieces of coca leaves being placed in the mouths of humans beings
just prior to their sacrificial deaths (Ramos [1621] 1976, p. 26). Archaeological evidence
supports this assertion, because the Llullaillaco maiden was found to have had small
fragments of coca leaves around her mouth, on her lips, and in her hands. The coca leaf
was a common offering in Inca times (Murua [1590] 1946, p. 242) and still is in many areas
of the Andes today (Allen 1988). Although today the coca leaves have been incorporated
into the ordinary diet, the chewing of coca leaves was restricted at the time of the Inca
Empire (Levillier 1940, p. 131). Hair analysis performed on the three Llullaillaco mummies
tested positive for cocaine (Cartmell 2001; Wilson et al. 2007), thus providing another
source of evidence to show that the children selected for sacrifice had been under the
strict control of the Inca state.
Constanza Ceruti
Inca Offerings Associated with the Frozen Mummies
from Mount Llullaillaco
173
Spondylus Shells and Necklaces
The Spondylus shell, called by the Quechua name mullu, was highly esteemed by the Incas,
who considered the material to be more valuable than gold (Sarmiento de Gamboa [1572]
1999, p. 167). The Quechua manuscript of Huarochiri states that in prehispanic times,
mullu was symbolically fed to the sacred places, being one of the favorite “dishes” of the
huacas (Taylor 1999, p. 299). Since in South America this sea-shell can only be found in
the warm waters of the coast of Ecuador, its exotic nature increased its economic and
symbolic value, rooted in its supposed efficacy in attracting rain. The ritual importance
of Spondylus in the Andean world has survived until the present (Rosing 1996).
The use of Spondylus shell has been well documented in the archaeological record from
Llullaillaco, where miniature carved figurines are not the only offerings made of this
material. On this mountaintop site we found a Spondylus necklace woven in wool and
human hair, surrounding the assemblage of llama figurines in a row with two male statues
mentioned earlier (Reinhard and Ceruti 2010, p. 83). In addition to the artefactual use of
Spondylus, the natural shell was also incorporated as an offering, which was generally
placed close to the surface, after the refilling of the tombs.
Necklaces of sea-shells were noted as being worn during important Inca ceremonies
(Cobo [1652] 1990, p. 151). In 2000 I observed a necklace of trapezoidal Spondylus beads,
almost identical to the one recovered from Llullaillaco, in an exhibit at the Museo Nacional de Arqueología, Antropología, e Historia del Perú, surprisingly in association with
a funerary bundle of the Paracas period (about 1,500 years before the time of the Incas).
The American Museum of Natural History in New York has a similar specimen with wool
cordage, attributed to the Nazca Valley and culture (Craig Morris, personal communication, accession number 41.0/5454). In view of the continuity of Andean beliefs attached
to the mullu sea-shell, we cannot rule out the hypothesis that the Incas may have been
reusing valuable antiques for their own ceremonial purposes.
174
Textile Garments and Feathered Ornaments
Inca sacrificial victims on mountaintop shrines were usually buried with the clothing
that they were wearing at the moment of death, plus outer textile mantles used to wrap
them as bundles. Chronicler Martín de Murua ([1590] 1946, p. 319) refers to the custom
of including bags, spare sandals, and extra tunics inside the bundles. In the case of the
Llullaillaco boy, two extra tunics were included in his bundle, in addition to two pairs
of sandals, and two slings placed in the burial close to his body. The young girl from
Llullaillaco also had spare moccasins and sandals.
Fine tunics were sent as diplomatic presents by the Inca to local leaders or curacas.
Curacas often had important roles in the Capacochas, even offering their own children,
as reported by the chroniclers (Hernández Príncipe [1621] 1986). This could explain
why fine male tunics were buried together with female victims on Mount Llullaillaco and
elsewhere (Reinhard and Ceruti 2000, p. 78). The Llullaillaco checkerboard tunic is of the
type described by John Rowe as having been a gift of the Inca to local rulers (Rowe 1979,
p. 240-250).
The application of feathers on textile bags and mantles has been well documented in the
offerings on Llullaillaco, since a chuspa or bag covered in red feathers and presumably
containing coca leaves, was placed in the burial of the younger girl, while a similar white
feathered bag was buried in direct association with the boy. Feathers were also given
special value among the Incas and the use of objects covered in feathers was restricted to
noble people and ceremonial contexts (Betanzos [1557] 1996, p. 195).
In Inca times, it was a common practice for a person’s own hair and nails to be kept to be
buried with his body at death, as they were seen as important for accompanying the soul
in the afterlife (Garcilaso [1609] 1966, pp. 84-85). The three individuals from Llullaillaco
were accompanied by little bags, apparently made of skin from the testicles of llamas,
containing cut hair that belonged to the same children, as proven by ancient DNA analysis
(Wilson et al. 2007).
Constanza Ceruti
Inca Offerings Associated with the Frozen Mummies
from Mount Llullaillaco
175
Conclusions
The archaeological items from the summit of Mount Llullaillaco, in Northwestern
Argentina, constitute one of the best preserved and best documented collections of Inca
offerings ever found. Three mummies and their associated offerings were discovered (and
recovered for preservation and study) during scientific excavations that I co-directed at
the highest archaeological site in the world.
The mummies are those of children who were sacrificed five hundred years ago, under
the rule of the Inca Empire. The sacrifice of the young victims on Llullaillaco was most
probably performed to appease the deities and ensure the well-being of the Inca emperor
and the local communities. According to the historical sources written around the time
of the Hispanic conquest, Inca human sacrifices were performed in response to natural
catastrophes, the death of an Inca emperor, or to propitiate the mountain spirits that
grant fertility. The selected children and the young acllas or “chosen women” were taken
in processions to the highest summits of the Andes and they were believed to become
messengers into the world of the mountain deities and the spirits of the ancestors.
Interdisciplinary studies conducted on the frozen mummies from Llullaillaco during the
nearly six years in which they were temporarily preserved at the Catholic University of
Salta (UCASAL) included radiological evaluations by conventional X-rays and by CT scans,
which provided information about the condition and pathology of the bones and internal
organs, as well as dental studies that estimated the ages of the three children at the
time of death. Ancient DNA studies and hair analysis were also performed in cooperation
with academic institutions in the United States and Europe, including the Institute of
Bioscience at George Mason University, the University of Bradford, and the Laboratory of
Biological Anthropology at the University of Copenhagen.
The archaeological discovery and the interdisciplinary studies conducted on the Llullaillaco
mummies and their offerings lent visibility to the needs of the indigenous communities
in Argentina, motivating governmental authorities to recognize their rights, and inspiring
society in general to become interested in their welfare. Consequently, in recent years,
numerous communities have coalesced and formed in several Argentinean provinces, in
the context of a strong and sustained native revival movement. In multicultural societies
like that of northwest Argentina, whose social identity was traditionally anchored in
176
the Hispanic arrival and the gaucho culture, the Andean cultural heritage has become
substantially more highly valued. Since the discovery of the Llullaillaco mummies,
importance has begun to be placed on the study of the Inca civilization, both in Salta and
in other parts of Argentina, as part of the basic content of the school curriculum. There
has also been an increase in interest, on the part of the general public, in studying the
Quechua language and pre-Columbian cultures.
The Llullaillaco mummies and offerings are among the exceptional evidences of Inca
ceremonies of Capacocha that survived destruction caused by looting and treasure
hunting, having been opportunely rescued in the context of scientific archaeological
fieldwork conducted at elevations higher than 6700 meters above sea level. In this paper
I have described and analyzed the social use and symbolic meaning of the miniature
figurines, pottery items, textiles, ornaments, and food supplies that were buried in direct
association with the Llullaillaco mummies. The offering assemblages buried by the Incas
on the highest summit shrines contributed to the legitimization of the state cult of the
Sun deity, Inti, as well as helped to reinforce the local worship of sacred mountains.
Acknowledgments
I am grateful for the institutional support of the National Council of Scientific Research
in Argentina (CONICET), the Catholic University of Salta, and the National Geographic
Society. I also express my thanks to Johan Reinhard, Carlos Previgliano, Facundo Arias
Aráoz, Josefina González Díez, Andrew Wilson, Timothy Taylor, Chiara Villa, Emma
Brown, Tom Gilbert, Larry Cartmell, Keith McKenney; Arnaldo Arroyo, Gerardo Vides
Almonacid, Bob Brier, Arthur Aufderheide, Rubén Gurevech, Niels Lynnerup, Keith
McKenney, Gael Lonergan, Angelique Corthals, Andrew Merriwether, Ian Farrington,
Clara Abal, Vuka Roussakis, Craig Morris, Juan Schobinger, Thomas Besom, Tamara Bray,
and Sumru Aricanli.
Constanza Ceruti
Inca Offerings Associated with the Frozen Mummies
from Mount Llullaillaco
177
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179
180
S T E V E KO S I B A
T R A C I N G T H E I N C A PA S T.
RITUAL MOVEMENT AND SOCIAL MEMORY
I N T H E I N C A I M P E R I A L C A P I TA L
Steve Kosiba
Tracing the Inca Past. Ritual Movement
and Social Memory in the Inca Imperial Capital.
181
Introduction
Andean myths tell of how the Incas made the world anew when they first walked a path
to Cusco, a valley destined to become the center of their empire. The myths state that
these ancestors of the Incas left their homeland behind and wandered across high plains
and craggy peaks until they came to Huanacauri, a mountain that towered above Cusco.
Figure 1 Huanacauri, an Inca huaca
and ritual center situated on a high
mountain above the city of Cusco.
(Photograph by the author).
182
Their gaze falling on Cusco for the first time, the ancestors began to perform the acts
that would make them Incas. One of the ancestors perceived disorder among the hills
and ravines of Cusco, and then quickly corrected this problem by using his great sling to
flatten mountains, create gorges, and redirect rivers. These feats demonstrated his inherent power to shape the land, but led his siblings to fear his arrogance and seal him in a
cave. Another ancestor joined his flesh to a sacred stone (huaca) and became Huanacauri,
a principal Inca god and a “place-person” (sensu Mannheim and Salas 2015) that embodied
the Incas’ ancestral power to shape the earth and its people. Following these superhuman
acts, the ancestors rested at a place called Matagua, where they invented the rites that
would define their religion and their people. Then they descended to Cusco itself, where
one of them assaulted the valley’s “savage” inhabitants, disemboweling them and forcing
them to show obeisance. In these actions, it was said, the ancestors laid the foundations
of a city and an empire. They defined what it meant to be Inca. 1
Similar to the boasts of other expansionary states, these Inca myths claim the world
was a province of “savages” before the Incas wielded their divine power to forge “civilization.” The Incas kept no written documents, but Inca elites were keen to tell Spanish
scribes these stories about how their ancestors shaped the cultural practices and social
landscape of Cusco (Betanzos [1551] 1968, p. 13; Cabello de Balboa [1586] 1951, p. 294;
Molina [1573] 1947, p. 129; see also Kosiba 2010; Salles-Reese 1997). During the Inca
reign, these narratives of the past were transmitted in theatrical ceremonies and manifested in austere facades of Inca imperial architecture. In ceremonies such as Capac
Raymi–Cusco’s most solemn festival–young boys reenacted the Inca origin myths as they
walked pathways to the huacas where Cusco was born, such as Huanacauri (Yaya 2008,
2012; see also Bauer 1996). Throughout Cusco, Inca monuments and shrines were built
directly atop massive boulders and striking natural features, making it seem as though
Inca power was primordial–that it inaugurated a new age as it sprouted from the earth
(Dean 2010; Kosiba 2015).
Many anthropologists and historians have argued that, in creating Cusco, the Incas assembled a “sacred landscape” of monuments and ritual pathways that embodied their
myths (e.g., Julien 2012) or encoded their social principles (e.g., Zuidema 1990) but they
often neglect to consider how Cusco, which certainly embodied pre-Inca cultural values,
became Inca.
1
The
Spanish
chroniclers
recorded
diferent versions of this foundation myth.
The various versions likely re ect political
wrangling in the early Colonial period,
when Cusco’s people struggled to bolster
their social position by claiming the places
that had once constituted Inca authority
(see Urton 1990). They disagree on which
ancestor Inca is entombed in the cave and
which one becomes Huanacauri (compare,
for instance, Betanzos [{1551} 1968], pp. 1213 and Sarmiento [{1572} 1965], p. 215) with
Cabello de Balboa ([1586] 1951, pp. 261263), Molina ([1573] 1947, pp. 21, 137), and
Murúa ([1590] 1962, p. 23). However, several
of these historical sources state that the
ancestor Inca joined with a preexisting huaca
named Chimpo and Cahua of the “Sañu” or
“Sano” (see especially Murúa [{1590} 1962],
p. 23). In all variations, though, an Inca
ancestor reshapes Cusco with his sling; an
ancestor becomes Huanacauri; the ancestors
pause at a place called Matagua; and then,
inally, the ancestor Mama Huaco violently
assaults the people of Guallas and then plants
the irst maize. There are also alternative
claims to Huanacauri. The Alcaviza ethnic
group, a group repeatedly vanquished by the
Incas in the myths, testiied to the Spanish
that Huanacauri was in fact their ancestor,
and the Incas appropriated this mountain
and this huaca (Duviols 1997).
Steve Kosiba
Tracing the Inca Past. Ritual Movement
and Social Memory in the Inca Imperial Capital.
183
In this paper, I present recent archaeological survey and excavation data to uncover
the ritual practices through which the people of Cusco recognized their past and affirmed
their social roles during Inca rule. In particular, I examine how the pathways of the Capac
Raymi ceremony engendered a landscape replete with diverse and even contradictory
social memories and perspectives on the past. I also uncover the ritual practices through
which Cusco’s people recognized their past and affirmed their social roles during Inca
rule. My principal argument is that the inhabitants of ancient Cusco came to know their
past by engaging in rituals as they walked pathways that invoked both indigenous and
Inca social memories. Taking this approach, the paper moves beyond top-down myths of
Inca dominance to explore what I term “cultures of articulation”–the complicated ways
that indigenous landscapes and memories may obstruct or become entangled with a
state’s pretensions (see also Wernke 2013).
Navigating Cusco
Cusco was an extensive urban environment spread across a wide Andean valley. In building Cusco, the Incas assembled a network of ethnically discrete communities and terraced fields interconnected by agricultural task scheduling, a ritual calendar, and socioeconomic interdependence (Bauer 2004; Zuidema 1964, 1990). Hence, Cusco was less a
concentrated city, such as the urban complexes of ancient Mesoamerica, and more an
archipelago of settlements that were grafted onto the slopes that surrounded the city’s
core. Architecture and settlement locations marked inner and outer areas of Cusco, while
signifying differences between Incas, lower status Incas by privilege, and the commoners
whom the Incas moved to the valley (Bauer 2004; Farrington 2013). To understand ancient Cusco, then, is to understand whether and how this urban environment created an
appearance of spatial and temporal coherence–an Inca landscape.
Archaeologists and art historians have long sought to understand Cusco’s social landscape by interpreting the meaning and aesthetic of Inca stone buildings and shrines. Inca
shrines and palaces were abstract and colossal stone structures that did not bear legible
iconography or epigraphy. Still, many archaeologists and historians seek to uncover the
semiotic code in the cyclopean stones of Inca buildings and shrines, suggesting that the
geometric aesthetic of these stones represented royal persons, reflected Inca cultural
184
principles, or communicated that Inca rule was “natural” (e.g., Acuto 2005; Dean 2010;
van de Guchte 1999). In particular, researchers contend that the Incas constructed monumental architecture at their royal estates (e.g., Pisaq, Machu Picchu) in an attempt to memorialize their conquests and inaugurate an Inca epoch (Niles 1993, p. 163, 1999). Such
research contends that, by raising august structures and carving gigantic stones throughout Cusco, the Incas clothed their imperial project in a general aesthetic that expressed
an Inca claim to absolute authority and created a sense of shared history.
Other anthropologists and historians argue that Cusco’s landscape organized the Inca
realm by encoding Andean structural principles (e.g., Zuidema 1990, 2011). 2 This argument holds that the Incas established ritual pathways (ceques) and huacas in Cusco to
create a calendar of the celestial cycles that structured and synchronized the agricultural
tasks and ritual practices of dispersed communities (e.g. Zuidema 1977a, 1982). This
theory holds that the ceques determined social relationships throughout the Cusco region
and emplaced a social hierarchy centered on the city’s monumental core. R. Tom Zuidema, the principal advocate of this argument, contends that the ceque system was a centrally organized map of Inca society. He suggests that each ceque of Cusco corresponded
to a social group within a tripartite hierarchical system (collana, payan, and cayao) that
described the group’s social rank and designated the other group from which they might
choose a marriage partner (Zuidema 1964; see also the reformulation of this view in
Zuidema 1977b). This approach describes the places and sites that constituted Cusco as
if they were abstract entries in a vast “computer” (Zuidema 2008), a catalog of knowledge
that Inca elites and administrators organized and read from the center of Cusco.
In focusing on aesthetics and ceque lines, the aforementioned models of Cusco concentrate on how the Incas organized their territory from the top-down and according to a
general plan. In these views, the Incas conceptualized their landscape in a manner similar to a mental map, in which they understood the meaning and function of constituent
places by referring to an overarching order of space (see Gell 1985 for a review of social
maps). Similarly, Cusco’s history would have been understood in terms of an Inca ideology that, hewn in stone and drawn in ritual pathways, emphasized Inca actions and
principles of order while eclipsing alternative visions of space, society, and history (e.g.,
Zuidema 2002). And, perhaps more importantly, these theories suggest that Inca subjects
and elites of different social stations could understand the general semiotic order of the
Inca capital. In consequence, these models imply that there was a single Inca semiotic
2
Several researchers have discussed how
Cusco’s system of royal roads and ritual
pathways (ceques) created an appearance
of coherence throughout the Inca capital
(Bauer 1998; MacCormack 1990; Niles 1987;
Rowe 1980, 1985; Sherbondy 1992; Zuidema
1990). Here I summarize R. Tom Zuidema’s
perspective on the ceques, a compelling
perspective that has had considerable
in uence in Andean studies (see critique,
however, in Nowack 1998).
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Tracing the Inca Past. Ritual Movement
and Social Memory in the Inca Imperial Capital.
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system carved into Cusco’s stones and a single Inca cosmological order written in Cusco’s
ceque lines. While these models certainly do well to reveal the organizational structure of
Cusco as an Inca ruler might have seen it, they also obscure our vision of politics in ancient Cusco because, by and large, they only show an Inca elite’s perspective on landscape
and history. We are left to wonder how Cusco’s people perceived their past during Inca
rule, how indigenous cultural principles and social memories changed as they were incorporated into Inca Cusco, and how pre-Inca social memories influenced or constrained
Inca visions of Cusco’s landscape.
I suggest that we alter our perspective of Inca Cusco by focusing less on the semiotic
structures of its monuments and pathways, and more on the ways that Andean people
moved throughout the city and learned its history. Recent studies provide insights into
how Andean people engaged with Inca monuments and pathways over time. Brian Bauer’s
(1998) systematic archaeological and ethnohistorical survey suggests that the ceque lines
were a dynamic ritual system that, at different times, undergirded different versions of
Inca history. Given these findings, we might consider how Andean people invoked visions of the past as they engaged with Cusco’s landscape. For instance, Zachary Chase’s
(2015) recent archaeological research in the Andean province of Huarochiri reveals how
towns and huacas in this region were key stages for performative rites in which claims
to a “deep mythic history” became manifest. Likewise, Abercrombie’s (1998) ethnography
in the contemporary Andes describes how people mapped their social environment and
kin relationships, less in terms of abstract structures and more in terms of oppositions
between towns and hamlets. These insights suggest that, in ancient Cusco, knowledge of
the past was likely transmitted through particular places. Indeed, places directed perception and spatial orientation, rather than mental maps.
A place-centered spatial orientation is consistent with both historical and contemporary
Quechua reckonings of personhood, which understand a person through his/her relationships to human persons, non-human persons, and objects in the environment. In
this spatial orientation, a person is not primarily defined as a particular kind of being
through reference to family name or social position, as is often the case in Western or Judeo-Christian societies. A Quechua person is of a particular place; his or her body shares
an ontological bond with the land (Kosiba 2015; Mannheim and Salas 2015). Furthermore,
Bruce Mannheim has recently demonstrated (personal communication February 2015)
that Quechua speakers take on a spatial orientation that is radically different from the
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spatial orientation assumed by a mental or abstract map. That is, Mannheim argues that
Quechua speakers employ an allocentric (object-to-object) spatial orientation in which
they come to know information about one object by coming to know the location of that
object, or its constituent parts, relative to other objects (see Klatzky 1998 on allocentric and egocentric representation). In an allocentric spatial orientation, the location or
character of an object is by necessity defined relative to other objects, in a sequence or
a cluster. This kind of spatial orientation contrasts with egocentric (self-to-object) forms
of spatial navigation and representation, which represent the location of objects relative
to the body of the observer and the body’s phenomenological perspectives of right-left,
up-down, and front-back (e.g., Klatzky 1998; Kozhevnikov and Hegarty 2001).
Building on these insights into Quechua spatial orientation, I reconstruct how the Incas
came to know their city’s environment and past by moving along its pathways, from the
very heart of the city to its borders. I suggest that pathways created knowledge about the
landscape and its history consistent with an allocentric spatial orientation–that is, they
established sequences of places and objects, and in so doing, afforded particular perspectives on the environment and the past. Data are derived from two projects that I directed:
the Wat’a Archaeological Project (2005-2009) and the Huanacauri Archaeological Project
(2014-present). Several reports from the Peruvian Ministry of Culture were invaluable to
this analysis (especially Amado 2003 and Catalán Santos and Mantúfar Latorre 2007).
Capac Raymi. Pathways through the Past
The pathways of the Capac Raymi ceremony offer a close perspective on how Cusco’s
people (Cusqueños) perceived their city during the height of Inca rule. Capac Raymi was
one of Cusco’s most important ceremonies. There are several excellent ethnohistorical
studies of Capac Raymi (e.g., Yaya 2008, 2012; Zuidema 1992). Here, I complement these
accounts with an archaeological perspective on the pathways and places that were essential to the ceremony. During Capac Raymi, Cusqueño boys 3 between 12-15 years old
became members of the elite when they participated in processions during which they
received materials that would define their status: arms (e.g., guaraca, a sling), a breechcloth (guara), and earspools (Molina [1573] 1947, pp. 102, 105; Polo de Ondegardo
[1571] 1916, p. 18). The processions were a series of treks from Cusco’s main plaza of
There is con icting evidence about who participated in the ceremony, though it is clear that they
were people from Cusco who were descendants or
relatives of the Inca (Cobo [1653] 1964, p. 207;
Molina [1573] 1947, p. 102; Polo de Ondegardo
[1571] 1916, p.18). Molina ([1573] 1947, p. 86)
ofers insights into the participants when he joins
together Inca and indigenous Cusco ethnic groups
in the “Prayer for All the Incas” that he recorded, a
prayer spoken during the ceremony of Situa:
“¡GOh Sol!, padre mio, que dijiste haya cuzcos y
tambos; sean vencedores y despojadores estos
tus hijos de todas las gentes; adorate para que
sean dichosos si semos estos incas tus hijos y no
sean vencidos ni despojados, sino siempre sean
vencedores, pues para esto los hiciste” (italics
mine). [“Oh Sun! My father, who said, ‘let there
be Cusqueños and people from Tambo’; let these,
your sons, be victors and despoilers of all peoples;
you are worshiped so that Incas may be fortunate if they are your sons, and are not conquered
nor despoiled, but, instead are always victors,
because you made them for this” (translation by
the editors).]
3
Similar to Capac Raymi, all foreigners were required to leave the city during Situa. But the prayer clearly states that the blessed should include
“Cuzcos” and “Tambos”–the former likely referring to nobility in Cusco and the latter to ethnic
groups near the Inca origin place of Paqaritambo
(see note by Bauer in Molina [1573] 2011, p. 108).
Moreover, Bauer also notes that, in Ramos Gavilán’s
account ([1621] 1967, pp.145-147) of an initiation
ceremony near Copacabana, the ceremony was a
means for choosing and making nobles. That is,
the Inca would choose those who participated in
the ceremony, and then elevate the status of those
participants who were most successful, especially the initiates who performed well in the foot
race. The weak participants were not promoted to
a higher status or social position. The initiation
ceremony that Ramos Gavilan witnessed was most
likely a replication of the ceremony in Cusco.
We might thus conclude that the participants in
the ceremony were from recognized families,
whether they were pure Inca or not, and they were
promoted to high social positions based on their
performance in the ceremony.
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and Social Memory in the Inca Imperial Capital.
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Figure 2 This map depicts the major
destinations of the Capac Raymi
ceremony, a series of processions
from the Aukaypata and Korikancha
in the center of Cusco to important
huacas. (Map by the author).
Aukaypata to major huacas. In one of the first processions, the boys dressed as their
ancestors and reenacted the mythic journey to Cusco from Huanacauri. By tracing this
route to Huanacauri, and comparing it to the other processions in the ceremony, we can
begin to understand how Cusqueños perceived their past.
Spanish historical sources focus on the ways that Capac Raymi marked status distinctions of inner and outer Cusco–that is, distinctions between the inner Inca elites and
outer ethnic groups (see Yaya 2012). Capac Raymi was a ceremony of Cusqueños, and
for Cusqueños. During the first days of Capac Raymi, outsiders left the city, while the
Inca initiates drank with their mummified ancestors and received the Inca’s blessing
(Cobo [1653] 1964, pp. 208-209; Molina [1573] 1947, p. 96). Then these initiates departed for Huanacauri in a procession led by priests (tarpuntaes) and a white llama
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that was said to have descended from the first animals that survived “the flood” (Cobo
[1653] 1964, p. 208)–a term that was a Spanish gloss for an Andean statement about
the mythic past. These first days not only defined differences between inner and outer
Cusco, but also restricted access to the past: only the select Cusqueños would have seen
and known the ancestors, Inca, and llamas that consecrated this journey to this journey
into a living past.
Figure 3 This map illustrates the
major Inca roads from the center of
Cusco to the area near the huaca at
Huanacauri. The procession road that
was used during Capac Raymi (dark
red) passed near or through several
important pre-Inca ruins (orange).
(Map by the author). The locations of
the roads were in part derived from
Amado (2006) and Catalán Santos and
Mantúfar Latorre (2007).
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Recent archaeological research greatly adds to the information from the historical
sources, largely because the Spanish, in their accounts, did not record the places that
the initiates encountered on their journey to Huanacauri. But, in an allocentric spatial
orientation, these places, and the relationships between them, would have been essential to understanding Cusco’s landscape and history. Archaeological research has
revealed the trajectory of the road to Huanacauri and nearby sites (Amado 2003, p. 43;
Bauer 1991, 1998; Catalán Santos and Mantúfar Latorre 2007, p. 131) 4. In 2014, I conducted an archaeological survey of the road and its immediate surroundings, by documenting all architectural features and associated surface-level archaeological materials
within approximately 100 meters of the road. These data complement the historical
accounts. Indeed, the survey shows that the road reiterated the inner and outer social
boundaries of Cusco. For instance, the initiates embarked on their journey by following a path to Pumachupan, the site where the Tullumayu and Saphi Rivers meet. Early
historical accounts recognize this point as the “remate de la ciudad” (Betanzos [1551]
1968, p. 37), a boundary defined by the rivers that separated the core of the city from
surrounding fields and communities.
4
There are three ancient roads near
Huanacauri. One of these roads is the road
to Cuntisuyu. It climbs through the narrow
gorge between the mountains Anahuarque
and Huanacauri, and then crosses a high
pass as it continues toward the towns of
Pumacancha and Paruro and the lands of the
Chisques y Mascas ethnic groups. There is
another road, on the slopes of Huanacauri,
which appears to be the ritual procession
route because it bears formal architecture
such as retaining walls and it adjoins many
huacas of the ceque system (Bauer 1998).
Finally, there is a path that ascends to the
southeast side and high puna of Huanacauri
Mountain from the area of Sucsu ayllu near
the town of San Jerónimo.
But my research also provides a different perspective than the historical accounts, revealing that the road invoked a vision of the past that is not contained in the myths.
The data demonstrate that the procession, after leaving the inner city, passed through
some of Cusco’s largest and most striking pre-Inca archaeological sites. First, the road
crossed the site of Membilla (now the neighborhood and archaeological site called
Wimpillay), which was occupied for thousands of years before the Incas (Barreda Murillo
1973, 1991; Bauer 2004). Membilla, quite literally, housed the early Inca past. In 1559,
the Spanish administrator Polo de Ondegardo remarked that he found the mummies and
idols of the first Inca rulers–of Hurin Cusco–at Membilla (Cobo [1653] 1964, p. 66-69;
Polo de Ondegardo [1571] 1916, p. 30). Second, the road passes Muyu Urqu, which was a
regional ceremonial center during the Qotakalli Period (ca. 200-600 CE) and Middle Horizon (ca. 600-1000 CE) (Barreda Murillo 1982; Zapata Rodríguez 1998). Third, the road
intersected Tankarpata, a long-occupied Qotakalli and Middle Horizon village (Bauer
2004:49; Bauer and Jones 2003), and then passed through the Inca town of Qotakalli,
which includes, and was surrounded by, several large pre-Inca, Qotakalli Period villages
(Bauer 2004). Finally, the road crossed Pukakancha, a Middle Horizon (Araway) (ca. 6001000 CE) burial ground (Bauer 2004, pp. 48-49; Bauer and Jones 2003; Catalán Santos
and Mantúfar Latorre 2007).
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It appears as though the road was intentionally built to pass through these sites. Using
Geographic Information Systems (GIS), I conducted a “least cost path analysis,” which
demonstrates that the Inca road significantly veered from what would have been the
most efficient ascent from the center of Cusco to Huanacauri. The “least cost path” would
have directed the initiates farther down the valley, near the town of San Jerónimo, before
they ascended Huanacauri. The Inca road, however, passes the important pre-Inca sites
mentioned above and also maintains, more or less, the direction of the line of sight from
the center of Cusco to Huanacauri. The position of this road thus suggests three different
possibilities: the road drew on the meanings and attendant practices of these past places;
the road itself predated the Inca state; or the road followed a more or less direct visual
path to Huanacauri. Recent archaeological excavations in the road itself did not uncover
any evidence that the road was constructed before the Incas, evidence such as archaeological materials or structures from the Qotakalli Period or Middle Horizon (Catalán
Santos and Mantúfar Latorre 2007). In fact, the excavations uncovered Inca artifacts from
the road bed and nearby platforms, suggesting that the Incas built the road. It is difficult
to evaluate whether the road was intentionally constructed to follow a direct visual path
from Cusco’s center to Huanacauri, but it is important to note that this line of sight was
probably significant to the procession. Initiates may have envisioned this straight line of
sight even as they traveled a circuitous path. This line of sight would have directed the
initiates’ perception toward Huanacauri, concentrating their attention on their journey
into the mythic past.
The ethnohistorical and archaeological data strongly suggest that the road was built to
draw on the meanings of the pre-Inca sites. The remains of the pre-Inca sites–the architecture, artifacts, and terraces that we can now see–would have also been visible to the
Inca initiates. Of course, the initiates likely did not associate these artifacts with discrete
cultural time periods such as Qotakalli and the Middle Horizon, but they were surely
able to recognize that these were abandoned villages and ruined buildings containing
non-Inca pottery, architecture, and agricultural terraces–“civilized” places which could
not simply have been places of mythic “savages” who practiced neither town planning nor
agriculture. Moreover, it is clear that the Incas recognized many of these pre-Inca sites
as sacred places. Most of these pre-Inca sites were huacas within the Collasuyu quarter
of the Inca ceque system, and were places of religious practices and offerings during Inca
times. Several Spanish chroniclers state that the cult, Chima-panaqa, hosted ceremonies
for the mummies at Membilla (Cobo [1653] 1964, pp. 66, 180; Polo de Ondegardo [1571]
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1916, p. 30). Here, a huaca named Acoyguaci (Collasuyu ceque 6, wak’a 3) guarded the
mummy of Sinchi Roca, the mythic Inca ruler born on the slopes of Huanacauri (Cobo
[1653] 1964, pp. 65, 181). Similarly, Muyu Urqu was a huaca called Tampuvilca (Collasuyu
ceque 9, wak’a 5) that received offerings of burned coca leaves (ibid., p. 182). Qotakalli
likely housed the huaca called Catacalla (Collasuyu ceque 7, wak’a 2), one of the boulders
(pururauca) that came to life in defense of Cusco, which would have received offerings
(Bauer 1998, pp. 106-110; cf. Rowe 1980, pp. 11-12). Finally, classic Inca architecture and
pottery at Pukakancha and Tankarpata demonstrate that these sites were continuously
used or revered during Inca times. In general, the positions of these sites suggest that, by
walking this road, the Cusqueños traveled through a series of places that, taken together,
invoked memories of the past.
The survey also reveals how the initiates walked this path, recognized past places, and
entered ritual spaces. Architectural attributes of the road called attention to pre-Inca
sites and land features by influencing the initiates’ bodily dispositions and movements.
For instance, after passing through Pukakancha, the road widened and became a staircase that led the initiates to a broad stone platform called Paqopallana which overlooked
Qotakalli, Muyu Urqu, and Membilla. This wider section of the road would have ushered
the initiates into a mass ceremony on the platform. After Paqopallana, the road narrowed
considerably to about two meters in width as it traversed some of the steeper slopes on
the route to Huanacauri. This narrow segment led to a small platform at the base of a
peak called Inca Damian. Recent Peruvian Ministry of Culture excavations at Inca Damian
uncovered canals embedded within the platform, suggesting a drainage system to receive
offerings and/or protect the road (Catalán Santos and Mantúfar Latorre 2007). The wide
road and broad platform at Paqopallana suggest a space for taqui ceremonies, in which
dances and songs celebrated stories about the past, mythic heroes, and deities. The narrow
road, however, would have required the initiates to walk in a single-file line, and then
individually enter the platform at Inca Damian, suggesting a ritual in which the initiates
gave a blessing (mochar) to a land feature.
Similarly, the survey data demonstrate how the road directed the initiates’ entry into
mythic space or past space. The road narrowed to about 1.5 meters right before the initiates arrived at another semi-circular platform, at the entry point to the site of Matagua.
As mentioned above, Spanish sources state that Matagua was where the ancestor Incas
rested before they descended to Cusco (Betanzos [1551] 1968, p. 13; Cobo [1653] 1964, p. 65;
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Figure 4 Two perspectives of the
road to Huanacauri. The photograph
above reveals the linear (visual and
spatial) relationship between pre-Inca
sites and the road. The photograph
below illustrates the narrow pathway
that ascends to the mythic Inca
sites of Matagua and Huanacauri,
(Photographs by the author).
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Sarmiento [1572] 1965, pp. 216-217). The historical sources suggest that Matagua was
where the Incas invented their rites of passage, including Guarachico (ear piercing), Rutuchico (hair cutting), Quicochico (first menstruation), and Awscay (ceremony of the new
born) (Betanzos [1551] 1968, p. 65; Cabello de Balboa [1586] 1951, p. 263; Murúa [1590]
1962-64, pp. 23, 26; Sarmiento [1572] 1965, pp. 216), but particular sources also suggest
that the Inca initiates would have recognized Matagua as place from the mythic past
or a ruin from a past people. Indeed, Cobo ([1653] 1964, p. 181) suggests that Matagua
was a ruin during Inca times, describing Matoro (a probable name for Matagua) 5 as: “...
una ladera cerca de Guanacauri, donde habia unos edificios antiguos, que cuentan fue la
primera jornada donde durmieron los que salieron de Guanacauri despues del Diluvio”.
The evidence from the road survey suggests that the narrow section and small platform
altered the initiates’ dispositions, focusing their attention on a ruin that they must have
perceived as the mythic site of Matagua.
Recent excavations by the Peruvian Ministry of Culture suggest that Matagua was not
occupied during the height of Inca rule. Matagua contains several small circular and
D-shaped houses that correspond to the Killk’e Period in Cusco, a period that predates the
classic Inca artifact and architectural styles. Cusqueños produced Killk’e pottery for centuries, but this pottery style is thought to correspond to the initial process of Inca state
consolidation when it is found in excavation contexts without many cultural materials
from other time periods (on Killk’e, see Bauer 1992, 1999, 2004; Gonzáles Corrales 1984).
Among the decorated pottery at Matagua (1928 fragments; 5.4 percent of total pottery
recovered), the excavations recovered a very high density (1902 fragments; 98.6 percent
of what was recovered) of Killk’e pottery, but very few classic Inca sherds (16 or 0.008
percent) (Catalán Santos and Mantúfar Latorre 2007, p. 723). In particular, there were
many Killk’e serving vessels–especially ollas with conical bases, bowls, and high-handled
jars with face effigies (ibid., p. 734). Overall, these data indicate that the site was largely
occupied during the Killk’e Period. The high densities of serving vessels suggest that
Matagua was a place for ceremonial feasting during the Killk’e Period. Matagua, then, was
a site that the Incas recognized as a ritual place, and integrated into the road system.
5
“... A hillside near Guanacauri, where
there were some old buildings, that they
say was where those who left Guanacauri
after the Flood slept at the end of irst day”
(translation by the editors).
The Spanish historical sources provide information about the Inca rites that occurred at
Matagua and Huanacauri. They tell us that, after spending a night at Matagua, the initiates ascended to the shrine of Huanacauri. The priests who accompanied the initiates
took a bit of wool from each llama and blew on it to make an offering to the mountain
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(Molina [1573] 1947, p. 99). Some of these llamas were sacrificed (Cobo [1653] 1964, p.
209; Molina [1573] 1947, p. 99). Then, the initiates received guaracas in a quebrada called
Quirasmanta. Here, the attendants whipped the initiates’ legs, and then the initiates sang
a guari (or huaylli), which was a song that the ancestors were said to have created for this
ceremony (Cobo [1653] 1964, p, 210; Molina 1947 [1573], p. 100; see Yaya 2012, p. 117).
My recent archaeological survey and excavations at Huanacauri revealed additional details
of the road and the site. The architecture of the road and the site emphasizes individual
experience. As the initiates approached Huanacauri, the road passed to the south side of
the mountain, where the initiates lost sight of the Cusco Valley and, for the first time, saw
the lands from where the Incas said they had emerged. After the road sharply veered to
Figure 5 Aerial photograph and
photogrammetry mosaic of the plaza
(Sector A) at Huanacauri. (Photograph
by the author).
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195
the east, the initiates saw the shrine complex of Huanacauri surrounded by the glaciated
mountain peaks of the Cusco region. From this point, they entered a private and exclusive space–a plaza flanked by structures that obstructed their vision of the surroundings.
This, however, was not the end of the journey. My archaeological research at Huanacauri
revealed another shrine in a small ravine on the other side of the mountain peak. This
sector features a large zigzag (chakana) shaped wall, a symbol of power found at many
prestigious Andean sites. The wall surrounds an immense jagged sandstone boulder,
suggesting that this was a huaca.
Figure 6 Aerial photograph and
photogrammetry mosaic of the wall
and huaca (Sector B) at Huanacauri.
(Photograph by the author).
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The architecture at Huanacauri indicates that the initiates participated in a ceremony in
the site’s plaza and then left offerings to the sandstone boulder. In 2014, I directed intensive excavations within both sectors of Huanacauri, uncovering a total of 192 square
meters of this sacred Inca site. My analysis of the excavated materials is still in progress.
However, the preliminary analyses definitively show that there was not a pre-Inca site
at Huanacauri. There were no pre-Inca or Killk’e occupation levels and only an insignificant amount of Killk’e cultural materials. Indeed, among the diagnostic pottery recovered
throughout the excavations at Huanacauri (3234 fragments), there was a very high density of classic Inca ceramic sherds (3101; 95.9 percent), but only a few fragments of Killk’e
pottery (90; 2.8 percent) or non-Inca, non-Killk’e, pottery (43; 1.3 percent). These data
strongly suggest that the Incas constructed Huanacauri after the process of state consolidation, though radiocarbon dates will clarify the construction sequence and occupational
history of the site.
The excavations in the plaza complex and the huaca revealed two distinct ritual spaces.
Excavations in the plaza complex on the east side of the mountain uncovered multiple
large pottery vessels (aríbalo, urpu) broken in situ near concentrations of ash and maize
kernels, suggesting an area for maize beer (chicha) production and ceremonial food
consumption. The excavations in the huaca complex on the west side of the mountain
recovered few artifacts, suggesting that the Incas regularly cleaned this space after
conducting rituals. Within the artifact assemblage from this sector, however, there were
many small Inca plates, suggesting that offerings were made to this stone. The architecture of this sector indicates that these offerings were made in private and individualized rituals. The spatial organization of the huaca–with a single doorway on either
side of the zig-zag wall–suggests the initiates entered the space individually and then
proceeded to cross the rock, in a procession, to the other doorway. Here, they did not
encounter an ancient site. Rather, they participated in an intimate ritual in which they
faced a living rock that embodied one of their mythic ancestors.
These preliminary archaeological details suggest the pathway to Huanacauri offered
a perspective on Cusco’s past as it meandered through pre-Inca and mythic sites, and
then culminated at the ritual spaces of the Inca principal huaca. Similarly, the other
pathways of Capac Raymi journeyed to major Cusco huacas, all of which provided
access to mythic places and persons, or places that embodied indigenous communities
(Yaya 2012). After Huanacauri, the procession returned to Cusco to perform a taqui,
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and then visited Anahuarque (Collasuyu ceque 1, wak’a 7), an important huaca atop a
mountain that neighbored Huanacauri, which was said to have run very swiftly during
“the Flood” (Cobo [1653] 1964, p. 210). 6 Here, the initiates offered sacrifices, performed
a guari, and received arms (Molina [1573] 1947, pp. 105-107). Then, they performed
the role of Anahuarque as they swiftly ran from the huaca to a hill above Cusco (Tito
Cussi Yupanqui [1570] 1988, pp. 33-36). Anahuarque was the principal huaca of the preInca Cachona and Chocco ethnic groups who allied with the early Incas (Molina [1573]
1947, p. 105; see also Bauer 1998, p. 120; Yaya 2008, 2012). 7 My archaeological reconnaissance atop the mountain of Anahuarque found the remains of rectangular structures, an extensive flat area, and classic Inca pottery (compare with Bauer 1998, p. 120),
suggesting that this area was flattened and used for a broad ceremony or taqui during
Inca times. There were not any fragments of Killk’e or pre-Inca pottery at Anahuarque,
and no apparent structures from time periods before the Incas. Hence, similar to
Huanacauri, the discovery of only classic Inca materials at the site suggests that
Anahuarque became a huaca during Inca times (see below).
6
According to an account of Inca initiation
from outside of Cusco, the foot race was
especially important because the successful
boys were promoted to higher ranks (Ramos
Gavilán [1621] 1967, pp. 145-147, quoted in
Molina [1573] 2011, pp. 111-112). The weak
boys were chastised and not promoted. The
Anahuarque race thus illustrates that nobility
and social rank in the Inca empire were not
given; they were earned.
7
Bauer (1998, p. 120) notes that 16th
century documents from this area of Cusco
indicate that the people of Chocco descended
from Anahuarque.
After Anahuarque, the procession visited other huacas of Cusco’s non-Inca past and
indigenous communities (see Yaya 2012, pp. 117-119 for a more detailed account).
Following their foot race from Anahuarque, the initiates returned to Cusco to make
sacrifices and sing a guari in Aukaypata. Then, after sleeping at a place called Wamankancha, they walked the road to Yavira (Chinchaysuyu ceque 9, wak’a 6), a huaca
situated upon Picchu mountain, located on the north side of the Cusco Valley (Betanzos
[1551] 1968, p. 42; Cobo [1653] 1964, p. 211; Molina [1573] 1947, p. 109; Sarmiento
[1572] 1965, p. 237). Yavira was an important huaca for Cusco’s indigenous people (also
called Apuyavira; Bauer 1998, p. 70). It was said to be a person who lived at the same
time as the ancestor Incas and, like Huanacauri, turned to stone (Cobo [1653] 1964,
p. 174). Yavira was also said to be the principal huaca of the Maras ethnic group (Molina
[1573] 1947, p. 111). Here, the initiates conducted sacrifices and received the materials
that marked their status, such as breechcloths, earplugs, feather diadems (pilco cassa), and medallions (ibid.). After receiving these items, they performed a taqui (ibid.,
p. 112). Bauer (1998, p. 71) suggests that Yavira (or Apuyavira) was a large stone on the
slopes of Picchu, called Ñusta and now said to be the sister of the Inca ancestor Manco
Capac. Similar to Anahuarque, Yavira was a huaca recognized as indigenous that was, by
way of rites and movement, integrated into Cusco’s most solemn ceremony.
198
After visiting Yavira, the initiates returned to Aukaypata to make more sacrifices, perform
taquis, bathe in a spring, and finally, have their ears pierced in chacaras near Cusco (Molina [1573] 1947, pp. 115-116). At the end of the ceremony, the foreigners were invited
back to the center of the city to eat maize cakes soaked in the blood of the sacrifices from
the huacas along the route (Cobo [1653] 1964, p. 211). These final rites continued to mark
differences between inner and outer Cusco. The cyclical return to the Aukaypata reiterated the role of the plaza as a center that connected the disparate huacas of the broader
landscape. More particularly, by inviting the outsiders back into the city, the Cusqueños
confirmed a historical sequence–Inca state consolidation and then imperial extension–
and mapped this historical sequence onto social differences between inner Cusco (those
who participated in state consolidation) and the outer provinces (those whom the Incas
subjugated). Only the Cusqueño people and places participated in the ceremony itself.
Capac Raymi was thus an exclusionary rite that reiterated the phase of early Inca political
development, a phase during which Cusco’s ethnic groups joined to forge the nascent
Inca state. The outsiders, then, symbolically received benefits from this core group of
Cusqueños, who offered them consecrated foods, just as the Incas offered the stores of
the state to the people whom they subjugated (cf. Ramírez 2005).
The roads of Capac Raymi were therefore designed as entryways to this past. Ancestral or
indigenous huacas were not common in Cusco’s ceque system, suggesting that the Incas
intentionally positioned the pathways of Capac Raymi to visit these huacas. There were
a total of sixty-six huacas (20.1 percent) in the ceque system that invoked Cusco’s past.
They embodied the actions of a named non-human person (e.g., Huanacauri, pururauca)
(25 or 7.6 percent), a named Inca person (e.g., Inca Yupanqui) (35 or 10.7 percent), or a
general Inca person (e.g., “place where the Inca sat”) (6 or 1.8 percent). Only fourteen of
these huacas were in the Collasuyu sector of Cusco, where the road to Huanacauri was
situated, and many of these were located along the road to Huanacauri. Moreover, there
were few Cusco huacas that invoked Cusco’s indigenous past. Throughout Cusco, there
were fourteen (4.3 percent) huacas that explicitly or implicitly embodied the indigenous
past. Explicit huacas included such places as Cinca (Chinchaysuyu ceque 5, wak’a 9),
which was said to be the place where the Ayarmaca emerged, or places such as Vicaribi
(Chinchaysuyu ceque 9, wak’a 5), which was the tomb of the leader of the Maras people
(Cobo [1653] 1964, pp. 172, 174). Furthermore, implicit indigenous huacas were often
listed as “adoratorios antiguos” or tombs of “local lords” (e.g., ibid. p. 178, 182), but these
huacas were not common. Further research will be necessary to determine whether these
Steve Kosiba
Tracing the Inca Past. Ritual Movement
and Social Memory in the Inca Imperial Capital.
199
huacas were in reality “indigenous,” that is, whether they predated the Inca state, or
whether the Incas invented a “past” or emplaced an ancestor at these places, as they seem
to have done at Huanacauri and Anahuarque. However given the uneven distribution of
these historical and indigenous places throughout Cusco, it is remarkable that the roads
of Capac Raymi connected so many places that invoked the distant past.
Discussion. Landscapes and Memories in Ancient Cusco
The archaeological data from the routes of the Capac Raymi ceremony reveal a perspective on Cusco’s past that is not evident in the Spanish historical accounts of Inca foundations. On the road to Huanacauri, we see that the initiates encountered abandoned
villages and ancestral huacas, specifically huacas associated with a non-Inca past such as
Anahuarque and Yavira, as well as ruins such as Muyu Urqu, Pukakancha, and Matagua.
They met with these beings and places as they walked to pay reverence to their own
ancestor, Huanacauri. The positions of these huacas and sites suggest that this road,
and the other processions of Capac Raymi, were designed to call attention to the city’s
past and the city’s constituent ethnic groups. The archaeological data also suggest how
Cusco’s past was invoked as these initiates walked the road to Huanacauri. The road was
designed to alter the initiates’ dispositions and perceptions before they entered mythic
places. Broader plazas (Aukaypata, the plaza of Huanacauri, the platform at Paqopallana,
and also the plain at Anahuarque) suggest spaces to perform dances and songs of the
past. It is probable that the platforms of the Capac Raymi roads were used for the taquis
and guaris that the Spanish sources consistently mention when describing the ceremony.
In contrast, the narrow sections of the road, the small platforms, and the exclusive walled
huacas heightened the initiates’ attention to specific places and land features, providing
for an individual and intimate encounter with mythic beings.
The pathways of Capac Raymi invoked a perspective on the past by connecting a sequence of sacred places and requiring a sequence of ritual practices. In this sequence,
“where” each huaca was located was essential to “when” each huaca was located (in using
this phrase I draw on Chase’s 2015 interpretation of huacas). In other words, the positions of huacas on the land, and their positions relative to the sequence of other huacas,
placed them in time. The sequence of huacas created a temporal sequence that could only
200
be “known” from the relationships between objects in the sequence, rather than from a
central or egocentric perspective from Cusco. In this sense, the Incas built Huanacauri
at the end of a sequence of huacas and ruins to anchor Cusco’s history in an ancestral
“line” (a claim to history rather than a lineage). The initiates who walked the roads of Capac Raymi journeyed through the recent past and the mythic past. The pathway to Huanacauri first led them to a recent past personified by the mummified rulers and warrior
boulders (pururaucas) of Inca Cusco. It then led them through the ruins. This leg of the
journey does not have a correlate in the origin myths or historical sources. But it appears
as though, by walking through these ruins, they recalled the deeper past of their city and
their civilization. After passing the ruins, they entered a mythic past of the ancestor Incas
when they encountered places such as Matagua and Huanacauri. Throughout the remainder of the ceremony, the initiates continued to encounter these pasts: the past personified by mummified ancestors, the past of living ethnic groups, and the mythic past. These
“pasts” were not reduced to a linear sequence of time–together, the objects and persons
on these routes constituted a vision of Cusco’s foundation. The ceremony reveals that,
for the Incas, the past was present, living, and attainable. The Inca past was not a Christian-Protestant ontological sense of the past, in which mythic events, persons, and lands
are largely attainable only through revelation, Biblical text, or priestly sermon. In Cusco,
the past was knowable through ritual and movement. The initiates came to encounter and
know their past when they participated in processions, taquis, and guaris.
The ritual practices and movements of Capac Raymi provided Cusqueños a personal experience of the past, and this personal experience was essential to their subject positions as heads of the Inca state. As the Cusqueños encountered sequences of huacas and
ruins on these roads, they acquired social memories–shared perspectives on the past.
Theorists differentiate between kinds of social memory: (1) episodic memories which
reflect those events, people, and places we encounter and experience, and (2) semantic
memories that reflect those events, people, and places we learn via lecture, map, or text
(Assmann 2006, p. 2; see also Wertsch 2002, p. 5). When anthropologists and historians
discuss the construction and dissemination of ideas about “the past,” they typically refer
to the processes by which a narrative perspective on the past is built and then distributed
by way of education–a semantic memory that is learned through use of a map or text. In
making such semantic memories, alternative versions of the past are silenced in favor of
a single narrative (see Trouillot 1995). This kind of semantic memory is inscribed in (and
perhaps created by) the Spanish historical sources. These sources attempted to render
Steve Kosiba
Tracing the Inca Past. Ritual Movement
and Social Memory in the Inca Imperial Capital.
201
Inca notions of the past in a way that was understandable to a Western audience–a linear
narrative (cf. Abercrombie 1998). In tracing Cusco’s roads, though, we do not see such
a singular linear narrative of the past, nor do we see a unified set of textual knowledge
grafted onto the land. We see that knowledge of the past was acquired in movement
across the land, through access to sequences of huacas and ruins that, when encountered
in sequence, invoked shared (allocentric) understandings of the recent and mythic past.
This kind of memory is not unique to the Incas. To be sure, social memories are often
bound to places that are meant to objectify people’s inner experiences and emotions (Casey 1987, pp. 182-184; Nora 1989). What is different about the Inca case, though, is that
the places of Capac Raymi worked to subjectify–they taught a shared understanding of
the past, and in so doing, created Incas. These encounters would have instilled a sense of
shared history and purpose that would have been crucial to the constitution and maintenance of a Cusqueño status.
Drawing on the data from the Capac Raymi pathways, I suggest that the monuments
and huacas of Cusco did not reveal a singular Inca vision of shared history. In other
words, the meanings of these huacas depended on their position, and their position
could be changed, terminated, or articulated with other indigenous landscapes. My suggestion builds on Yaya’s (2008, 2012) compelling interpretation of Capac Raymi, which
contends that the ceremony marked elite status while also confirming the Incas’ asymmetrical kin ties with the indigenous social groups who gave wives to the Incas. Hence,
Capac Raymi reasserted the uneven reciprocity of marriage networks in which the Incas
held dominion over Cusco’s indigenous communities, and it required the initiates to
pay respects to the assimilated huacas of Cusco’s other people (Yaya 2012, p. 130-131).
The archaeological data suggest two corollary interpretations of Capac Raymi. First,
recent archaeological research in Cusco proposes that early Inca state consolidation
was less a sequence of Inca military and marriage victories (as portrayed in Sarmiento
[1572] 1965), and more a complex and protracted process during which a new kind of
regional authority was forged in social interactions between powerful ethnic groups in
Cusco (Bauer 2004; Covey 2006; Kosiba 2012). These interactions gave rise to the concept “Inca” itself, which defined social differences by signaling that elites were an exclusive class holding authority (Kosiba 2012). In this light, it would seem as though the
Cusqueño initiates who visited indigenous huacas and non-Inca sites in Capac Raymi
called to mind the initial process by which the ethnic groups of Cusco became principal
members of the early Inca state–that is, the process by which their once-autonomous
202
ancestors became Inca. Second, the archaeological data strongly suggest that the Incas
constructed the platforms, shrines, and roads used in Capac Raymi in an effort to construct the past of the Cusco Valley, a past that was always present in the land. The data
indicate that sites such as Huanacauri and Anahuarque were not established prior to
the advent of the Inca state and its classic material culture style. These sites, and the
Capac Raymi ceremony itself, may have been a later “invented tradition” meant to structure social memory among a Cusco elite during a time of imperial expansion (a time in
which there were multiple new and non-Cusqueño claims to authority from the military,
foreign sons, and provincial elites). The sites and roads of Capac Raymi, then, would
have represented the panoply of indigenous Cusco groups that first assembled a state.
Furthermore, the archaeological data suggest that these Inca social memories depended
on the geographic contexts and places in which they were invoked. Indeed, if we compare
the pathways of Capac Raymi with my recent archaeological research on the Inca road
from Cusco to the monumental town of Ollantaytambo (Kosiba 2015), we see contrasting
perspectives on the Inca past. Similar to the pathways of Capac Raymi, the road to Ollantaytambo was a royal procession route that was most likely restricted to state officials
and elites (on Inca restrictions, see Hyslop 1984). In brief, the road to Ollantaytambo
reveals a perspective on the Cusco region grounded in an Inca view of “the present.” The
Incas built this road on land they had recently reclaimed from the flood waters of the
Vilcanota River, land that was previously unoccupied and undeveloped. The road calls
attention to the state-directed public works on this land, such as agricultural terraces, a
channelized river, canals, and new towns–it emplaces a political aesthetic similar to that
of modernist states (Scott 1998). The Incas positioned carved boulder huacas along the
road. Situated next to springs, amidst terraces, and above canals, the shrines emphasized
Inca transformations of the environment. The similarities in materials and design suggest
that the shrines were designed to standardize, focus, and direct ritual practice toward the
Inca public works in the region. The huacas were situated in lands where the Incas had
moved people from other areas of the empire (mitmakuna, mamakuna) (ARC, Beneficencia, legajo 46, F.182 [1555-1729]; AGN, Derecho Indígena, legajo 31, cuaderno 614, f. 13,
f. 26V, f. 29 [1559-1560]; see also Burns 1999; Kosiba 2015). In consequence, this road
and its huacas emphasized new lands and new people. It did not pass near the pre-Inca
sites of the Ollantaytambo area. It revealed a different (and perhaps contradictory) vision
of the land and the past.
Steve Kosiba
Tracing the Inca Past. Ritual Movement
and Social Memory in the Inca Imperial Capital.
203
Conclusions. Walking Roads, Making Cusco
This paper provides a new archaeological analysis of Inca pathways and huacas in Cusco
and offers insights into how the people of the ancient Inca capital in Cusco perceived
their landscape and recognized their past. Given the preliminary data presented here, we
might return to our starting point and ask: What was an Inca landscape? And, what was an
Inca past? Our journey along the routes of Capac Raymi revealed that, if there was an Inca
sense of “the past,” then it certainly was a politically charged past that was both transmitted and recognized in ritual practice, and not the textual meta-narrative of “history” that
was often rendered by the Spanish (see Zuidema 1990). The data from the Capac Raymi
and Ollantaytambo roads suggest that Inca understandings of the past were inflected with
political ideologies and modified according to historical and contextual circumstances.
The study reveals that the Incas assembled perspectives about the past as they participated in ritual practices. The Incas experienced and perceived Cusco’s landscape by moving
along pathways and tracing the past of powerful places.
204
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208
B R I A N S. B A U E R I D AV I D A . R E I D
THE SITUA RITUAL OF THE INCA.
M E TA P H O R A N D P E R F O R M A N C E O F T H E S TAT E
Brian S. Bauer / David A. Reid
1
An earlier version of this chapter has
been published in Inka Llaqta (Bauer 2012).
2
Modern societies are not exempt from
this, as we have seen the United States
government declare wars on cancer, poverty,
drugs, crime and, most recently, terrorism.
3
For an extensive overview of actual
warfare in the Andes see Arkush and Stanish
(2005).
4
The ritual is spelled in various ways
including: Citua, Sithua, Situay, Situwa,
Zithuwa.
Most other authors are not so speciic,
suggesting that the ritual fell sometime in
August or September, depending on the
lunar phases of a speciic year.
The Situa Ritual of the Inca:
Metaphor and Performance of the State
209
In many cultures, purification is an important part of ritual behavior. 1 The Inca (ca. AD
1400-1532) of the Central Andes were particularly concerned with purification, and each
year they dedicated several days within a specific month to cleanse their entire kingdom,
as well as its inhabitants, of impurities. This purification ritual, called the Situa, was a
state-sponsored event built around the metaphor of war. The use of the war metaphor
within ritual is present in almost all cultures and is almost universally evoked to justify
actions of the state (Lakoff and Johnson 1980; Steinert 2003, p. 266). 2 The war metaphor
is so commonplace that it seems unremarkable, yet it has only achieved this position because it is so persuasive. 3 The goal of this study is to examine several specific elements
of the Situa ritual and to explore how the metaphors within this Inca ritual took on exceptionally clear permutations.
5
6
The Situa ritual is mentioned in passing
in various accounts, including those by the
Anonymous Chronicler ([ca. 1570] 1906, pp.
158-159); Juan de Betanzos ([1557] 1996, p.
66); Diego Fernández ([1571] 1963, p. 86);
and Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa ([1572]
2007, p. 119), as well as in the report of the
Tercer Concilio Limense ([1582-1583] 1982).
Several others writers provide descriptions
of the Situa that are largely based on
information provided in Polo de Ondegardo’s
report. These include Acosta ([1590] 2002,
pp. 316-317); Cabello Valboa ([1586] 1951,
p. 351); and Ramos Gavilán ([1621] 1988,
pp. 134-135, 154). Cobo ([1653] 1990,
Bk. 13, Ch. 29, pp. 145-148) also includes
a long description of the Situa ritual, most
of which is based on Molina’s and Polo de
Ondegardo’s descriptions.
7
Known in English as Saint John the Baptist;
during the San Juan celebrations, which are
still held annually on the eve of the June
solstice, large bonires are lit, and individuals
cleanse themselves by bathing in the sea or
jumping through ire.
Overview and the Sources
Each year, near the beginning of the rainy season, the Inca performed a cleansing ritual
called the Situa. 4 According to Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1966, p. 413) this purification
event began on the first day of the new moon after the September equinox. 5 The goal of
the ritual was to prevent the arrival of illnesses associated with the rainy season in the
Andes. 6 Cristóbal de Molina is very specific on this point, writing:
The reason they have this festival called Citua in this month is because that
is when the rains begin, and many illnesses tend to occur with the first rains.
[Hence, it was] to pray to the Creator to prevent [illnesses] from occurring in
Cuzco, as well as in all the [lands] conquered by the Inca, during that year
(Molina [ca. 1574] 2011, p. 30).
The Spaniards were familiar with such cleansing rituals, and both Pedro Sarmiento de
Gamboa ([1572] 2007, p. 119) and Juan de Betanzos ([1557] 1996, p. 66), in rare displays
of cultural sensitivity, suggest that the Situa was similar to the Iberian ritual of San Juan. 7
Despite parallels with a familiar ritual, the Spaniards suppressed the Situa, and most
other Inca ritual practices, as they gained control over the Andes. Nevertheless, parts of
the Situa celebration were still practiced openly in Cusco in the 1540s and 1550s, albeit
210
in a greatly diminished form. We know this because Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1966, pp.
413-417) offers very specific memories of a Situa ritual that occurred around 1545, when
he was six or seven years old. He describes various aspects of the ritual, but also notes
that, as a child, he was not able to see all of it:
I remember having seen part of this celebration in my childhood. I saw the first
Inca come down with his spear. ... I saw the four Indians running with their
spears. I saw the common people shaking their clothes and making the other
gestures, and saw them eat the bread called çancu. I saw the torches or pancunu,
but did not see the nocturnal rite, because it was very late and I had already gone
to bed (Garcilaso de la Vega [1609] 1966, p. 416).
As the Spaniards took control of Cusco, the public performances of the Situa became
smaller, more restricted, and devoid of much of their original piety. Juan Polo de
Ondegardo was in his first term as corregidor of Cusco (1558-1560) in the year that
Garcilaso de la Vega left Cusco to live in Spain. As corregidor, Polo de Ondegardo was
empowered by the Spanish crown to rid the Cusco region of idolatrous practices. The
mandate included the banishment of non-Christian public rituals. Polo de Ondegardo was
relentless in his campaigns against idolatry and he suggests that, by the end of his term,
only a few vestiges of the Situa ritual remained, and those were largely practiced in secret
([1559/1585] 1916, p. 31). Therefore, later writers such as Molina (ca. 1574) and Felipe
Guaman Poma de Ayala (ca. 1615) had to rely largely on the memories of older informants
to describe the ritual in its fullest manifestations under the Inca state. 8 Despite these
limitations, the Situa was mentioned by numerous writers whose descriptions provide
insights into this remarkable public ritual.
The Cleansing of Cusco by Water
The primary instruments of purification used during the Situa were water and fire. These
same elements are used cross-culturally in different cleansing rituals. However, for the
Inca, the ritualized cleansing of the empire also took on the metaphor of warfare, as
both individuals and state-supported warriors gathered in Cusco to drive sicknesses,
misfortune, and evil from the land. Although the link between warfare and the defeat
8
Molina suggests that the Situa ritual
took place in August. However, all of his
ritual descriptions are of by one month.
For example, Molina lists those rituals that
occurred in June under the heading of May,
and those celebrations that occurred in
December are listed in his description for
November.
Brian S. Bauer / David A. Reid
The Situa Ritual of the Inca:
Metaphor and Performance of the State
211
Figure 1 Guaman Poma de Ayala ([ca. 1615]
1980, p. 92 [112]) depicts the emperor Huayna
Capac dressed for war. He holds a spear similar
to those described by Garcilaso de la Vega in his
account of the Situa ritual.
of illnesses is made in several accounts, the indigenous writer, Guaman Poma de Ayala
provides an especially detailed description that lists the various maladies addressed
during the Situa:
During this month the Inca ordered sicknesses and pestilence to be banished
from the towns of the whole kingdom. Warriors armed as if going to war wave
torches, shouting, “Sickness and pestilence be gone from among our people
and this town! Leave us!” At this time they wash all the houses and streets
with water and clean them. They did this throughout the whole Kingdom.
They performed other ceremonies to banish the taqui oncoy [dance sickness],
and sara oncoy [maize sickness], puquio oncoy [spring sickness], pacha panta
[flat earth], chirapa oncoy [rain with sun sickness], pacha maca [earth vessel],
acapana [(sun rise/set], ayapacha oncoycona [sicknesses caused by burials]
(Guaman Poma de Ayala [ca. 1615] 2009, pp. 192, 195).
The ritual began on the day of a new moon when, according to Molina, a council was held
in the Coricancha (otherwise known as the Temple of the Sun) with the Inca, the high
priest of the Sun, and other important officials and priests, concerning the arrangements
of that year’s ritual. 9 In a peremptory act of cleansing, those individuals who were deemed
impure, including all foreigners and anyone with a physical defect, were banished from
the city.
9
Molina ([ca. 1574] 2011) suggests that
the ritual began at noon, while Garcilaso de
la Vega indicates that it started at sunrise.
10
Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1966, p.
414) states that the Situa ritual he witnessed
began near the fort of Sacsayhuaman–
more speciically at the Inca palace of the
Collcampata on the slope above Cusco–rather
than at the Coricancha. The Collcampata,
the oicial residence of the neo-Inca rulers
of Cusco, was a logical alternative to the
Coricancha during the early colonial period
because the central temple of Cusco was
destroyed when a Dominican church was
built over it (Bauer 2004).
During this council, a large group of warriors amassed outside the Temple of the Sun
waiting instructions from the Inca. 10 It was the job of these warriors to begin the ritual
and to drive impurities from Cusco and the surrounding countryside. Garcilaso de la Vega
([1609] 1966, p. 414) describes in detail one of the warriors who was attired to fight the
evils of the city,
“He was richly dressed, wrapped in a blanket, with a spear in his hand garnished
with a band about a tercia wide [about 30 centimeters], made of feathers of
various colors, which hung from the point of the spear down to the guard and
was attached at places with gold rings, a device also used as a standard in
wartime.” (Figure 1)
212
Those who had assembled at the Coricancha then went to the central plaza of Cusco
chanting, “Illnesses, disasters, misfortunes, and dangers leave this land!” 11 Molina
([ca. 1574] 2011, pp. 31-32) notes that four groups of one hundred armed warriors would
be stationed around a ceremonial font near the center of the plaza into which chicha
was poured. 12 Each group faced one of the four divisions (suyus) or quarters of the
empire: Chinchaysuyu (to the northwest), Collasuyu (to the southeast), Cuntisuyu (to the
southwest) and Antisuyu (to the northeast). The warriors then repeated the ritual cries
and began running in their assigned directions, carrying their spears with them. The
inclusion of each of the four suyus ensured that the entire kingdom would be cleansed.
Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1966, p. 415) also describes this part of the event, writing
that “The messenger touched the spears of the ... Indians with his own, and told them that
Names listed By Molina
Modern Name
Distance from Cusco
Collasuyu
Co: 1. Acoyapongo
Co: 2. Huaypar
Co: 3. Antahuaylla
Co: 4. Huaraypacha
Co: 5. Quiquisjana
Angostura
Huacarpay ?
Andahuaylillas
unknown
Vilcanota River near Quiquijana
14 k.
30 k.
38 k.
-64 k.
Chinchaysuyu
Ch: 1. Satpina
Ch: 2. Haquehahuana
Ch: 3. Tilca
Ch: 4. Apurimac
unknown
Xaquixahuana
Tilca
Apurimac River
-18 k.
65 k.
70 k.
Antisuyu
An: 1. Chita
An: 2. Pisac
Chitapampa
Vilcanota River near Pisac
9 k.
19 k.
Cuntisuyu
Cu: 1. Churicalla
Cu: 2. Yaursique
Cu: 2. Tantar
Cu: 3. Cusibamba
Churicalla
Yaursique
Tantar Cuzco
Apurimac River near Cusibamba
7 k.
9 k.
35 k.
41 k.
11
Garcilaso de la Vega, Guaman Poma
de Ayala, Cristobal de Molina, and Polo de
Ondegardo all record similar, although not
identical, cries to rid the city of evils.
12
By the time Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609]
1966, p. 414) witnessed the Situa, the scale
of the ritual had been reduced to its symbolic
essences with only four runners in the central
plaza, each facing a diferent direction.
Table 1
Locations mentioned in Molina’s
account of the Situa.
Brian S. Bauer / David A. Reid
The Situa Ritual of the Inca:
Metaphor and Performance of the State
213
the Sun had bidden them to go forth as his messengers to expel the diseases and other ills
that might be in the city and its neighborhood.”
According to Molina ([ca. 1574] 2011, p. 34), as the armed warriors passed through the
city, its citizens emerged from their houses, shaking their blankets and symbolically
cleansing themselves of impurities. In the commotion, they cried out for illnesses to
leave the city and they hoped for a prosperous year. Garcilaso de la Vega also recalls
these events:
The inhabitants, men and women, old and young, came to the doors of their
houses as the ... [warriors] ran by and shook their clothes as if shaking out dust,
giving vent to loud cries of pleasure and rejoicing. They then ran their hands
Figure 2 During the Situa, runners
left Cusco and traveled into the four
quarters of the Inca heartland.
The runners organized themselves
into relays and carried the ritual
materials to the major rivers of the
region. The runners then bathed and
washed their weapons and the rivers
carried the maladies away. These
actions helped to both deine and
cleanse the Inca heartland.
(Map by Gabriel E. Cantarutti)
214
over their heads and faces, arms, legs, and bodies, as if washing themselves
and driving all ills out of their houses so that the messengers of the Sun might
expel them from the city. This was done not only in the streets through which
the [warriors] passed but also throughout the city as a whole (Garcilaso de la
Vega [1609] 1966, p. 415).
When the warriors left the city, the ritual developed into a relay as their spears (which
were seen as both carrying and defeating the illness) were passed from the first runners to
others located in the countryside. The order of the runners mirrored the social hierarchy
of the empire as the highest status citizens of Cusco began the race within the confines of
the city and then passed the weapons on to lesser individuals in the hinterland. 13 Again,
Garcilaso de la Vega describes this practice:
The messengers ran with their spears a quarter of a league out of the city,
where ... other Incas, not of the royal blood, but Incas by privilege, took the
spears and ran another quarter of a league, and then handed them to others,
and so on until they were five or six leagues from the city ...” (Garcilaso de la
Vega [1609] 1966, p. 415).
Furthermore, Molina ([ca. 1574] 2011, pp. 32-34) provides a detailed account of the routes
that the armed warriors traveled from Cusco. These routes are important because they
provide a map of social territories within the Cusco region (Table 1). Molina indicates that
the warriors who ran towards Collasuyu left Cusco, shouting and carrying their spears
as far as the straits of Acoyapongo (Figure 3). Acoyapongo is the narrow, eastern end of
the Cusco basin known today as the Angostura. There, selected citizens of Hurin Cusco
(i.e. Lower Cusco) accepted the spears and delivered them to the settlers of Huaypar, who
in turn carried the spears until they reached the village of Andahuaylillas. From there,
the spears were given to the inhabitants of Huaraypacha until they reached Quiquijana,
where the runners washed themselves and their weapons in the river. The warriors who
went towards Chinchaysuyu left Cusco carrying their spears and shouting in the same
way. They traveled to a place approximately a league from Cusco called Satpina. From
there, new runners went to Xaquixahuana (modern Anta) and then others ran to the
mountain of Tilca near the town of Marcahuasi. The relay ended with runners bathing
themselves as well as their clothes and weapons in the Apurímac River. Those who ran
towards Antisuyu went as far as Chita [pampa] where they met settlers from Pisac. 14
13
For additional information on the kin
groups involved in the Situa, see MacCormack
(1991, pp. 195-199).
14
These runners are said to have been
from the towns of Coya and Paulo. For
additional information on these groups see
Covey (2006).
Brian S. Bauer / David A. Reid
The Situa Ritual of the Inca:
Metaphor and Performance of the State
215
Figure 3 Guaman Poma de Ayala ([ca. 1615]
1980, p. 226 [254]) illustrates the use of the
burning pancuncus during the Situa ritual.
Note that the participants carry shields and
are dressed for war. The drawing is entitled
September, cola raimi quilla (queen celebration
month).
These warriors finished their part of the ritual by bathing in the Vilcanota River. The
group that ran towards Cuntisuyu passed their spears to the settlers of Yaurisque at the
mountain pass of Churicalla. From there, the runners continued to the village of Tantar in
the Paruro Valley. There, a new set of runners continued until they reached the Apurímac
River on the plain of Cusibamba, where they bathed themselves and their weapons.
In this ritual washing, the runners and their spears (and, symbolically, all of the regions
through which runners had journeyed) were cleansed.
During Inca times, the ritualized expulsion of disease ended with the last participants
of the four relays bathing themselves and their weapons in the major rivers of the
region. The four end locations of the relays were not casually selected, but as noted by
Covey (2006, p. 210), marked the “limits of territory over which royal Inca lineages had
traditional control.” Molina ([ca. 1574] 2011, p. 34) notes that the runners washed in these
rivers because they believed that these specific rivers would carry the maladies away into
the sea.
216
The Situa ritual later witnessed by Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1966, p. 415) ended just
outside of Cusco. Nevertheless, shortened relays ended with the runners sticking their
spears “in the ground as a barrier to prevent the ills from re-entering the area from which
they had been banished.” Thus, even in this pared-down version, the instruments of war
(i.e. the spears) were important elements of the ritual.
The Nocturnal Cleansing of Cusco by Fire
During the first day of the Situa, the illnesses of Cusco were driven out of the city by
spear point and cleansed by water. However for the Inca, the daytime cleansing of the
region was not enough, and a similar ritual was conducted in the night. We are told that
as the new moon rose in the night sky all would cry out, “Evil be gone” and special straw
torches were lit to cleanse the city of nighttime evils. Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1966, p.
415), explicitly associates the use of spears to fight evil during the day with the selection
of fire to fight evil during the darkness, writing that the “torches removed the evils by
night as the spears did by day.” The torches in particular intrigued the Spaniards, so we
have several different descriptions of them. Polo de Ondegardo ([1559/1585] 1916, p. 31)
indicates that they were called panconcos, and that among other activities the natives hit
each other with them. The Anonymous Chronicler ([ca. 1570] 1906, p. 158-159) provides
a few more details, writing, “At the conjunction of moon in that month, for three nights,
all the Indians left the plaza together with many wooden torches with grass, burning to
give light, they went running through all the streets, with great shouts and cries in loud
voices, saying that it was to cast the pestilence and sicknesses from the city…” 15 Molina
([ca. 1574] 2011, p. 39) also provides information saying that “... they would take some
large straw torches, like very large balls, which they tied with some ropes and lit. They
would go about playing with them, or more precisely, hitting one another. They called
these straw balls, mauro pancuncu”. Guaman Poma de Ayala describes the pancuncus as
“burning slings” and illustrated them in his chronicle (Figure 3). Once again, however, it
is Garcilaso de la Vega who provides the most detailed account. He writes the following:
The following night they went out with great torches of straw woven like the
jackets for oil jars in round balls. These were called pancuncu, and took a long
time to burn. Each was fastened to a cord a fathom in length, and they used to
15
Y a la opusición de la luna leen a de este
mes, tres noches, juntos todos los ynidios,
salían á la plaza con muchos hachos de
para con lumbre, encendidoa á manera de
yluminaries, y andauan corriendo por todas
las calles, dando grandes gritos y alaridos
y muchos bozinas; y dezían que esto hera
para echar la pestilencia y enfermedades del
pueblo, e que con esto que hazían auentaban
las enfermedades.
Brian S. Bauer / David A. Reid
The Situa Ritual of the Inca:
Metaphor and Performance of the State
217
run through all the streets trailing the torches till they were outside the city, as
if the torches removed the evils by night as the spears did by day (Garcilaso de
la Vega [1609] 1966, p. 415).
Similar to the spears used in the daytime cleansing of the city, the pancuncus were
especially powerful, dangerous, and potentially contaminating objects. Accordingly, they
were thrown into rivers at the end of the ritual so that the waters would carry them and
their attached ills out of the heartland. Garcilaso de la Vega observes, “If later any Indian,
young or old, found any of these torches in a steam, he would flee from it as if from the
flames, lest the evils that had been driven out should attach themselves to him (Garcilaso
de la Vega [1609] 1966, p. 415). 16
16
Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1966, p.
416) also notes that as a small boy he had
accidently come upon a discarded pancuncu.
Although the native children avoided the
torch he did not, because he had not been
told of its importance.
17
The exact order of these events is not
entirely clear from the diferent accounts.
For example, Molina suggests that the
inhabitants of Cusco bathed before the
pancuncus were carried though the city.
18
The word ceque refers to a boundary
line or a ritual pathway.
19
Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1966, p.
413) indicates that the sancu was cooked in
dry pots and left half-baked and doughy.
Once the city had been cleansed by the burning pancuncus, the people bathed themselves. 17
Polo de Ondegardo ([1559/1585] 1916, p. 31) provides a description of this activity,
“When this was done, there were general ablutions in the steams and wells, each person in
his ceque, 18 or neighborhood, and they drank for four successive days.” Molina concurs,
writing that, “At dawn, everyone went to springs and rivers to bathe in twilight, ordering
illnesses to leave them.” During the diminished rituals witnessed by Garcilaso de la Vega
([1609] 1966, p. 416) bathing was still important. However, individuals could simply wash
themselves within their house compounds or in nearby streams. Nevertheless, even in
these cases, the contaminated water had to be removed from the city and poured into a
larger river to carry the evils away.
The Celebrations in the Center of Cusco and the Culmination of the Ritual
Other important elements of the Situa activities included a preparatory fast – again an act
of cleansing – and the consumption of fine foods and large quantities of chicha during
the closing celebrations. Among the most important food that was prepared, used, and
consumed during the ritual was sancu–a dough made from ground maize and blood. 19
Like other major elements of the ritual, the sancu (also called yahuarsanco, blood paste)
was used to cleanse individuals as well as the city itself. Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609]
1966, p. 413) suggests that the blood of the sancu came from young children who had
been bled, but not killed, from a cut made between the eyebrows. Molina ([ca. 1574] 2011,
218
p. 41), on the other hand, suggests that the blood came from camelids that were sacrificed
during the rite. Garcilaso de la Vega provides a detailed description of the use of sancu
during the Situa in Cusco:
Shortly before dawn on the night of the baking, all those who had fasted
washed their bodies and took a little of the dough mixed with blood and
rubbed it on their hands, faces, chests and shoulders, arms and legs, as if
cleansing themselves so as to rid their bodies of infirmities. This done, the
eldest relative, the master of the house, anointed the lintel of the street door
with dough, leaving some sticking to it as a sign that the ablution had taken
place in the house and that their bodies had been cleansed. The high priest
performed the same ceremonies in the house and temple of the Sun and sent
other priests to do the same in the house of the women of the Sun and at
Huanacauri, a temple a league from the city. ... They also sent priests to other
places regarded as sacred ... (Garcilaso de la Vega [1609] 1966, p. 414).
Molina provides a similar account of the use of the blood paste:
Once that was over, they would go to their houses, and by then they would
have a mixture of coarsely ground maize prepared, which they called sanco.
They would place its [blank space] 20 on their faces, also smearing it on the
lintels of the doors, and in the places where they kept their food and clothes.
They would also take the sanco to the springs and throw it in, asking not to
be ill or for the illnesses to enter any given house. They would also send this
sanco to their relatives and friends for the same purpose, and they would warm
the bodies of the dead with it [as well], so that they could enjoy the celebration
(Molina [ca. 1574] 2011, p. 36).
The sancu was also eaten during the state-sponsored Situa festivities within the central
plaza of Cusco. According to Molina ([ca. 1574] 2011, p. 41), the dough was scooped up
using three fingers and consumed after a short prayer. 21 Great care was taken so that
none of the dough would fall on the ground. Those who were too sick to come to the plaza
to participate could receive the sancu in their beds.
20
An incomplete word starting with the
letters “ba” followed by a blank space.
21
Molina provides transcriptions of eleven
prayers which were made during the Situa
ritual. Because very few Quechua prayers
were recorded in the early colonial period,
the Situa prayers have been the subject of
intensive study by various scholars, including
Beyersdorf (1992); Calvo Pérez and Urbano
(2008); Castro (1921); Farfán Ayerbe (1945);
Meneses (1965); Rojas (1937); and Rowe
(1953, 1970).
Brian S. Bauer / David A. Reid
The Situa Ritual of the Inca:
Metaphor and Performance of the State
219
After sickness and pestilence had been banished by fire and water, the Situa ritual continued
for three to four days, and like other Inca state rituals, involved public ceremonies
and offerings associated with the worship of the creator god Viracocha, the Sun, and
the Inca. 22 Thousands of inhabitants, grouped according to their appropriate lineages
and moiety divisions, would gather in the plaza to participate in the festive events. The
gatherings were joyous occasions and any bickering or arguments were discouraged as it
was thought that any malicious action would bring misfortune to the participants. Molina
([ca. 1574] 2011, pp. 37-38) indicates that priests brought all the major shrines [huacas]
of the city, including the richly dressed mummies of the former Incas, to the plaza for
all to see, and so that they could also participate in the celebration (Bauer and Coello
Rodríguez 2007). The mummies were treated as living beings and underwent all other
aspects of the ritual, including having sancu smeared on their faces.
Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1966, pp. 415-416) describes how requisite offerings were
made of sacrificed camelids with the “flesh roasted in the main square and distributed
among all those present”, alongside commencements of singing and dancing. Molina ([ca.
1574] 2011, pp. 41-42) also records that the lungs of the sacrificed animals were inspected
for divination purposes to indicate whether the forthcoming year would be prosperous.
Like other state-sponsored festivities and rituals, the offerings and maize came from the
“lands of the Religion” which were held and worked by the Inca mit’a system across the
empire (Cobo [1653] 1979, p. 147).
22
For additional information on the
activities which occurred during these days
see Molina ([ca. 1574] 2011).
At the close of the celebrations, those who had been banished from Cusco because
of impurities returned to the city, as well as visitors from conquered ethnic groups
of the empire. Molina describes the procession of foreigners into the plaza where the
conspicuous symbols of power and hierarchy of the Inca state were on display, “The
next day in the morning, all the nations that the Inca had subjected would enter [the
plaza]. They came with their huacas and dressed in the clothing of their lands, the finest
that they could have. And the priests who were in charge of the huacas carried them on
litters” (Molina [ca. 1574] 2011, p. 50). The delegations participated in the final rituals
of the Situa and performed their taqui (or song) and dance native to their homelands.
Accordingly, the Situa lasted for multiple days and incorporated rites on the individual
and state level.
220
The Situa Ritual an Anthropological Perspective
Colonial descriptions of the Inca calendric ceremonial cycle, and, in particular, the
Situa ritual, offer rare insights into the structures and form of ritual in the prehispanic
Andes. Though the study of ritual is myriad in the discipline of anthropology, two main
premises are helpful for our analysis: 1) rituals are inherently symbolic, and 2) rituals
are performances tied to structures of power and negotiation (Schieffelin 1985). It is
in the performative realm of ritual that ideology as a process plays out in society. We
can therefore analyze the Situa ritual as one where its symbolic qualities, namely the
metaphor of warfare, are used to orient the individual within the Inca state and in relation
to the supernatural world. As ideology and power are inextricably entwined, the Situa
ritual also functioned to legitimize the Inca state within its heartland and conquered
territories.
The Situa cleansing ritual reflects how the Inca interpreted misfortune and illness as
residing within a supernatural realm where, through the use of rituals and active
participation, humans could still hold sway. More specifically, it was only through statesponsored ritual and supernatural warfare that sickness and evil could be kept at bay and
order emplaced over chaos. The fact that we find warfare at the core of the Situa ritual is
not surprising, as warfare is one of the central metaphors promoted by the Inca (Bauer
1991, 1996) and it provides the central logic for almost all of their ritualized actions.
In the words of Steinert (2003, p. 268), “The war metaphor is ubiquitous, connected to
strong emotions and social values and it is widely useful in politics of mass appeal. The
metaphor creates pressure for unity, solidarity, mobilization of people and resources for
the common good (against the foe).” Furthermore, as the sense of an imminent danger
to the populace is highlighted via the war metaphor, obedience is demanded, urgency
conveyed, and any dissent is seen as a danger to the public good. With its emphasis on
combat, the warfare metaphor also engendered the ritual responses in terms of male
actions.
The warfare metaphor is an especially strong and self-serving analogy for rulers of any
centralized state to use because it serves to recognize the state’s monopoly of force
and reaffirms a ruler’s position as the rightful leader. By controlling, scheduling, and
orchestrating the most important rituals of the empire, the Inca elite placed themselves
at the core of the Andean cosmos. Through the public materialization and personification
Brian S. Bauer / David A. Reid
The Situa Ritual of the Inca:
Metaphor and Performance of the State
221
of the social order within ritualized action, the overriding social inequalities of the state
become naturalized and legitimated (DeMarrais et al. 1996). Similarly, as the participating
actors engaged primordial powers that were well beyond the reach of ordinary mortals,
the officially sponsored rituals rendered the authority of the state unquestionable and
irreplaceable (Bauer 1996). As power structures constantly need to be reinforced and
reenacted in order to be maintained, the annual calendric ceremonial cycle became a
means of the materialization of Inca ideology and power.
Participants in the Situa also included foreign leaders and groups from conquered
territories who traveled to Cusco for the culminating days of the ritual. Molina ([ca. 1574]
2011, pp. 49-50) describes how representatives of conquered nations were required to
swear oaths of loyalty to the Inca, dance and sing their nations’ traditional taqui, and
were only granted permission to return to their homelands if they left, “the huacas that
they had brought that year as a gift in Cusco and took and returned to their lands the ones
they had left during the festival the previous year.” The housing of conquered huacas and
principal idols in Cusco may have made them “hostages for the loyalty of their people” as
Rowe (1982, p. 109) suggests, but it also reinforced the notion of Cusco as the spiritual
center of the empire. The annual return of the spiritually-charged huacas back to their
ethnic homelands served to incorporate conquered groups and their belief systems into
the religious hierarchy imposed by the Inca state.
Redistribution, or rather the appearance of redistribution, is often employed by states
and empires in order to maintain cohesive and lasting loyalties and alliances between
often diverse and disparate territories under their direct and indirect control. Though the
Situa ceremonies involved giving gifts of chicha, sancu, and livestock during the ritual’s
celebratory final days, this can be considered as spiritual, rather than solely economic,
redistribution. As noted by Polo de Ondegardo:
During this month, the mamaconas [specially selected woman] of the Sun
made large quantities of cakes with the blood of certain sacrifices. They gave
a piece to each of the foreigners and also sent some to the foreign huacas
[shines] throughout the kingdom, and to various curacas [local lords], as a sign
of alliance and loyalty to the sun and the Inca (Polo de Ondegardo [1559/1585]
1916, p. 31).
222
Gifts were also given to the visiting leaders from conquered nations. Cristóbal de Molina
writes:
They were given gold, silver, cloth, women, and servants as a reward for the
effort they had made in coming from such distant lands. And the principal
lords were given permission to travel in litters. They [also] gave the huacas
chacras [cultivated fields] in their lands and servants to serve them (Molina [ca.
1574] 2011, p. 50).
Through their participation in this dramatic ritual organized and sponsored by the state,
the inhabitants of the empire reaffirmed the ruling Inca’s unique position in the cosmos
and his right to rule the Andes. The Situa ritual not only oriented the individual within the
Inca belief system that involved sickness and purity, but also became a political stage for
processes of the state that employed common symbols and metaphors, and mechanisms
of distribution, as well as alliance building.
Summary and Conclusion
Each year, using the most basic (and purest) of forces, fire and water, the Inca attempted
to defeat the impurities of the world in metaphorically charged combat within a highly
ritualized setting. The first rites of the Situa included the purification of individuals
through fasting and cleansing of the city by expelling those who were considered
contaminated, impure, or unlucky. Then armed warriors radiated out from the center
of Cusco, shouting and driving illnesses from the city and the surrounding territories
with their spears. The warriors, having come in contact with the maladies, were then
required to wash themselves in the major rivers that marked the perimeters of the Inca
heartland. In the evening, the city was again purified, as warriors ran once more through
the city streets, not with spears this time, but with torches. In the days of celebration
that followed this cleansing ritual, a special blood-paste was made for both eating and
for covering the faces of the celebrants. The scale of the Situa ritual, including local and
foreign participants from the Inca Empire, make it one of the largest orchestrated, statesponsored rituals known in the Andes.
Brian S. Bauer / David A. Reid
The Situa Ritual of the Inca:
Metaphor and Performance of the State
223
Recent anthropological inquiry has demonstrated how ritualized behavior and
performance creates an arena where power and ideology is negotiated (Inomata and
Coben 2006). If individuals stop believing in specific aspects of ritual, such as the elite’s
control of ritual, or its underlying meaning, political power can be lost and relationships
between the performers and participants need to be renegotiated (Schieffelin 1985). In
this manner, ritual is not solely integrative in a functional sense, but can be an arena of
contestation of power at all levels of participation.
This is best observed in the final public performances of the Situa ritual in Colonial Cusco.
As the Spanish increased control over the Andes, a concerted effort to uproot indigenous
beliefs and practices occurred. Polo de Ondegardo ([1559/1585] 1916, p. 31) reported
that only a few remnants of important Inca ritual practices continued in Cusco during his
first term as chief magistrate (1558-1560), with all Inca state ceremonies disappearing
from public view by the mid-1570s. This is confirmed by Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609]
1966, p. 416) who observed the Situa as a young boy sometime around 1545, “... in my
time the rite was no longer observed with the strict reverence and solemnity of the days
of the Incas. It was not performed to banish their ills, for they had already lost their belief
in this, but as a memory of olden times.”
As new Colonial power structures emerged, belief and ritual not only changed due to
Christianizing forces and the extirpation of idolatry, but also the nature of political
control of Cusco. When a political state falls, so do the rituals that once legitimized its
rule, and consequently the meaning and interpretation of ritual changes as well. The Situa
became more symbolic of the lost days of Inca rule and its continuance into the midsixteenth century, albeit in a less extravagant and public form, can be viewed in terms of
resilience and resistance to the upheaval of the newly emplaced Spanish colonial system.
In this regard, we can also use the Situa ritual, its emergence in a prehistoric state context
and cessation after state collapse, as a model to understand how ideology, power, and
ritual are entwined and reflective of cultural changes.
224
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226
STEVEN A. WERNKE
B U I L D I N G T E N S I O N . D I L E M M A S O F T H E B U I LT
E N V I R O N M E N T T H R O U G H I N C A A N D S PA N I S H R U L E
Steven A. Wernke
B u i l d i n g Te n s i o n . D i l e m m a s o f t h e B u i l t
Environment through Inca and Spanish Rule
227
Over the last decade there has been a certain convergence of thinking regarding the local
production of power and new social formations in Tawantinsuyu and the Viceroyalty
of Peru. In both fields of study, scholars have come to understand colonial power as a
manifold and relational process that can produce seemingly contradictory effects: how
techniques of dominance do not necessarily produce stable systems of domination – and
more than that – how power relations can be destabilized through the same policies and
media intended to stabilize them. This paper takes soundings of the consolidation and
destabilization of power through the built environment, focusing on the transition from
Inca to Spanish colonial rule in a particular context: the Colca Valley of southern highland
Peru. It focuses on the terminal era of Inca rule through the colonial mass resettlement
known as the Reducción General de Indios (the General Resettlement of Indians) instituted
by the Viceroy Francisco de Toledo in the 1570s.
Quite some time ago, Frank Salomon aptly characterized Inca imperial politics as “pseudo
conservative” in nature. As he put it, “. . . at every stage . . . Inca administrators appear to
have observed a norm demanding a superficial formal congruence between the imperial
and aboriginal levels of government. Innovation was clothed in a conservative rhetoric”
(Salomon 1986, p. 215). The Inca presented themselves as “a chiefdom over chiefdoms”,
largely through the ritual forums and practices of commensalism, public ceremony,
and mortuary cult. All were meant to reinforce a vision of the Incas as superordinate
ancestors–a status that would trump obligations owed to local elites and numina. Local
lords served as locally-recognized intermediaries, while state extraction was represented
as an extension of traditional kin-based relations of reciprocity and redistribution. The
form of imperial administration thus varied significantly as distinct orders were locally
improvised. As a result, the form that the state actually manifested in daily life varied
significantly as well.
This dynamic posed a dilemma to Inca imperial power relations: Incaic “dominance”
depended on its antithesis, the communitarian logic and ethos of kinship (Silverblatt
1988, p. 86). As ancestors to all, the Incas obliged tribute of their subject peoples, but
by incorporating these invaders as ancestors, local peoples also (at least potentially)
obliged the Incas to return the gift (Gose 2008). Because this apparent paradox of Inca
imperial power relations was never resolved–and because Spanish colonial rule was
instituted through the remnants of Inca institutions–it also shaped relations between
local communities and Spanish colonial agents and institutions.
228
But if the modus operandi of the Incas was pseudo conservative, that of the master
architect of viceregal governance in Peru, Francisco de Toledo, was “pseudo radical”. At
the level of official discourse, Toledo’s governmental reforms called for the reorganization
of the Andean settlement and community life from the ground up through a general
administrative survey of the entire viceroyalty (the Visita General) and an accompanying
comprehensive resettlement, a regimented tribute and labor quota system, and a corps
of provincial magistrates (corregidores de indios) to oversee it all. Toledo envisioned an
omniscient government and rigidly hierarchical social order in which everyone had an
ascribed place and role in the dynastic realm of the Catholic kings. But the realpolitik
was much more improvisational, through Spanish co-optation of Incaic institutions,
clientelism, and so on. This was also partly by design. As Jeremy Mumford puts it in
his recent book Vertical Empire, “Toledo loudly called for transforming the Andean way
of organizing space, in the broad outlines, while quietly preserving it in the details”
(Mumford 2012, p. 116).
Although these more subtle ethnographic dimensions of the Toledan reforms are only
obliquely accessible in written texts, this paper traces them out through the primary
media of their enactment – the built environment. Here again is another parallel between
the Incaic and Spanish colonial projects: in both, the built environment was seen as not
just a reflection of a new civilizational order, it was manipulated to produce it. The built
environment was seen as generative of policia–social order (Cummins 2002). Likewise,
in the Inca empire we have come to appreciate imperial centers as elaborate stage sets
for commensal ritual–as theaters for the production of political and economic obligation
through the logics and ethos of communitarian reciprocity (Bauer 1996; Coben 2006;
Morris 2013). Likewise, Spanish clerics, magistrates, and viceroys designed and built
gridded towns around churches and plazas to inculcate Indian subjects to a new Christian
social order (Cummins 2002). But such spatial ideologies could be sustained only so long
as they resonated with the practices of subject peoples and thus made intelligible to them
(Abercrombie 1998; Durston 1999; Mumford 2012; Wernke 2007).
In this paper I look at the local effects and processes involved in the transition from one
imperial spatial order to the other under Inca and Spanish rule, as they articulated with,
and were transformed by, local communities. Centered in the Colca Valley of southern Peru,
I trace out how Inca administrative schemata were incompletely instituted and continued
to be mediated by local elites, even as new imperial settlements and imperial installations
Steven A. Wernke
B u i l d i n g Te n s i o n . D i l e m m a s o f t h e B u i l t
Environment through Inca and Spanish Rule
229
at existing settlements were constructed throughout the valley. This exploration of the
Inca occupation contextualizes post-invasion dislocations within a longer trajectory of
centripetal movement and migration. Within this trans-conquest context, the more subtle
ethnographic dimensions (sensu Mumford 2012, pp. 2-3) of Toledo’s massive experiment
in social engineering come into clearer focus. Even as the Reducción did violence to
relationships between people, settlement, and their enveloping agro-pastoral landscapes,
it also recycled some of the core aspects of settlement organization initiated during the
Inca imperial occupation. More detailed exploration of a particular reducción–the now
abandoned town of Santa Cruz de Tute–shows how even the internal organization of
reducciones were deeply compromised and derivative of Inca spatial forms and practices.
This perspective adds to a growing understanding of how the reducciones were not simply
alien forms arbitrarily imposed, nor as totalizing in their transformation of Andean ways
of organizing space as proclaimed in official correspondence. Such “building tension”
was never resolved, as the built environment simultaneously produced and troubled new
colonial subjectivities and economies of power.
Settlement Consolidation and Administration under Inca Rule
Although perhaps unique in the speed of its execution, Toledo’s Reducción was not the
first state-ordered mass resettlement in the Andes. The Incas resettled as many as three
million subjects over great distances in their empire to serve as mitmaqkuna (ethnic
colonists), and large population segments were also resettled to state settlements on a
more local scale. Thus, in the Colca Valley–as in many areas–the Reducción would have
been experienced not so much as an unprecedented rupture as a punctuated event in a
longer trajectory of settlement consolidation.
Inca administration in the Colca Valley does not fit neatly into the heuristic categories
of “direct” or “indirect” strategies of governance. In general, documentary sources
represent a situation of centralized imperial rule through the partial realignment of local
communities to an administrative hierarchy based on bipartite, tripartite, and decimal
structural elements. The relación of Juan de Ulloa Mogollón, written for the survey of
the Relaciones geográficas de indias, describes the political structure of the province
of the Collaguas. First, Ulloa describes the distinct mythic origins, territories, insignia,
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Figure 1 Location of the Colca Valley,
showing provincial subdivisions,
reducciones (pink) and other sites
discussed. Map by S. Wernke
economic foci, and mythic origins of the two ethnic groups of the province the Aymara
speaking Collaguas of the middle and upper stretches of the Colca Valley, and the
Quechua speaking Cabanas of the lower part of the valley. Second, he discusses how
the Collaguas were internally divided between a higher ranking group known as the
Yanquecollaguas, who occupied the upper part of the valley, and the lower ranking
Laricollaguas, who occupied the middle part of the valley, bordering Cabanaconde
lands to the west (Figure 1). Third, as is ubiquitous in the central Andes, each of these
three populations was internally divided by ranked moieties: Hanansaya and Urinsaya.
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Fourth, Ulloa explains how each moiety was subdivided by a ranked, tripartite schema,
with the names (in descending order of rank) Collana, Pahana, and Cayao. These are
the same categories that governed the ordering of the ceque system in Cuzco. 1 Ulloa
refers to them as ayllus, and it is evident within the relación that each of them was
composed of a decimal administrative unit of 300 tributaries, which was divisible to
three minimal ayllus of 100 tributaries, which were in turn classified by the same
tripartite ranking.
The incomplete process of accommodating a standardized imperial program to the
local context becomes evident when comparing the outline of the ideal structure to the
deviations from it, as registered in a series of detailed administrative surveys (visitas) from
the 1590s through the mid-17th century. In all three provincial subdivisions, the ayllus of
Hanansaya tend to deviate more from the ideal, and these were primarily autochthonous,
not migrant (mitmaq) ayllus. This is especially apparent in Yanquecollaguas and
Laricollaguas, in which the names of the Hanansaya ayllus are predominantly Aymara,
and point to an underlying dualistic organization. Tripartite and decimal administrative
nomenclature sometimes appear tacked on the names of Hanansaya ayllus. These
addenda probably index imperial efforts to restructure both moieties to the ideal schema.
The functional workings of the system probably flowed from distinct policies between
the two moieties: in Hanansaya, the Incas promoted the local elite and governed more or
less indirectly through them, while in Urinsaya, the Incas resettled foreign ayllus and/
or reorganized autochthonous ones according to the tripartite schema. Those Urinsaya
ayllus were probably more directly overseen by imperial administrators.
1
The ceque system was a network of
shrines (huacas) that synchronized ritual
activity in Cusco in calendar-like fashion.
Shrines along the imaginary lines that
radiated out from the Temple of the Sun were
attended in sequential fashion on prescribed
dates.
If anything, the archaeological evidence points to a more pseudo-conservative form of
Inca administration than might be expected from the written record. There is no dominant
imperial administrative center in the Colca Valley. Instead, administration was apparently
coordinated through three smaller imperial centers in each of the three provincial
subdivisions. In Laricollaguas and Cabanaconde, the settlement pattern expands
dramatically in terms of the number of sites and total area occupied between the Late
Intermediate Period (hereafter LIP; AD 1000-1450) and the Late Horizon, administrative
centers dominating the local settlement network in each. In Yanquecollaguas, existing
settlements grew markedly and a new administrative center was built in the location of
the future reducción of Yanque. Local administration there appears to have been more
locally-mediated, as ceremonial complexes in the form of kallankas (great halls) and
plazas were constructed prominently within the largest LIP settlements (Figure 2).
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Such open plaza spaces and associated great halls were central features in Inca
settlements throughout the empire (Hyslop 1990). They were used as staging grounds
for elaborate processionals and commensal rituals in which imperial representatives
reified an imperial ideology of state beneficence through the conspicuous redistribution
of staple and prestige goods in reciprocity for subjects’ loyalty and labor services. The
performance of staged commensal ritual was a primary idiom of pseudo conservative
imperial politics–as the Inca was presented as a kuraka-like father-provider to his
subject “children” (see, e.g., Bray 2003; Coben 2006; Dillehay 2003; Ramírez 2005).
These rituals engaged core Andean constructs of personhood and community, defined
by varied conceptions of reciprocity among people and animating cosmological forces
of the enveloping Andean landscape.
Post-invasion incorporations
Figure 2 Panorama of the ritual core
of the site of San Antonio, a secondary
Inka administrative center that became
one of the early Franciscan doctrinas
in the Colca Valley. This doctrina was
abandoned with the establishment of
the reducción of Coporaque (background) in the 1570s.
Photo by S. Wernke
As with most people in the Andes, for the people of the Colca Valley, the events of
Cajamarca would have been a distant piece of news of likely ambiguous details and
significance. The Spanish invasion was not experienced in this local context as a bloody
takeover as much as a chaotic change in administration (though “administration” is
almost too formal a term for early Spanish colonial rule). An initial semblance of Spanish
governance was achieved by coopting local ethnic lords and distorting the structures of
Inca imperial rule to meet the extractive ends of encomiendas (grants of Indian labor to
Spanish trustees). As part of the first general distribution of encomiendas by Francisco
Pizarro between 1538 and 1540, all of Yanquecollaguas was granted to his half-brother
Gonzalo, while Laricollaguas was divided by moiety and granted to Marcos Retamoso
(Hanansaya) and Alonso Rodríguez Picado (Urinsaya) (Málaga Medina 1977). Gonzalo
Pizarro reportedly maintained a residence in Coporaque, though he spent little time
there. The only Spaniards to live in a sustained fashion among local communities during
the first generation after the invasion were Franciscan friars, who built a series of chapels
at former centers of Inca administration.
Consistent with early evangelization elsewhere in the Andes and Mesoamerica (Burkhart
1998; Edgerton and Pérez de Lara 2001; Estenssoro 2001; Hanson 1995; Lara 2004;
MacCormack 1985), the earliest evangelical strategies in the Colca Valley thus seem to have
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resonated with prehispanic analogs by focusing on outdoor catechesis and pageantry in
a performative pastoral approach. The close associations between the Franciscan chapels
and Inca administrative architecture within these doctrinas suggest that the friars’ early
pastoral efforts, in contrast to the pseudo radical view of eradication and replacement
evident in the documentary record, produced spatial analogies that referenced Incaic
ceremonial spaces and their associated practices for the inculcation of new Catholic rites
(Wernke 2007).
Coeval documentation of their initial entry are lacking, but a Franciscan memorial written
around 1585 recounts the arrival of a small group of friars headed by one Fray Juan de
Monzón, along with Fray Juan de Chaves, about forty years previous–that is, sometime
around 1545 (ASFCL registro 15, parte 5). About twenty years later, the Franciscans had
expanded and began formalizing their mission in valley. By this time–the height of the
Counter Reformation in Europe–Church institutions throughout the viceroyalty were
struggling to move toward more uniform doctrine and methods of indoctrination (Durston
2007, p. 71; Estenssoro 2003, pp. 139-145). By the mid-1560s, the friars had constructed
convents in Yanque in the central part of the valley and Callalli in the upper reaches of the
valley (Córdoba y Salinas [1651] 1957, pp. 151-157), and a more formal system of doctrinas
seems to have been in place (Cook 2002). The friars had by this time begun congregating
households from surrounding settlements to the doctrinas (Echeverría y Morales [1804]
1952). We can explore these transformations in spatial order and practice in great detail at
the doctrina of Malata, located in the upper reaches of the Colca Valley.
Malata: an Inca Provincial Outpost and Early Franciscan Doctrina
The site of Malata is located high in the Colca Valley at 3850 meters above sea level in
a transitional ecozone between the agricultural core of the valley and the high altitude
puna grasslands, where pastoralism is practiced. This small village, composed of 81
standing fieldstone structures in a 1.8 ha core habitation area, occupies a shallow draw in
a broad alluvial terrace above the deep gorge of the Colca River (Figure 3). The site dates
to the Inca and early post-invasion eras, and was abandoned with the establishment of
the Toledan reducciones in the 1570s (Wernke 2007, 2012, 2013a, 2013b).
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Figure 3 Architectural map of Malata,
showing areas excavated (white).
Map by S. Wernke
Malata also exemplifies the centripetal trends in settlement patterning that began during
Inca times. Prior to becoming a doctrina, Malata was a secondary- or tertiary-level Inca
imperial outpost. Unlike other such sites in the valley with Inca architecture, however, there
are no indications of a significant pre-Incaic occupation at Malata. The site was apparently
established as a prerogative of Inca administration. However minor a role the site played in
overall imperial administration in the valley, it retains elements of Inca settlement planning
found on a larger scale at other administrative sites locally and throughout Tawantinsuyu.
A small (9.6 x 6.0 m) kallanka or great hall, with two trapezoidal doorways, faces a long
(24.0 x 8.5 m) plaza, which is situated atop a terrace on the high, western end of the
site. Our excavations in the kallanka at Malata recovered significantly higher proportions
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of finely-crafted Collagua Inca style serving vessels in floor level contexts than those of
domestic structures (Wernke 2013a). The great hall and its associated plaza thus appear to
have been the focal point of public ceremonial space during the Inca occupation.
Similar to the other doctrinas in the valley, a rustic chapel is situated close to this Inca
era ceremonial complex (Figure 4). This proximity by Euclidean measures, however,
obscures major spatial reordering of the settlement as it was transformed into a
doctrina. The chapel was originally built on the natural hill slope and fronted by four
entry steps, without the enclosing atrium or fronting plaza. The atrium, plaza, and
steps leading from the plaza up to the atrium were all added during a subsequent
Figure 4 Panorama of the public
and ritual center of Malata during
excavations, including the Franciscan
chapel (right), colonial plaza (in front
of chapel) and Inka kallanka and its
associated plaza (center, background).
Photo by S. Wernke
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remodeling event. The basic features of what became standard elements of Spanish
urban planning in the Americas thus took form at Malata: church, atrium, plaza, cross,
and civic building. They were not built at once, but fitted to an existing settlement,
which was then significantly modified to fit a Spanish urban model (however rustically
executed), perhaps with the expansion of the Franciscan mission in the valley during
the 1560s (Wernke 2012, 2013b, pp 158-213).
Evidence from the residential area also points to significant growth and the addition
of newly-configured domestic compounds during the colonial era occupation of Malata.
The village is arranged around an older core area near the Inca complex, composed of
domestic compounds of circular floor plan arranged irregularly around central patio
areas. Around this old site core, rectilinear houses were added during the colonial era.
At the eastern end of the site, these houses are arranged in linear fashion in the manner
of streets. They were almost certainly built by households congregated to the doctrina
under the direction of the friars. At the western end of the site, such colonial era houses
are arranged singly with patio spaces. Because of their separation from the rest of the
settlement, proximity to the chapel, and the unique character of their internal layouts
and assemblages, these buildings were most likely the quarters of friars, who probably
came for short stays during pastoral rounds (Wernke 2013a).
The Reducción General de Indios in the Colca Valley
The Franciscan doctrinas were short lived, however, as they were either forcibly
abandoned or overbuilt during the Reducción General of the 1570s. Between 1572 and
1574, the corregidor Lope de Suazo, in his capacity as visitador, “reduced” the population
of 33,900 inhabitants in the Collaguas Province to 24 towns (Gutiérrez et al. 1986; Málaga
Medina 1974, 1977). The province was the most densely populated under the jurisdiction
of Arequipa, constituting a third of its population, and 35% of its annual tribute (Guillet
1992; Manrique 1985). Considering the regional importance of the province, there were
powerful incentives to maintain the productive capacity of its lands and population. In
that sense, the interests of viceregal administration, the church, and local communities
were broadly aligned. But that must have made the difficult compromises inherent to the
resettlement much more evident: who would bear the brunt of the resettlement? Many of
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the important aspects of planning the resettlement must have been negotiated at a very
local level when Suazo and his entourage met with the resident friars and community
authorities.
So how did resettlement affect existing patterns of settlement and land use? A full discussion
of these processes is beyond the scope of this paper, but as a rule, a pseudo radical
policy is evident. Although the reducciones brought about an abrupt transformation of
the settlement pattern, high ranking populations resident in the largest settlements were
displaced the least. There is overall continuity of settlement between the principal Inca
administrative centers and the principal reducciones of each of the three repartimientos
of the colonial province. In the cases of Yanque and Lari–the capitals of their eponymous
repartimientos–the reducciones are literally built on top of the old Inca centers. In the
case of Cabanaconde, the reducción town is adjacent to the two principal Inca settlements
in the lower part of the valley (the sites of Antisana and Kallimarka), which were situated
on steep hilltops, and thus not amenable to the construction of a gridded town (de la Vera
Cruz Chávez 1987; Doutriaux 2004).
In the upper reaches of the valley lie the ruins of a reducción that was apparently started,
but never finished. This settlement, today known as Laiqa Laiqa, is also situated in the
area of a significant Inca era settlement. During Inca times, it likely functioned as a
secondary administrative center, sharing the same characteristics found at other other
such centers in the valley, including two kallankas and their associated plazas. But what
is especially intriguing about Laiqa Laiqa is the presence of a large church in ruins at the
center of the settlement. This church is nearly three times the size of the chapels at the
early Franciscan doctrinas, and is on the same scale as those of the other reducciones.
Based several lines of evidence, Laiqa Laiqa was most likely the reducción referred to
as the “Villanueva de Alcaudete de Coymo” (hereafter, “Coymo”) in the original listing
of reducciones from the visita general. This being the case, Coymo would have been
the nearest reducción to Malata, and was, therefore, the most likely town to which the
inhabitants of Malata were resettled. However, Coymo was very short-lived. It was already
abandoned by 1591–this is known because Coymo was not recorded in the visita from that
year (the earliest known post-Toledan visita in the valley). It is, therefore, quite likely that
the people of Malata were subjected to multiple resettlements over a few generations: 1)
when it was established under Inca rule, 2) when new households were congregated there
during its brief use life as a Franciscan doctrina, 3) when it was abandoned and the
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Figure 5 Reconstruction of the
history of resettlement from Malata to
Laiqa Laiqa (Villanueva de Alcaudete
de Coymo), from Laiqa Laiqa to Santa
Cruz de Tute, and from Santa Cruz de
Tute to the modern town of Tuti.
Map by S. Wernke
population was resettled to a reducción (probably Laiqa Laiqa/Coymo), and 4) finally with
the abandonment of Laiqa Laiqa (Figure 5) (Wernke in press).
The reasons for this aborted attempt at resettlement remain obscure–especially given that
resettlement would have minimally displaced the households of the surrounding large
terminal prehispanic settlement. But it is likely that the great majority of its population
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would have been resettled to the neighboring reducción of Santa Cruz de Tute, the subject
of the remainder of this paper.
Recycling and Recirculating Spaces at Santa Cruz de Tute
The reducción of Santa Cruz de Tute (today known as Mawchu Llacta), is located at
4100 meters above mean sea level, just two kilometers to the northwest of Coymo, in
a high basin hemmed in by steep colluvial slopes (Figures 6-8). As discussed below,
the reducción is situated at the location of a major Inca center that functioned as the
top tier administrative center for this high altitude area of the province. Analysis of
the visitas from the late 16th and early 17th centuries establishes that two thirds of
the population pertained to ayllus of the higher ranking Hanansaya moiety, and that
nearly half of its population came from a single ayllu: Pahana Caloca. Pahana Caloca was
also the highest ranking ayllu of Hanansaya and the village as a whole. Moreover, the
households of Pahana Caloca and the higher ranking Hanansaya moiety in general held
more livestock per capita than those of Urinsaya. This is consistent with the ecological
setting of Mawchu Llacta, in the high altitude puna grasslands. Thus, Pahana Caloca likely
composed much of the original population of the Inca era settlement, and the reducción
process minimized dislocation to this ranking ayllu compared to the disruptions to the
lower ranking ayllus, especially those of Urinsaya. The ayllus of Urinsaya were very
small by comparison, varying between just 17 and 91 souls, and were consistently more
agriculturalist in economic focus, suggesting they moved up from settlements in lower
altitude areas, such as Malata and Laiqa Laiqa/Coymo. Pseudo-conservatism of Inca
administration is evident here–the underlying Inca settlement was built in the location
of a high-ranking autochthonous ayllu, while lower-ranking ayllus of Urinsayu were more
directly tied to the state (as evidenced by their names). The pseudo-radicalism of the
reducción is equally apparent. On the one hand, the lower-ranking ayllu segments of
Urinsaya were radically displaced from their ancestral settlements. On the other hand,
the reducción was situated atop a major Inca era settlement where the ranking ayllus
resided. The descendent households in the ranking ayllus continued to mediate colonial
administration as they had under Inca rule. As we will also see, even though the built
environment of this reducción obliterated much of the prior Inca era settlement, some of
its original core features significantly oriented and ordered its layout.
Figure 6 Panorama of the central
portion of the reducción of Santa Cruz
de Tute (today known as Mawchu
Llacta), from the south. The main
church and fronting plaza are in
the center of the frame. Photo by S.
Wernke
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The excellent archaeological preservation at Mawchu Llacta enables a detailed view of
the built environment and everyday life in a reduction town. It is located in the puna,
with a large bofedal (high altitude marsh) running through the center of the settlement.
Our archaeological survey of the town shows that it was built atop a major Inca center.
We know from parish records that the town fell into a derelict state by the turn of the
19th century and was abandoned by 1843, when the population had moved 1.5 km
downslope to the current village of Tuti, which is also built around a central square and
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church. Today the population of Tuti recognizes Mawchu Llacta as their ancestral town.
Mawchu Llacta thus provides an unusually detailed window into life in a reducción
through the entire colonial era and into the first two decades of the republican era.
Like the other reducciones in the valley, Mawchu Llacta is organized on a grid of square
blocks. The blocks are uniform, varying only between 40 and 43m on a side, which
Figure 7 Three dimensional
perspective of Mawchu Llacta, from
the east. Photo by S. Wernke
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Figure 8 Draft architectural plan of
Mawchu Llacta. Plan by S. Wernke
corresponds to 50 varas or one cordel (the size stipulated in Toledo’s ordenanzas). The
construction of the urban grid was clearly the first step in construction of the reducción,
given that several blocks were delineated but no buildings were built in them. In fact, the
center part of the site was apparently never built up. This central area corresponds to the
bofedal. It may seem odd to build a reducción on a marsh, but the bofedal undoubtedly
provided pasturage for the large flocks of camelids kept by the population.
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It appears that the urban planning evident in the overall town layout did not extend to the
interior organization of the blocks themselves or the forms of domestic structures within
them. Colonial oversight apparently did not extend to the design of domestic structures,
judging by the variability of their orientations and layouts within the blocks. In any case,
it did not approach Toledo’s ideal model of surveillance, which called for each block
to be divided into four domestic compounds, giving access only to the street and not
internally to each other. Though a detailed analysis of domestic architecture is beyond
the scope of this paper, in these high elevation areas of the province, late prehispanic
domestic structures were predominantly circular in floor plan and were built around
shared patios. As we saw at Malata, this arrangement was contested with the congregation
of new households in the early doctrinas, as new domestic units were constructed with
rectilinear houses fronted by patios. The domestic compounds at Mawchu Llacta generally
follow this post-invasion model. That is to say, although state intervention is not evident
in terms of the specific internal configuration of residential blocks, certain introduced
architectural forms had apparently become normative.
Moving out again to the scale of the reducción as a whole, the insistence on the regular
orthogonal grid is especially impressive when considering the irregularity of the terrain,
and the fact that this area was also the location of a major Inca era settlement. But the
remains of this older Inca center were not entirely demolished by the reducción, and
what was left in place is especially intriguing. In looking at the checkerboard grid of
the site, one would expect to find the greatest regularity of layout in its center–that is,
around the church and plaza. But in fact, this is where the orthogonal grid is least regular.
A striking feature of this reducción compared to others in the valley is that its main
church is flanked by not one, but two plazas: one situated off the north lateral portal
of the church, and the other in front of the church (Figure 9). The plaza in front of the
church does not fit the orthogonal grid in either its form or dimensions: it is trapezoidal,
not rectangular, like the other plaza, and its placement does not conform to the rest of
the grid. Large trapezoidal plazas are standard features in Inca settlements, especially
provincial administrative centers. So this was almost certainly the central plaza of the
original Inca era settlement. In short, the very core of the reducción was oriented around
the central ceremonial complex of the Inca settlement.
Several other lines of evidence support the interpretation of the trapezoidal plaza
as the original ceremonial space of the underlying Inca settlement. First, although
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Figure 9 Plan and orthomosaic of
the central area of Mawchu Llacta.
Structures and features discussed in
the text are indicated.
Plan by S. Wernke
we have only recently completed intensive surface artifact collections (there are two
teams in the field at the time of drafting this paper), there is a clear concentration of
Late Horizon ceramics in this area of the reducción, suggesting it was the core of the
prior settlement. Second, there are finely worked andesite blocks of imperial Inca style
found exclusively in the walls of the church and the rectory. This area adjacent to the
central plaza was likely a kancha (Inca residential ward) composed of buildings made
of fine cut-stone masonry. It is worth noting that such cut-stone blocks have only been
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recorded in the three top level centers in the valley: in the reducciones of Yanque and
Lari, and at the site of Kallimarka adjacent to Cabanaconde. So this was apparently a
site of similar administrative importance for the high altitude reaches of the province
where the large camelid herds of the Collaguas were concentrated. Third, opposite
the church façade, across the trapezoidal plaza, is a small chapel, behind which is an
enclosed hilltop strewn with rock outcrops and boulders. That area is also one of the
zones of highest concentrations of diagnostic Late Horizon ceramics. This area appears
to have been a locus of intense ritual activity (likely a huaca or ushnu). These lines of
evidence combined establish that the core elements of the old Inca settlement were
not obliterated, but instead were integrated and recycled as its core elements. The Inca
plaza was reused as the main plaza of the reducción. It was flanked on one side by a
huaca, and on the other side by an Inca administrative or palatial complex (kancha),
which was converted to church and convent.
We also know from documents from the Tuti parish archive that this trapezoidal plaza
was the primary plaza of the town. Church inventories from the late 18th and early 19th
centuries refer to it as the plaza real (royal plaza), while the other plaza off the lateral
portal of the church was called a plazuela (“small square”) (AAA 1792, fol. 17v-18r; AAA
1816). This is especially striking when considering that the so-called “plazuela” is a much
more elaborate construction, with six chapels (all in ruins by 1792) and a central cross.
It is the largest feature at the site, leveled with up to three meters of fill and massive
retaining walls.
We can further specify how the plaza real was subtly altered to accommodate Catholic
ritual practice through the construction of four platforms along the edges of the plaza.
These were almost certainly platform bases for posa chapels. Posas–altars or chapels
situated in quadrilateral form around the church atrium or fronting plaza–were standard
features in the atria of Franciscan complexes since the earliest evangelical missions in
Mesoamerica. In part this configuration accommodated open air worship in the form of
processionals during holy days and other significant events (such as funerals), given
that early churches were often too small to house the large crowds, and the unbaptized
were not allowed into the sacred interior space of the church itself. In this case, what
is especially interesting about the placement of the posa platforms is that they were
not situated in the corners of the trapezoidal plaza but instead were aligned against its
bounding walls in a manner that forms a rectangle between them (see Figure 9 above).
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That is to say, the posas “squared the trapezoid” and demarcated a Catholic sacred space
in orthodox form within the central ceremonial space of the Inca center.
Here we see another dimension of the pseudo radicalism of the reducciones in built form:
the continued recycling of the central spaces of Inca imperial ritual in the heart of the
reducción itself. Looking out beyond this core area, it seems likely that the orientation of
the church to this plaza, and the alignment of the town grid as a whole, was set by the
Inca plaza.
The rectangular plaza at the center of the reducción also points to a similar trajectory as
we saw at Malata and the other doctrinas: the move from an accommodation of antecedent
Inca spaces and their analogous use through ritual processions (in this case, in the plaza
real), to a more eradicative spatial order with the construction of a new plaza with its
more orthodox trappings (in the plazuela). Here at Mawchu Llacta, the rectangular plaza
represents a major investment in “perfecting” Catholic practice and producing policía.
The same elements are present as in the trapezoidal plaza, but in much more elaborated
form. In place of four posa platforms, there were six posa chapels and a central cross. Five
of them are still easily distinguishable: three are located in the southeast, northeast, and
northwest corners of the plaza. The southwest corner, the usual location for the fourth
chapel, was used as the main access to the plaza, and probably for this reason, the fourth
“corner” posa chapel is located in the center of the west side of the plaza. The fifth chapel
is more than double the size of the others. It is situated in the center of the north side
of the plaza, aligned with the central cross platform and lateral portal of the church (as
described above). It is referred to in church inventories as a miserere chapel (a feature
found in other reducciones in the valley) (as in the case of the chapel of San Sebastian in
Coporaque. See Tord 1983, pp. 87-89).
Paradoxes of Power and Place
By tracing out this local trans-conquest historical trajectory, we have explored how the
built environment was implicated in the simultaneous production and perturbation of
colonial power in the Andean region. Both Inca and Spanish colonial projects produced
major changes in the most tangible, daily practices of social life, but they were also
248
profoundly compromised in their local execution. For the indigenous communities of
the Colca Valley, the ruptures of colonial resettlement–although indisputably disruptive–
would have been understandable given how Inca colonial plans were also played out
through the built environment and public ritual. These same media were also part of
a continuous, trans-conquest negotiation of ritual space, as the central staging for
commensal ritual (kallankas and plazas) became materia prima in the negotiation of
religious transformation during the first evangelization. This early encounter– when
the power lines between church, state, and community were not yet so clearly drawn–
can be characterized as a dialogue that initially played on spatial analogies to provide
entrée to both sides of the colonial encounter. At Malata, the implantation of a new
model for the proper structuring of the spaces of a settlement can be appreciated, but
the apperception, use, and significance of such spaces must have depended on their
resonance with the cognate forms from the era of Inca rule. The construction of a space of
religious indoctrination could thus also produce a new kind of local place of ambiguous
and contested significance. In no small measure, it was such persistent heterodoxy that
led to the more radical dislocations of the reducción program of the following decade.
The close-in perspective afforded by Mawchu Llacta illustrates these paradoxical aspects
in detail: its construction was clearly a massive undertaking and investment of labor
for its constituent population and its design significantly altered the many material
and spatial dimensions of daily life. But just as clearly, its location, orientation, and
organization were significantly shaped by a large and important Inca-era settlement in
the same location.
Looking at the spatial organization of the reducción itself, it seems unlikely that the
central dilemmas of colonial rule were resolved through the imposition of new built
forms (as proclaimed by Toledo). If anything, the dilemmas of the built environment
were intensified by the recycling of Incaic and autochthonous features and practices.
Through such conflations, Catholicism and colonial conceptions of social order came to
be apprehended and incorporated by the inhabitants of the reducción. That is to say, the
process of reducción produced a new social order, but one that was both trans-local and
irreducibly local. Here we can start to approach an understanding of the simultaneous
production and destabilization of colonial dominance through the production of place.
Ultimately, the Toledan move to recycle and mimic Incaic spatial forms and practices–
plazas, processionals, commensal feasts, etc.–both produced and destabilized colonial
Steven A. Wernke
B u i l d i n g Te n s i o n . D i l e m m a s o f t h e B u i l t
Environment through Inca and Spanish Rule
249
power. From a local point of view, both Incaic and Spanish colonial programs enabled the
incorporation of the foreign within a local frame, even as that which typified “local” was
transformed in the process.
An earlier generation of researchers pointed to the widespread dereliction and
abandonment of reducciones as evidence of the project’s failure at colonial social
engineering. We have seen in this local context that Santa Cruz de Tute was ultimately
abandoned in 1843, seemingly proving the incompatibility of the reducción with local
community forms and land use practices. However, such a conclusion ignores the legacy
of the reducción: the founding of the present day village of Santa Cruz de Tuti–a town
spontaneously organized on a grid around a church and plaza. “Spanish” forms had been
incorporated to the point of becoming symbols of autochthony. The people of Santa Cruz
de Tuti abandoned one reducción to build another. Their descendants continue to live
there today.
250
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252
D O N ATO A M A D O G O N Z Á L E S
S I S T E M A D E T E N E N C I A D E T I E R R A S D E AY L LU S
Y PA N A C A S I N C A S E N E L VA L L E D E L C U S C O,
S I G LO S X V I - X V I I
Donato Amado Gonzáles
Sistema de tenencia de tierras de ayllus
253
y panacas incas en el valle del Cusco, siglos XVI-XVII
Cusco, el centro de administración política y religiosa del gran Estado del Tahuantinsuyo,
morada de los incas, de los ayllus reales y de las panacas, fue un eje de irradiación
y concentración de todo un sistema de caminos que integraban y comunicaban, en
primer lugar a las huacas y los centros de ceremonias, y en segundo lugar a los centros
administrativos y las zonas de producción de los diferentes pisos ecológicos. El valle del
Cusco estaba estructurado por todo un sistema de caminos rituales cuyo punto de partida
era el Coricancha. Este sistema integraba a las huacas que se encontraban bajo el cuidado,
la atención y el mantenimiento de los linajes según su jerarquía social–collana, payan y
cayao–, y que estaban divididas en cuatro parcialidades o suyos, los cuales conformaban
el sistema dual político y social: en Hanan Cusco el Chinchaysuyo y el Antisuyo, y en
Hurin Cusco el Collasuyo y el Cuntisuyo. Por otro lado, del centro nobiliario delimitado
por los ríos Saphi y Tullumayu, y que estaba conformado por los canchas de los reyes,
salían los caminos del inca o Qhapaq Ñan, que se dirigían hacia los cuatro suyus y que
constituyeron una auténtica columna vertebral, que unía los caminos de integración y
articulación con los pueblos o centros administrativos ubicados en zonas estratégicas.
En términos sociales, la nobleza inca del valle del Cusco estaba dividida en dos grupos.
La primera, la más alta, estaba conformada por los descendientes de cada uno de los
gobernantes incas, quienes formaron ayllus y panacas denominados ayllus reales.
La segunda comprendía a gente a la que se reconocía como parientes lejanos de los
descendientes de los incas (Rowe 2003), que estaba vinculada a algún antepasado mítico
(Zuidema 2010, p. 430), o ascendientes de capitanes u hombres principales y a personajes
que tenían vínculos de parentesco, alianzas políticas o militares, o que destacaron durante
el proceso de integración y articulación del estado inca (Amado 2013). A esta segunda
clase se la conocía como los ayllus no reales. Ambas noblezas estuvieron divididos en dos
parcialidades: Hanan Cusco y Hurin Cusco.
Los estudios etnográficos, etnohistóricos, arqueológicos e históricos referidos al valle
del Cusco, sugieren que es necesario investigar históricamente el sistema de tenencia de
tierras, lo que nos dará una mejor explicación de la organización social de los ayllus y
panacas en dicho valle. Esta propuesta tiene como sustento el contraste de la información
de las crónicas de los siglos XVI y XVII, con el registro de la compra y venta de tierras,
fragmentos de visitas y de composición de tierras, pleitos, deslindes y amojonamientos
de tierras en los mismos siglos.
254
Donato Amado Gonzáles
Figure 1 Tierras Valle del Cusco.
Preparado y elaborado por Donato
Amado Gonzales.
Sistema de tenencia de tierras de ayllus
y panacas incas en el valle del Cusco, siglos XVI-XVII
255
Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa y la relación de ayllus y panacas en 1572
Sarmiento de Gamboa ([1572] 1965) fue, a nuestro entender, uno de los cronistas que
mejor comprendió la historia de los incas. Así por ejemplo, al describir la personalidad y
el gobierno de cada Inca, señaló al terminar el nombre del ayllu y panaca, la parcialidad
y el nombre de sus representantes o descendientes. Sin embargo, al finalizar la crónica,
al momento de efectuarse la probanza de la Historia índica, los descendientes de cada
gobernante fueron nombrando a todos los representantes por ayllu, y su relación no
concuerda con la de quienes fueron incluidos en el cuadro anterior. En esta perspectiva
resulta interesante contrastar toda esta relación con la “Declaración de los curacas de los
cuatro suyus” (en Archivo Regional del Cusco 1584), donde en primera instancia se agrupa
a los incas gobernantes en dos clases, Incas remotos e Incas modernos, del siguiente
modo: los primeros corrieron desde Manco Capac hasta Viracocha Inca, mientras que
Huayna Capac, Topa Inca Yupanqui, Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui y Viracocha Inca fueron
agrupados dentro de los Incas modernos. En la relación podemos observar el nombre del
Inca, el de los ayllus y panacas, y sus respectivos descendientes. En ella se constata que
los descendientes o representantes de cada Inca gobernante únicamente son varones y
que no hay ninguna mujer.
Los ayllus reales y panacas estuvieron divididos en dos parcialidades, Hanan Cusco
y Hurin Cusco. En términos espaciales el primero comprendía al Chinchaysuyo y el
Antisuyo, ubicados al noreste del valle, mientras que el Hurin Cusco en cambio abarcaba
al Collasuyo y el Cuntisuyo, que estaban al suroeste. Según el sistema de ceques, el
último ceque del Antisuyo y el primero del Collasuyo marcaban el límite entre Hanan
y Hurin en la parte meridional del valle. En cambio en la parte noroeste el límite estaba
marcado por el último ceque del Chinchaysuyo y el último del Cuntisuyo. Estos ceques
que servían de límite entre Hanan y Hurin coincidían además con el recorrido del camino
del Collasuyo. Siguiendo esta ruta, los caminos que partían hacia la izquierda se dirigían
hacia el Antisuyo y los que iban hacia la derecha iban hacia los pueblos del Collasuyo.
Del mismo modo, en la parte norte, en la ruta del Cuntisuyo, los caminos que partían
hacia la derecha articulaban los pueblos del Chinchaysuyo y los que enrumbaban hacia la
izquierda unían a los pueblos del Cuntisuyo (Amado 2007).
El límite entre Hanan y Hurin dentro del valle del Cusco se explica a partir de los siguientes
casos. En 1562, en el pleito por las tierras de Puquinhuqui, Gualcancaguasi y Qanto, éstas
256
Donato Amado Gonzáles
Sistema de tenencia de tierras de ayllus
257
y panacas incas en el valle del Cusco, siglos XVI-XVII
Leyenda
Figure 2 Tierras de ayllus y panacas.
Elaborado por Edgar Denos Alfaro.
fueron señaladas como tierras de los ayllus Uscamayta, Hauainin, Suti y Cuicusa de la
parcialidad de Hurin Cusco. El Ayllu y Panaca Uscamayta, representado por Juan Tambo
Uscamayta, sostenía que estas tierras fueron de Tarco Guaman, quien a su vez las había
heredado del Inca Mayta Cápac. La Panaca Haguainin, representada por Martin Tisoc Sayre
Topa, descendiente de Lloque Yupanqui, también declaró haberlas heredado de Huillac
Uma, quien a su vez era descendiente del Inca Lloque Yupanqui. La otra parte del pleito
la representaba don Thomas Saua Ynga, hijo legítimo de don Juan Ramos Saua Ynga y
de doña Catalina Tocto, nieto de don Cristóbal Yupanqui, quienes eran descendientes de
Topa Inca Yupanqui y por consiguiente formaban parte de la parcialidad de Hanan Cusco.
Por esta razón el pleito fue sonado y se reconoció un conflicto por la tierra entre Hanan
y Hurin Cusco. El litigio fue resuelto por el corregidor Polo de Ondegardo, quien sostenía
ser conocedor de los descendientes de los Incas por haber tratado con ellos.
258
Gracias a los registros de la tenencia de la tierra en las inmediaciones de los campos en
disputa vemos que estamos frente a su usurpación por parte de los de Hanan Cusco,
quienes ocuparon los campos de su contraparte Hurin. Tal fue el caso de Colla Topa,
quien intentó apropiarse de las tierras de Puquinhuqui Gualcancaguasi de los de Hurin
Cusco. De este modo también encontramos a don Carlos Inca, hijo de Paullu Inca y nieto
de Huayna Cápac, quien formaba parte de los de Hanan Cusco y poseía las tierras de
Chaquillchaca, las cuales fueron expropiadas por el virrey don Francisco de Toledo para
fundar la parroquia de Santiago. En 1578 todavía encontramos a doña Leonor Chimbo
Ocllo, natural de la ciudad del Cusco y mujer del maestre Diego Fuentes, en posesión
de tierras en Chaquillchaca, las cuales sostuvo haber heredado de Mayta Cápac. Doña
Leonor por consiguiente formaba parte de la Panaca Uscamayta, conformada por los
descendientes del Inca Mayta Cápac, de modo que podemos deducir que las tierras de
Chaquillchaca eran de los de Hurin Cusco.
Las tierras de Huanchac 1 en la parte sur del valle tenían dos sectores, Hatun Huanchac y
Hurin o Lurin Huanchac. El límite entre estos dos espacios era el camino viejo que había
sido clausurado y al que también se conoció como el Camino de Guamantiana. Las tierras
a su margen derecha eran de Hurin Huanchac y las de la izquierda de Hatun Huanchac. En
1624 doña Pilco Cisa vendió a Rui Diaz de Betanzos un topo de tierras de maíz en el lugar
llamado Hurin Huanchac, cuyos linderos eran el “. . . camino que baxa de Limacpampa
junto al río de Tullumayo–al que se llamaba el camino a Papres–y por arriba el Camino
de Guamantiana”. Esta referencia nos permite ubicar las tierras de Hurin Huanchac en la
margen derecha del camino de Guamantiana. Del mismo modo, las tierras de los ayllus
Saño y Qollana, en la jurisdicción de la parroquia de San Jerónimo, estuvieron divididas
en dos partes por el “río y camino de Quispicanche”, 2 lo que evidentemente respondía a
la división dual de Hanan y Hurin Cusco.
De acuerdo a la tenencia de la tierra, los ayllus reales de Hanan Cusco en el sector del
Chinchaysuyo y Antisuyo estuvieron establecidos siguiendo este orden: los descendientes
de Huayna Cápac, a los que se llamaba el Ayllu Tomibamba, se asentaron en Colcampata,
Choquepata, Carmenca y Piccho; los de Tupa Inca Yupanqui conformaban Capac Ayllu y
estaban en Callispuquio, Parguaysso y Llaullipata; los de Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui, que
conformaban el Hatun Ayllu, vivían en Patallacta, Amarumarcahuasi y Tambomachay; los
de Viracocha Inca formaron Zuczo Ayllu o Cuzco Ayllu y estaban asentados en Callachaca
y Sucsumarca; y los de Yahuar Huácac integraban Aucaylli Ayllu en Guachullay y
1
Los
dos
sectores
de
Huanchac
comprendían todo el territorio del actual
distrito del mismo nombre.
2
El camino de Quispicanche
conocido como el camino real
el de la Villa Imperial de Potosí.
se le conoce como el camino
Collasuyu.
también fue
del Collao y
Actualmente
del Inca del
Donato Amado Gonzáles
Sistema de tenencia de tierras de ayllus
259
y panacas incas en el valle del Cusco, siglos XVI-XVII
Cusicallanca. Estas tierras estuvieron distribuidas entre las que posteriormente formaron
parte de las parroquias del Hospital de Naturales, Santa Ana de Carmenca, San Cristóbal
de Colcampata y parte de las tierras en la margen izquierda de las parroquias de San Blas
de Tococachi y San Sebastián de Colcabamba.
Las tierras de los descendientes de Inca Roca y el Ayllu Vicaquirao; de Capac Yupanqui
y el Ayllu Apomayta; de Lloque Yupanqui y el Ayllu Haguainin o Andamachay; de Sinchi
Roca y el Ayllu Raorao; y los de Manco Cápac y el Ayllu Chima se hallaban sobre la margen
izquierda del camino del Collasuyo, en la jurisdicción de la parroquia de San Jerónimo–el
actual distrito del mismo nombre–que las comprendía desde el río Pumamarca o Tenería
hasta Angostura. Por ejemplo, las tierras del ayllu Vicaquirao estaban en las inmediaciones
de Larapa; las de Andamachay o Haguainin en las tierras de Andamachay, cerca de Picol;
y las de los ayllus Raorao y Chima en lo que ahora se señala como Chimaraqay.
Las tierras de los de Hanan Cusco estaban repartidas sobre los sectores del Chinchaysuyo
y Antisuyo del valle del Cusco, los que se hallaban en la parte noreste, y a las que
delimitaban el camino del Contisuyo por el norte y el camino del Collasuyo por el sur.
Resulta interesante constatar dentro de este espacio la tenencia de tierras de los de
Hanan Cusco. De este modo, en la parte del Chinchaysuyu se hallaban las tierras de los
descendientes de los Incas Huayna Cápac, Tupa Inca Yupanqui y Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui.
En cambio, en el Antisuyo se encontraban las de los descendientes de los Incas Viracocha
Inca, Yahuar Huácac, Inca Roca, Cápac Yupanqui, Lloque Yupanqui, Sinchi Roca y Manco
Cápac. En esta relación resulta interesante constatar la ausencia de la descendencia de
Mayta Cápac, es decir del ayllu Uscamayta. Por otro lado, es interesante resaltar que los
descendientes de estos Incas se identificaban con el término ayllu: Capac Ayllu, Hatun
Ayllu, Zuczo Ayllu, Aucaylli Ayllu, Vicaquirao Ayllu y así sucesivamente.
Por otro lado, según la tenencia de la tierra, las de los grupos de Hurin Cusco estaban en
el sector del Collasuyo y Contisuyo, es decir en la margen derecha del valle del Cusco.
Lo más interesante es que los descendientes de los Incas gobernantes de Hurin Cusco
se identificaron con los términos ayllu y panaca, dándonos así a entender que los hurin
estaban identificados con estas últimas, es decir con la descendencia femenina. Sus
tierras se extendían del sur hacia el oeste, en la siguiente forma y orden: los miembros
de Iñacapanaca, que eran los descendientes de Mama Anahuarqui–la esposa de Pachacuti
Inca Yupanqui–tenían tierras en las inmediaciones de Cayra y Saylla. Esta última aún es
260
reconocida como perteneciente al ayllu Anahuarque. Zuczo Panaca Ayllu tenía las tierras de
Cayra y Oscollobamba conjuntamente con la Panaca Aucaylli. Los miembros de Vicaquirao
Panaca y Apomayta Panaca tenían las tierras de Vilcarpay, Molleray y Quesallay. Junto a
estas tierras se encontraban las de Raurau y Chima Panaca. En el sector de Cayaocachi 3
estaban las tierras de las panacas Uscamayta y Hauainin. La posesión femenina era
muy importante en Hurin Cusco, junto a lo cual es importante destacar que las colcas
estaban distribuidas en esta parcialidad, como por ejemplo las de Patacasallacta, Araway,
Muyourco, Taucaray y Silkinchani, y así sucesivamente.
Por las razones ya explicadas, los términos “ayllus y panacas” de los once gobernantes
incas no caben ambos bajo la denominación de panaca, puesto que los de Hanan
Cusco se identificaban como ayllus o ayllus regios, mientras que los de Hurin Cusco se
presentan como panaca o panaca ayllu. Esto quiere decir que ayllu y panaca no pueden
ser sinónimos, pues el primero se identificaba con los de Hanan Cusco, es decir con lo
masculino, mientras que la panaca se identificaba con los de Hurin Cusco, es decir con
lo femenino, cuyo significado derivaba de pana o hermana de un hombre. Esta forma
de organización y distribución de los ayllus y panacas tiene los siguientes datos como
fundamento.
Martin de Murúa ([1584] 1964, Cap. 4, pp. 12-13) quiso hacer referencia paralela a los
gobernantes Incas y sus respectivas coyas o esposas, y señaló así que “quando se trata de
los señores yngas de este Reyno se mudan algunas cossas y sucesos de las Coyas Reynas,
sus mugeres, todavia por particularizar más y dar mayor claridad a esta historia he
querido hazer de cada Coya y Reyna su capítulo junto al de su marido, porque haziendo
después particular tratado dellas, causaria en los letores confusión.”
Por su parte, el Inca Garcilaso de la Vega ([1609] 1945, Tomo I, Cap. XVI, p. 24), hizo una
importante observación al indicar que durante el gobierno de un Inca, los que estaban
unidos por vínculos de parentesco por la línea masculina poblaban el sector de Hanan
Cusco, y que por ello se le llamaba alto. En cambio el vínculo familiar establecido por la
coya, la esposa del Inca, radicaba en el sector de Hurin Cusco, por lo que lo llamaron bajo.
Según esto, los hijos varones del Inca gobernante formaban parte de Hanan Cusco y las
hijas, cuya cabeza era la coya, de Hurin Cusco. Esto queda corroborado con las siguientes
referencias históricas: el 28 de noviembre de 1566, Santiago Chuquicati (Archivo General
de la Nación 1594, ff. 127-130) declaró que descendientes del general Titininrin de
3
Cayaucache comprendía lo que es hoy
Coripata, que formaba parte de la antigua
parroquia de Belén.
Donato Amado Gonzáles
Sistema de tenencia de tierras de ayllus
y panacas incas en el valle del Cusco, siglos XVI-XVII
261
Inca Yupanqui estaban poblados en Savanmarca, un arrabal de la ciudad del Cusco, y
señaló expresamente que los hombres estaban en posesión de doce chozas o bohíos
junto con sus corrales y árboles, mientras que unas indias viejas y viudas tenían ocho.
Posteriormente estos indígenas se identificaron como los ayllus Hanansaya y Hurinsaya.
Otro documento data de 1584, (Archivo Regional de Cusco 1584-1585) de cuando las
hijas de don Cristóbal Paullu Inca, hijo de Huayna Cápac, interpusieron una demanda
judicial contra don Alonso Topa Atau y sus demás hermanos varones porque las chacras
de coca en el valle de Tono, en los Andes de Paucartambo, estaban siendo usurpadas por
dichos hermanos. Esto quiere decir que se repartieron cocales tanto para los varones
como las mujeres por separado. Otro caso interesante data de 1584, cuando los hatun
runas de los cuatro suyus presentaron una relación de los descendientes de Pachacuti
Inca Yupanqui en la cual la mayoría eran varones, mientras que las hijas conformaban a
Iñacapanaca; curiosamente, las tierras de esta última no estaban junto al Hatun Ayllu sino
en el extremo sureste del valle del Cusco. Toda esta información sugiere que los hijos
varones del Inca gobernante formaban Hanan Cusco, cuyas tierras se extendían sobre las
partes Chinchaysuyo y Antisuyo, mientras que las hijas junto con la Coya conformaban la
panaca y eran de Hurin Cusco, por lo que ocupaban el sector de Collasuyo y Contisuyo.
Para refrendar todo esto podemos señalar que la madre del Inca Garcilaso de la Vega tenía
tierras junto a las de Iñacapanaca, las cuales vendió a Pedro Alonso Carrasco. Las tierras
de Mamatunya aparecen consignadas en los títulos de la comunidad de Conchacalla, de la
parroquia de San Jerónimo. Por otro lado, Murúa refiere que Mamayunto Caya, mujer de
Viracocha Inca, tenía jardines y huertas en el asiento de Managuañunca–lo que significa
‘no morirá’–con un bosque donde había infinidad de animales. Estas tierras, que pasaron
luego a la orden de Nuestra Señora de la Merced, se encontraban junto a las tierras de
Choco Cachona.
Los ayllus no regios del valle del Cusco
Al igual que los ayllus regios, los que no lo eran estaban también organizados en dos
parcialidades, Hanan Cusco y Hurin Cusco; los primeros se hallaban distribuidos sobre la
margen izquierda del valle y los segundos a la derecha. La característica fundamental de
estos ayllus era su vinculación con el origen mítico de los incas (Chauin Cuzco, Arayraca,
262
Sutic Toco y Maras) y estuvieron ubicados en la parte de Hurin Cusco. En cambio los
ayllus de confianza como Guacaytaqui, Saño y Tarpuntay formaban parte de los ayllus
reales de los incas y estuvieron en el lado de Hanan Cusco. Así por ejemplo, Guacaytaqui
tenía el privilegio de considerarse yanaconas de los incas. Esta posesión les permitió, en
pleno periodo colonial temprano, realizar gestiones para que se les eximiera del pago
del tributo y reclamar privilegios que sólo tenían los ayllus de la realeza. Hay, por otro
lado, ayllus que no figuran en la lista de Sarmiento de Gamboa ([1572] 1965, pp. 19-20)
pero que sí tenían un lugar preferencial y notorio en la responsabilidad de mantener y
cuidar de los ceques, como por ejemplo los ayllus y parcialidades de Yacanora, Ayarmaca
y Cari, que se encontraban en las tres últimas series de ceques del Antisuyu. En este
punto es importante aclarar que el ayllu Yacanora, que no formaba parte de la nobleza
real, tenía la posición collana, Ayarmaca la de payan y Cari la de cayao. El caso de Choco
es muy especial pues no sólo se le consideraba como dadores de esposas a los incas,
sino que además fueron también nombrados e identificados como descendientes de Apo
Anaguarqui, “señor que fue destos reynos”. En San Jerónimo, don Cristóbal Cusi Rimache
Ynga, descendiente de Apo Cauiri Ynga, fue considerado como “Señor Gobernante destos
Reynos”. Todo esto explica el sistema de alianzas políticas, puesto que los gobernantes
de estas etnias se consideraban “señores de estos reynos”, aun cuando esta denominación
estaba reservada para los gobernantes incas procedentes de ayllus y panacas reales.
La tenencia de la tierra de los ayllus no regios en el valle del Cusco
Tomando en cuenta la información de Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa ([1572] 1965) y
Cristóbal de Molina ([1575] 1989), quienes nos presentan una lista de los ayllus no reales
con su ubicación, lo cual se corroboró con la tenencia de la tierra en los sectores de
Chinchaysuyo y Antisuyo, se ve que en la parte de Hanan Cusco la tenencia seguía el
siguiente orden: ayllu Arayraca, Saño, Tarpuntay, Maras, Uro Acamana y Collana Chauin
Cuzco. Hubo una excepción: el ayllu Guacaytaqui, al cual el sistema de ceques colocaba
en el Chinchaysuyo, no tenía tierras pero sí el privilegio de considerarse yanaconas de los
incas. Esta posesión les permitió, en pleno periodo colonial temprano, realizar gestiones
para eximirse del pago de tributo y reclamar privilegios que únicamente tenían los ayllus
regios y las panacas. En Hurin Cusco encontramos que la distribución de los ayllus y la
posesión de la tierra seguía el siguiente orden: Arayraca, Saño, Tarpuntay, Uro Acamana,
Donato Amado Gonzáles
Sistema de tenencia de tierras de ayllus
263
y panacas incas en el valle del Cusco, siglos XVI-XVII
Masca, Cuycusa, Maras y Sutic. Estos cuatro último ayllus, que estaban en Cayaocachi y
a los que posteriormente se redujo en la parroquia de Belén, fueron denominados Hurin
Cusco. En cambio las tierras de Arayraca, Saño y Tarpuntay, en la parte sur, estaban
divididas por el camino del Collasuyo.
Por otro lado, los ayllus no reales tenían la responsabilidad de mantener y cuidar a
los ceques, como los ayllus y parcialidades de Yacanora (collana), Ayarmaca (payan) y
Cari (cayao), ubicados en las tres últimas series de los ceques del Antisuyu. Estos tres
ayllus aparecen ocupando tierras en un espacio concreto, vinculado a los ayllus Zuczo
y Aucaylle. Son muy especiales los casos de los ayllus Choco, Cachona y Cañari, que no
aparecen en las listas de Sarmiento de Gamboa y Cristóbal de Molina, ni tampoco en el
sistema de ceques. Los choco no sólo se consideraban otorgadores de esposas a los incas,
sino que además fueron también nombrados e identificados como yngas descendientes
de Apo Anaguarqui, “señor que fue destos reynos”, y les encontramos poseyendo tierras
al lado de las panacas Chima y Raurau. Los cachonas, que también aparecen identificados
como el ayllu Hurin Cusco, poseían tierras junto a los choco, por lo que aparecen como
un solo ayllu llamado Choco y Cachona. En cambio el ayllu Cañari se encontraba en el
sector del Chinchaysuyu, en el asiento de Ayahuayco. Este espacio correspondía a los de
Hanan Cusco. Los “allinay” del ayllu Cañari señalaron que el dueño de estas tierras fue “un
capitán nombrado Titerinre”, a quien Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui se las había adjudicado,
lo que fue posteriormente confirmado por Tupa Inca Yupanqui y Huayna Cápac. Por otro
lado, según la declaración de Santiago Chuquicati cañari (1566 en Archivo General de la
Nación 1594), este ayllu vivía en Savanmarca, donde la organización de sus viviendas o
bohíos constaba de doce para los varones y ocho para las mujeres viejas y viudas, las que
conformaban hanansaya y hurinsaya cañari.
El vínculo entre los ayllus regios y los no regios
Esta relación explica el documento de transacción y concierto celebrado entre los ayllus
Zuczu y Yacanora, y revela un claro predominio del primero sobre el segundo:
no se pondrán las armas ynsignias en los dichos actos publicos ni pretenderan
sacar el dicho Estandarte Real de Santiago, porque no les toca ni pertenece
264
sino a los dichos yngas, sin acudir a las juntas con el dicho título, so pena de
ser quitados dichas armas y estandarte real y ser castigados por todo rigor
de derecho porque la ecepcion y libertad que gozan los dichos otorgantes
e yndios del ayllo Yacanora son por ser descendientes de Apo Saua Raura
Capitan General que fue del dicho Viracocha Ynga como hombre principal en
las guerras que tuvo y no descendientes del dicho Viracocha Ynga (Archivo
Diosesano del Cusco [1655], ff. 982v.-983).
En 1655 el ayllu Yacanora obtuvo una provisión que le dispensaba del pago del tributo o
de acudir a la mita, y que le permitía además gozar de otros privilegios. Esto hizo que el
ayllu Zuczu interpusiera una demanda, señalando que sólo sus integrantes tenían el título
de Ynga, y que por consiguiente solamente ellos tenían derecho a llevar la mascapaicha
y el estandarte real en los actos públicos, dejando además en claro que a los yacanora
no les correspondía este privilegio porque eran descendientes de Apo Saua Raura, quien
fue uno de los capitanes generales de Viracocha Inca. Los yacanoras tuvieron que aceptar
esto y por ello renunciaron a su pretensión de recibir privilegios. Lo mismo sucedió
con el ayllu Ayarmaca, que también pretendía acceder a los privilegios del ayllu Zuczu.
Los ayarmacas eran recordados como descendientes de Tocay Capac e Intimanya Sinche
Chiguanguay, quienes también fueron generales de Viracocha Inca.
Conclusiones
De acuerdo al estudio del sistema de tenencia de tierras, el valle del Cusco, estaba
organizada en dos grupos de la nobleza incacica. La primera, era la clase más alta
conformado por los descendientes de los once gobernantes incas–desde Manco Capac
hasta el Inca Huayna Capac– quienes conformaban los ayllus y panacas, denominados
ayllus reales. El segundo grupo, estaba constituida, por aquellos que se reconocía como
parientes lejanos de los incas–como es el ayllu Choco–o que tenían vinculo a algún
antepasado mítico como es el caso de los ayllus Misca, Maras etc.; o los que destacaron
como jefes, capitanes u hombres principales durante el proceso de integración del
estado inca, como los Yacanoras o Ayarmacas. A ellos se les conocían como los ayllus no
reales. Ambos grupos, aparentemente entremezclados, compartían los derechos a tierras
distribuidos en diferentes pisos altitudinales, es decir en la parte baja del valle a tierras de
Donato Amado Gonzáles
Sistema de tenencia de tierras de ayllus
265
y panacas incas en el valle del Cusco, siglos XVI-XVII
maíz y tierras de tubérculos en la parte alta (papas, ocas, años y lisas). Evidentemente las
mejores tierras, acondicionados con sistemas de terrazas, canales de riego, accesibilidad
a través de los caminos, eran las tierras de los ayllus y panacas de los descendientes de
los gobernantes incas.
Los ayllus y panacas reales y los ayllus no reales, estuvieron organizados de acuerdo a
los principios de la dualidad andina como son: Hanan Cusco y Hurin Cusco. De acuerdo
al sistema de ceques y huacas, el valle del Cusco estaba dividido en la siguiente forma: el
Chinchaysuyo y el Antisuyo, formaban parte del espacio territorial de los Hanan Cusco.
En cambio, el Collasuyu y el Cuntisuyo, constituían el territorio de los Hurin Cusco.
De tal forma, entre el ultimo ceque del Antisuyo y el primer ceque del Collasuyo, se
desplazaba el “Camino Antiguo de Huamantiana”, que era denominado el de Collasuyo,
por consiguiente esta vía, en la parte Sur del valle del Cusco delimitaba entre Hanan y
Hurin Cusco. Por otro lado, en la parte del oeste del valle, confluían en el Camino del
Cuntisuyo o Camino Real de Corca, el último ceque del Cuntisuyo y el primer ceque del
Chinchaysuyo, por ello, este camino en esta parte, dividía entre los Hanan y Hurin Cusco.
En este entender, la distribución de la tenencia de las tierras de los ayllus y panacas de la
descendencia de los gobernantes incas, lo hacían también siguiendo esta orden. En esta
manera, en la parte del Chinchaysuyo, estaban las tierras de los descendientes del Inca
Huayna Capac, de la descendencia del Tupac Inca Yupanqui, nombrados Capac Ayllu, y de
los descendientes de Pachacutic Inca Yupanqui, señalados como Hatun Ayllu. Siguiendo
este mismo orden y dirección, en la parte del Antisuyo, están las tierras del Ayllu Sucsu
de Viracocha Inca, Ayllu Aucailli de Yahuar Huacac, Ayllu Vicaquirao de Inca Roca, Ayllu
Apomayta de Capac Yupanqui, Ayllu Hahuainin de Lloque Yupanqui, Ayllu Raurau de
Cinchi Roca y del Ayllu Chima de Manco Capac. En toda esta parte, la tenencia de tierras
es predominantemente masculino y está vinculado a la denominación ayllu como: Ayllu
Tomibamba, Capac Ayllo y Hatun Ayllo etc. En cambio en la parte Sur-Oeste del valle,
se ubican el Collasuyo y el Cuntisuyo y representan a los Hurin Cusco. La distribución
de las tierras va en orden invertido de los Hanan, de Sur a Oeste, en esta forma: tierras
de Iñacapanca de la descendencia de Anahuarque, esposa de Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui,
tierras de Aucaylle Panaca, tierras de Sucsu Panaca, tierras de Vicaquirao Panaca, tierras de
Apomayta Panaca, tierras de Raurau Panaca, tierras de Chima Panaca, tierras de Hahuainin
Panaca y tierras de Uscamayta Panaca. En este espacio hay un predominio de las tierras
de las panacas o hermanas de los Incas. Es en esta misma orden es la distribución y
tenencia de tierras para los ayllus no reales, con algunas excepciones en que los ayllus,
266
Cari, Yacanora y Ayarmaca forman parte de Hanan Cusco. En cambio, los ayllus Choco
y Cachona pertenecen de los Hurin Cusco, como se podrá observar en el gráfico de la
tenencia de tierra de los ayllus no regios del valle del Cusco.
La relación entre los ayllus y panacas de los descendientes incas y los ayllus no reales,
eran claramente establecidos. En el primer caso, se señalaban como descendientes
directos por sangre del inca gobernante. En cambio en el segundo caso, descendían de
algún general de un inca gobernante como es el caso del General Apo Sauaraura quien era
uno de los generales de Viracocha Inca, cuya descendencia era llamado Ayllo Yacanora.
Asimismo, la descendencia de Tocay Capac, fueron denominado Ayllo Ayarmaca. Otro
caso importante, es el Ayllo Choco, aun siendo otorgadores de mujeres del inca, por la
procedencia de Anahuarque, también fueron considerados dentro de los ayllus no reales.
Finalmente, quizás a partir de esta relación, también se puede explicar la jerarquía social
que en el sistema de ceques es señalado como: Collana, Payan y Cayao. En la distribución
de los ceques del Antisuyo, el primer ceque es nombrado Collana y corresponde al Ayllu
Sucso, que vendría ser de la descendencia de Viracocha Inca, en cambio, el segundo ceque
es llamado Payan que habrían formado parte del parentesco más cercano, en cambio
el tercero que era Cayao, eran parientes más lejanos. Es interesante constatar, que en
las inmediaciones de las tierras del Ayllu Sucsus, están distribuidas las tierras del Ayllu
Yacanora, Ayarmaca y Cari. Estos tres últimos, en la distribución de los ceques, ocupan
el sétimo, octavo y el noveno ceque del Antisuyo, como dando entender el parentesco.
Donato Amado Gonzáles
Sistema de tenencia de tierras de ayllus
267
y panacas incas en el valle del Cusco, siglos XVI-XVII
O b ra s c i t a d o s
Do c u men t o s n o p u b l i c a d o s
Amado Gonzales, Donato (2013), Las tierras de los
ayllus no reales del valle del Cusco, siglos XVI-XVII,
ponencia presentado en el seminario del Programa
de Estudios Andinos, Písac, Perú, 1-6 de julio, Centro
Académico de la Pontificia Universidad Católica del
Perú.
Archivo Diocesano del Cusco (1655), Martin López de
Paredes. Prot. 140. 1655. F. 981. Transacción y concierto entre los Yngas del ayllo Sucso con los indios de
Yacanoras. En Cuzco 16 de enero de 1655.
Archivo General de la Nación (1594), Fondo Campesinado. Títulos de Propiedad. Leg. 34. C. 660. f. 170.
Títulos de tierras de Picchu en Cusco. Títulos de las
tierras y punas denominados Piccho en término y
jurisdicción de la ciudad del Cuzco que doña Teresa
de Vergas viuda del Capitán Tomas Vázquez vecino
dono por escritura de inter vivos en 14 de agosto de
1579 al colegio de la compañía de Jesús.
Archivo Regional del Cusco (1584), Libro Número
1, de la Genealogía de Don Diego Felipe Betancur
Tupa Amaro, con 854 folios. Registro Número, 21.
Declaración que hicieron, en 16 de enero de 1584 Don
García Tuiro Tupa Gualpa y otros consortes ante los
Señores Damián de la Bandera y García de Melo jueces comisarios.
Archivo Regional del Cusco (1584-1585), Quesada de
Luis Prot. 10. F. 55. Doña María Coca Guaco y Doña
María Cora Ocllo y Doña Catalina Choqui Cica y Doña
Isabel Coca Guaco hijas de Don Paulo Ynga difunto
por nos y en nombre de los de más mis hermanas a
quienes están hecha merced de la coca de las chacras de Tono y Paucarbamba, otorgan poder a Francisco Ulecela cañar para que por nosotras y en nombre
de las dichas nuestras hermanas pueda ir a la dicha
provincia de los Andes y beneficie y coxa dichas
chacaras de coca.
O b ra s pu bl ic a da s
Amado Gonzáles, Donato (2007), Sistema vial qollasuyu. Avances de investigación, Cusco: Instituto
Nacional de Cultura, Dirección Regional de Cultura
Cusco.
Garcilaso de la Vega, Inca ([1609] 1945), Comentarios
reales de los Incas, Buenos Aires: Emecé Editores.
Molina (El Cusqueño), Cristóbal de ([1575] 1989), Relación de las fábulas y ritos de los incas, en: Henrique
Urbano y Pierre Duviols (eds.), Fábulas y mitos de los
incas, Madrid: Historia 16, pp. 47-134.
Murúa, Fray Martin de ([1584] 1964), Historia General
del Perú. Introducción y edición de Manuel Ballesteros Gaibrois. Crónicas de América. Madrid.
Rowe, John H. (2003), La constitución inca del Cuzco, en: Los incas del Cuzco. Siglos XVI-XVII-XVIII, Cusco: Instituto Nacional de Cultura.
Sarmiento de Gamboa, Pedro ([1572] 1965), Historia
de los Incas. Segunda parte de la historia general llamada indica, Biblioteca de autores españoles, tomo
135, Madrid: Ediciones Atlas, pp. 193-279.
Zuidema, R. Tom (2010), El calendario inca. Tiempo y
espacio en la organización ritual del Cuzco, La idea
del pasado, Lima: Fondo Editorial del Congreso del
Perú y Fondo Editorial de la Pontificia Universidad
Católica del Perú.
268
K E R S T I N N O WA C K
W H AT W O U L D H AV E H A P P E N E D
A F T E R T H E I N C A C I V I L WA R ?
Kerstin Nowack
What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
269
What happened at the end of the Inca civil war between the two half-brothers Atagualpa
and Guascar is well known. Guascar’s troops were defeated, and the victorious Atagualpa was captured by the Spaniards who unexpectedly arrived on the scene. Because of
Atagualpa’s victory, many of Guascar’s adherents, both among the Inca elite and the
subject peoples of the empire, supported the Spanish invaders, which greatly facilitated
their conquest of the Inca realm (Hemming 1993).
But what would have happened to the Inca empire if the Spaniards had not arrived?
An answer to this question depends on the way the Inca empire and its political integration are viewed, and also what the observer judges the Inca civil war to be. Was it
a succession crisis as habitually occurred in the Inca empire, or a conflict disclosing
fundamental rifts in the structure of that empire? Would the winner, Atagualpa, have
been able to consolidate the empire, or would the internal contradictions and structural problems the civil war had laid open have resulted in its decline? In other words,
would there have been a consolidated empire that might have even survived an encounter with the Spaniards, if that had taken place twenty or fifty years later, or would
there have been a decline or disintegration of the empire which was a singular, shortterm, unsustainable political formation in the Andes?
An Improvised Empire
1
Rostworowski and Morris (1999), pp.
799-807. On Inca expansion, see Covey
(2006), pp. 184-203; Pärssinen (1992), pp.
85-140; Rowe (1946). Julien (2000) compares
the narrative accounts of the expansion.
2
D‘Altroy (1987), p. 3; Julien (1993), pp.
226, 227; Pärssinen (1992), pp. 408-410.
On indirect versus direct rule, Kolata (2013),
pp. 15-21. See Osterhammel (2013), pp.
608-615 for a deinition of empires.
The Inca empire developed within a few generations from a local polity in southern
highland Peru into the greatest political entity that existed in the Americas before the
arrival of the Europeans (D’Altroy 2015; Pärssinen 1992; Rostworowski 1999; and, especially, Rostworowski and Morris 1999, p. 769). The Inca extended their rule over the
Andes mostly by military conquests and political pressure on their potential opponents,
so that often promises and privileges or threats alone were sufficient to gain their submission. 1 What the Inca created, is no longer seen as a monolithic, and completely hierarchically organized state, but an empire which flexibly integrated new polities into
its realm, mostly ruling indirectly over its subject people. 2 Inca rule was adapted to the
socio-political formations the Inca encountered among the ethnic groups that became
part of their empire. New rulers forged new relationships with the subject groups, and
even within the reign of a single ruler, relations could change when imperial politics
270
or local reactions to Inca rule required this. Ethnic groups and/or provinces differed in
their status, and this status changed with time. 3 During the last decades of the empire,
Inca rule might have become more formally bureaucratic, especially in the core areas
of the empire. However, mostly the Inca ruled through local elites, not through an empire-wide hierarchy of officials.
In conclusion, many scholars view the Inca empire as diverse, flexible, and continuously
changing. Being less monolithic and less thoroughly organized can also be described as
being less stable. The Inca empire was a conquest state still in a phase of expansion. It
lacked time to consolidate and develop greater stability, and the stability which existed
could be seen as the result of its expansionist policy. María Rostworowski argued that
the Inca needed expansion to gain access to resources which fulfilled the expectations
of Andean reciprocity that dispensed goods and privileges in exchange for the services
rendered to the rulers (Rostworowski 1999, pp. 221, 222; Rostworowski and Morris
1999, pp. 776-778). To acquire goods for reciprocity and gift-giving, the Inca rulers had
to initiate new conquests, but every new conquest created new obligations for those
groups and persons who served as soldiers and military leaders (Rostworowski 1999,
p. 222; Rostworowski and Morris 1999, pp. 843, 844). Geoffrey Conrad and Arthur A.
Demarest wrote that Inca expansion was fueled by the practice called split inheritance.
Inca rulers left their propertiesBpalaces, rural estates, provinces, and dependent peopleBto their descendants, who formed a group dedicated to the veneration of their ancestor’s mummy, while the successor of the deceased ruler only inherited the political
power of his father, and had to amass new properties to install the future cult of his own
mummy. This ultimately led to a territorial expansion exhausting the available resources and going beyond the Incas’ military and political capacities (Conrad and Demarest
[1984] 1999, pp. 113-131).
As these authors suggest, the practices which made Inca expansion possible also
forced the Inca into a vicious circle where a new conquest automatically created the
need for the following conquest. Campaigns lasted longer and became more costly,
the Inca were forced to advance into difficult and foreign territories like the eastern slopes of the Andes, the growth of the empire tested the limits of the means of
communication, the population became more diverse and difficult to control, and the
practice of acquiring land for rulers in already conquered areas, or the reclamation of
previously unused or little used land, intensified the extraction of resources from the
3
D‘Altroy (2015); Julien (1993), (1998),
pp. 72-93. Ethnic groups and provinces
often seem to be one and the same, but there
were also provinces encompassing several
ethnic groups. The terms are sometimes
used as synonyms, and it has to be asked to
what extent the deinition of provinces led
to a clearer demarcation of ethnic groups
(Wernke 2013, pp. 295, 296).
Kerstin Nowack
What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
271
provinces (ibid., pp. 126-131). Policies which originally helped the Inca to govern, like
the promotion of ethnic diversity and indirect rule through local elites, proved to be
a source of danger and conflicts (Rostworowski 1999, pp. 223-225). Measures taken to
solve problems like the creation of specialized producers (camayoc) to fulfil reciprocal
obligations, the resettlement of mitimaes across the empire to provide security and
create new economic resources, or the establishment of yana, dependent households
which directly served elite individuals or supernatural beings, increased the tribute
burden of the remaining households in their home provinces (Rostworowski 1999, pp.
223, 226; Rostworowski and Morris 1999, p. 843; Rowe 1982). In this view, the Inca
civil war was not a simple succession crisis as had occurred in various forms before
(Rostworowski 1960), but an event which laid bare the fault lines in the empire’s institutions and practices.
The event that brings into focus the apparent instability of the Inca empire is the rapid
Spanish conquest. Documentary sources show how representatives of the local elites
hurried to contact the Spaniards, informed themselves about their intentions and military
capacity, and often decided to support them. Much of the cooperation can be explained
by the outcome of the civil war, which made the Spaniards allies of the defeated faction
of Guascar, but support for the Inca in general faltered and the later resistance against
the Spanish during the war of Manco Inca was limited to the core areas of the empire in
southern Peru. 4 In the moment the Spaniards arrived, the Inca empire apparently dissolved before their eyes.
The Spaniards thus profited from arriving at the end of the civil war, as they themselves
were well aware (for example, Zárate [1555] 1995, bk. 1, ch. 11, p. 61), but was the civil
war really a forewarning of the eventual decline, or even breakdown of the empire?
To answer this question, it is helpful to look at the events before, during and after
this war.
4
Examples are the Guancas in central
highland Peru (Espinoza Soriano 1972),
groups in the Rimac valley (Espinoza Soriano
1983-84), and the Chachapoyas (Espinoza
Soriano 1967). For Manco Inca‘s lack of support, see Nowack (2007), pp. 179, 180 and
Oberem (1985). On Manco Inca‘s war in general, see Hemming (1993).
272
The Long Reign of Guayna Capac
Guayna Capac ruled from about 1490 to 1524 or 1525. No major cases of rebellion
are mentioned for this period. 5 The problems this ruler faced were related to his attempts at further expansion, for example in the Chachapoya area, among the Pacamoros
in south-eastern Ecuador, and among groups in coastal Ecuador, and finally, of course,
during his decade-long campaign in the northern highlands of Ecuador.
Both Pedro de Cieza de León and Juan de Betanzos write that Guayna Capac started his
reign with a long period of tranquility while he stayed in Cusco, probably because he was
regarded as too young to rule and real power lay in the hands of his mother Mama Ocllo. 6
After Guayna Capac was declared to be no longer a minor, he strengthened his ties to
the Inca nobility, built himself an estate in the Yucay Valley, and went hunting near Lake
Titicaca. He embarked on his first military campaign, against the Chachapoya, only after
his mother finally died. 7 Afterwards, Guayna Capac went on a visit of several years to
the southern parts of his empire, meeting with the ruling elites, gathering information,
and initiating projects like the Cochabamba Valley estate for maize growing. 8 The visit
perhaps also served to satisfy Guayna Capac that the Inca empire had no neighbors worth
conquering in the south. No information is given about a rebellion or unrest during this
period.
The following campaign to the north of Quito is then described as a reaction to a rebellion
by a group of allies led by the Carangues, but it is much more likely that the people living
there had rejected Inca demands for further incorporation into the empire, which the Inca
interpreted as rebellious behavior. 9 During the ten or more years while he campaigned in
the north, Guayna Capac ruled the Inca empire from his base at Tomebamba, or directly
from his camp. He left two governors in Cusco, and due to the length of communication
lines, they were probably responsible for the day-to-day running of the empire, especially
in the south. 10 Guayna Capac received the supplies and reinforcement he needed, and in
fact the only major resistance against the duration of the campaign came from his own
nobility during the so-called “mutiny of the orejones” at Tomebamba. 11 After the successful end of the war against the Carangues and their allies, Guayna Capac did not hurry to
return and resume control of the empire from his capital. Accounts vary, but he stayed
in Ecuador, and he or his commanders embarked on new campaigns into Pasto territory
and on the coast. 12
5
In
contrast,
Rostworowski
states,
“Perhaps Huayna Capac was the ruler who
put down the greatest number of rebellions”
(1999, p. 89). Niles (1999, p. 93) mentions
rebellions of the Chachapoyas, the island
Puná, and the Chiriguanos. The Chiriguanos
had never become part of the Inca realm, and
the accounts about the con ict describe it
as an attack by Chiriguano warriors on Inca
provinces, not as a rebellion by Inca subjects
(Cabello Balboa [1586] 1951, bk. 3, ch. 23,
pp. 383, 384; Murua [1616] 1987, bk. 1, ch.
36, p. 130; Sarmiento [1572] 1906, ch. 61,
pp. 109, 110). Cieza states that, generally,
provincial governors had the right and the
responsibility to deal with local revolts
(Cieza [1548-54] 1985, ch. 20, p. 80), and
Agustín de Zárate mentions a major uprising
among the Chimu which is not dated, nor,
apparently, described by other sources
(Zárate [1555] 1995, bk. 1, ch. 14, p. 59).
There may have been other incidents as well,
but we can only discuss what the sources tell
us. In my view, nothing indicates that Guayna
Capac‘s reign was especially unquiet. Cases
of local resistance against Inca rule described
in documentary sources recount attempts
to harm the Inca rulers by magic, not open
rebellions; see Espinoza Soriano (1967)
and Rostworowski (1998) for a similar case
targeting Tupac Inca.
Kerstin Nowack
6
Betanzos ([1551-57] 2004), bk. 1, ch. 39,
p. 211; bk. 1, ch. 40, pp. 213, 214; Cieza
([1548-1554] 1985), ch. 61, p. 177; Cobo
([1653] 1964), bk. 12, ch. 16, p. 88.
7
Betanzos describes this campaign
as a separate event meant to honor
Mama Ocllo ([1551] 2004), ch. 41-44,
pp. 215-224. See also Cabello Balboa
([1586] 1951), bk. 3, ch. 20, p. 358;
Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk. 1, ch. 30, pp.
107, 108; Sarmiento ([1572] 1906), ch. 58,
p. 104. Cieza makes the Chachapoya
campaign a part of Guayna Capac‘s war in
the north ([1548-54] 1985), ch. 63, pp. 183,
184.
What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
8
Detailed account by Cieza ([1548-54]
1985), ch. 62, pp. 178-181. According to
Betanzos, the trip took four years ([1551-57]
2004), bk. 1, ch. 44, pp. 225-227, ch. 46,
p. 228. See Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951),
bk. 3, ch. 21, pp. 362, 363; Murúa ([1616]
1987), bk. 1, ch. 30, pp. 108, 109; Sarmiento
([1572] 1906), ch. 59, pp. 104, 105. See
Wachtel 1982.
9
Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk. 3, ch.
21, p. 365; Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk. 1, ch.
30, p. 109; Oberem (1990), pp. 473, 474;
Sarmiento ([1572] 1906), ch. 59, 60, p. 105.
10
Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk. 3, ch.
21, pp. 363, 364; Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk.
1, ch. 31, pp. 111, 112; Sarmiento ([1572]
1906), ch. 60, p. 105.
11
Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk. 3,
ch. 22, pp. 373-76; Murúa ([1616] 1987),
bk. 1, ch. 34, p. 122-125; Niles (1999),
p. 103; Rostworowski (1999), p. 85;
Sarmiento ([1572] 1906), ch. 60, p. 107.
12
Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk. 3,
ch. 23, pp. 384-386, ch. 24, p. 393; Cieza
([1548-54] 1985), ch. 67, pp 192, 193;
Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk.1, ch. 37, pp.
131-134; Pachacuti Yamqui ([1613] 1993),
f. 35v., 36r.; Sarmiento ([1572] 1906), ch. 62,
pp. 110, 111.
273
274
The Succession of Guayna Capac
13
The events following Guayna Capac’s death in Ecuador indicate as well that the empire’s subjects remained peaceful. The ruler had no son from his marriage with his sister-wife. 13 He also refused to nominate a successor among his sons by secondary wives
until it was too late (Betanzos [1551-57] 2004, bk. 1, ch. 46, pp. 228, 229). Still, the
transition to his son Guascar at first was astonishingly smooth, greatly aided by the fact
that the son’s mother, Ragua Ocllo, had been the favorite wife of Guayna Capac and accompanied him on his campaign. She informed Guascar, who had stayed at Cusco, that
he should install himself as the new ruler. 14 Guascar was aware that one of his brothers
could contest his rule, and he was especially distrustful of Atagualpa, the brother who
had been on the side of their father during the Ecuadorian wars. While most family
members traveled back to Cusco with the mummified body of Guayna Capac, Atagualpa
stayed in the north. 15
Betanzos ([1551-57] 2004), p. 241. The
principal wife or coya had been called Cusi
Rimay (Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk. 3,
ch. 20, p. 360; Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk. 1,
ch. 29, p. 107; Pachacuti Yamqui ([1613]
1993), f. 31r, v.; Sarmiento ([1572] 1906),
ch. 60, pp. 105. On the introduction and
purposes of Inca sister marriage see, Julien
(2000), pp. 259-261.
14
Betanzos ([1551-57] 2004), bk. 1, ch. 47,
p. 235, bk. 2, ch. 1, p. 243. See also Cabello
Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk. 3, ch. 25, p. 398;
Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk. 1, ch. 39, pp. 141,
142, ch. 40, pp. 142-145; Pizarro ([1571]
1978), ch. 10, pp. 50, 51; Sarmiento ([1572]
1906), ch. 62, p. 111, ch. 63, pp. 112, 113.
15
It can be doubted that the situation would have been less problematic if Guayna Capac
had had an undisputed heir with his principal wife. He himself had been the heir designated by his grandfather Pachacuti, 16 and still there had been two serious attempts at
the beginning of his reign to supplant him as the ruler of his empire. 17 In comparison,
the assumption of power by Guascar was hardly more contentious, even if he regarded
it as necessary to eliminate some of his brothers, and ordered the killing of high-ranking
relatives as a punishment for leaving Atagualpa in Quito. 18 There is no information about
unrest or revolts in the Inca empire. In fact, the empire gave the impression of an overall
tranquility, as Cieza noted (Cieza [1548-54] 1985, ch. 69, p. 196).
Cieza writes that the military leaders of
Guayna Capac had not wanted to come to
Cusco and lose what they had acquired (in
properties and positions?) in Quito ([154854] 1985), ch. 70, p. 198. Cobo interprets
the situation in a similar manner ([1653]
1964), bk. 12, ch. 18, p. 95.
Guayna Capac was the son of the irst
ruler who married his half-sister (Betanzos
([1551-57] 2004), bk. 1, ch. 26, p. 167, ch. 27,
pp. 168-170; Julien (2000), pp. 29, 30, 259261.
16
17
Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk. 3,
ch. 20, pp. 357, 358; Murúa ([1616] 1987),
bk. 1, ch. 26, p. 99, bk. 1, ch. 28, pp. 101,
102, bk. 1, ch. 29, pp. 103-106; Pachacuti
Yamqui ([1613] 1993), f. 30r.-31r.; Sarmiento
([1572] 1906), ch. 54, p. 102, ch. 55, p. 103.
A discussion of these events is found in Niles
(1999), pp. 88-92 and Zíólkowski (1996),
pp. 301-322.
18
Betanzos ([1551-57] 2004), bk. 2, ch. 1,
pp. 243, 244, bk. 2, ch. 2, p. 247, bk. 2, ch.
3, p. 249; Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk. 1, ch. 39,
p. 141, bk. 1, ch. 40, pp. 142-145.
Kerstin Nowack
What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
275
The Civil War
19
This might partly be due to the
geography of the empire. As long as the
provinces in the center and north of Peru
stayed loyal to Guascar, it was diicult
for anybody south of Ecuador to come
into contact with Atagualpa. The apparent
exception is Chincha, a valley on the south
coast of Peru, whose ruler supposedly was in
Cajamarca at the side of Atagualpa (Pizarro
[1571] 1978, ch. 9, pp. 37-39). He may
have declared his support after Atagualpa‘s
victory became foreseeable, when Guascar‘s
troops had already been forced farther to the
south, and he could travel to Atagualpa.
20
For Cañari involvement in the initial
stages of the civil war see, for example,
Betanzos ([1551-57] 2004), bk. 2, ch. 4, pp.
251, 252; Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk.
3, ch. 26, p. 407, ch. 27, pp. 421, 423, ch.
28, p. 432; Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk. 1, ch.
46, pp. 163, 165, 166; Pachacuti Yamqui
([1613] 1993), f. 37r.
21
For example, the Spaniards found wellsupplied storehouse at Cajas, Cajamarca,
and Jauja (Cieza [1548-54] 1985, ch. 12,
pp. 59, 60; Espinoza Soriano 1972; Xerez
[1535] 1988, pp. 86-88, 116). There are
cases where building projects had been
interrupted, but this could also have been
the result of the subsequent invasion of the
Spanish, and not due to the civil war (Morris
and Thompson 1985, p. 56; Ogburn 2004;
Protzen 2005).
22
Nowack (2011). The sources do not
agree who were the targets of these military
eforts, and Atagualpa‘s expeditions are partly
described as attempts to quell rebellions,
again probably an Inca interpretation of the
events, because the areas like the Pasto
territory on the Colombian border, or the
Quijo territory east of Quito, had not been
under their control previously.
During the civil war, most of the Inca empire apparently remained quiet. Guascar routinely recruited troops in the central and southern parts of the empire, and the local
rulers acceded to his demands. There are no reports that any ethnic groups used the
opportunity to rebel, or, alternatively, to side with Atagualpa. 19 The only evidence for
independent political activities comes from southern Ecuador and the nearby coastal
areas. The Cañaris, according to some accounts, incited Guascar and Atagualpa against
each other, perhaps with the greater aim of freeing themselves from their Inca overlords
in the resulting conflict. Ultimately, they choose Guascar’s side, and were severely punished for this miscalculation. 20 The second report of local unrest concerns the island of
Puná and the town of Tumbes. As the Spanish observed, the island’s inhabitants and the
population of Tumbes had waged war against each other, either acting as substitutes of
the parties of the civil war, or independently, using the opportunity of the war to rekindle old enmities (Pizarro [1571] 1978, ch. 5, p. 17, ch. 6, p. 22; Xerez [1534] 1988, p, 76).
On the whole, most of the ethnic groups in the Inca empire stayed quiet and yielded to
the demands of the warring parties. The Inca empire during the civil war displayed no
evidence of dissolution, and the Inca administrative apparatus continued to function. 21
Even more astonishing, at the beginning of the war, Atagualpa and Guascar engaged in
what I have called “secondary wars”. Guascar sent troops against the Chachapoyas when
the conflict with Atagualpa became foreseeable, and after the first battles, Guanca Auqui,
Guascar’s commander, found time to attack the Pacamoros (Bracamoros) located on the
slopes of the Andes in southeast Ecuador, while Atagualpa personally directed (or sent
military leaders on) various campaigns on the western and eastern flanks of the Ecuadorian Andes. 22
276
After the War
Atagualpa’s party executed a terrible revenge against everybody who had sided with
Guascar: ethnic groups and their leaders, members of the Inca nobility, and supernatural
beings. 23 The first group to be punished were the Cañaris in southern Ecuador. Several of
their leaders were killed and, at least according to Betanzos, symbolically eaten by Quillacinga warriors from the eastern lowlands (Nowack 2013a). Many other Cañaris either
died, or were forced to leave their homeland and resettle elsewhere. After the last battle,
captured soldiers from the Cañari groups were executed as a punishment for their support of Guascar. The same happened to the Chachapoyas caught during the final defeat. 24
A third group singled out for special acts of revenge were the Guancas from the central
Peruvian highlands, mostly because the mother of Guascar’s commander, Guanca Auqui,
was a member of this ethnic group. 25
Human beings were not the only targets of Atagualpa’s wrath. The powerful huaca of
Catequil in Guamachuco had admonished him for the excessive brutality with which he
treated his enemies. As a result, Atagualpa personally visited the sanctuary, killed the
priest and spokesperson of the Catequil, and ordered the huaca to be destroyed. 26 An
even more important supernatural was Pachacamac, the creator deity and lord of earthquakes from the central coast of Peru. He had enraged Atagualpa with predictions about
Guayna Capac’s death and Guascar’s success, and when Atagualpa became a prisoner of
the Spanish, he sent them to plunder Pachacamac’s temple for his ransom (Pizarro [1571]
1973, ch. 11, pp. 57, 58).
Turning to the Inca themselves, direct victims of Atagualpa’s revenge were Guascar’s secondary wives and their children. They were killed after his troops occupied Cusco. Guascar’s mother and his principal wife, as well as his supreme military leader, Guanca Auqui,
were caught and kept as prisoners. Whatever were the plans for them, they later died
together with Guascar. Other noble supporters were allowed to live and were punished by
blows on the back, while the whole nobility of Cusco was forced to render allegiance to
Atagualpa (represented by a statue). 27 A special treatment was reserved for the descent
group (panaca) of Tupac Inca. Its members had supported Guascar, 28 and the adults were
killed and the mummy of Tupac Inca, an important holy object and the visible legitimation of the panaca’s status, was burned in revenge. 29
23
Had he won the war, Guascar would have
hardly behaved with greater restraint. When
Guascar‘s military leaders were momentarily
victorious and caught Chalcochima‘s and
Quizquiz‘s families, they ordered them to
be killed (Betanzos [1551-57] 2004, bk. 2,
ch.13, pp. 276, 277).
24
Betanzos ([1551-57] 2004), bk. 2, ch. 4,
p. 253, bk. 2, ch. 5, pp. 255, 256, bk. 2, ch.
7, p. 263, bk. 2, ch. 9, pp. 267-269; Cabello
Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk. 3, ch. 28, pp. 432,
435, bk. 3, ch. 31, p. 462; Cieza ([1548-54]
1985), ch. 72, p. 201, ch. 73, p. 204; Murúa
([1616] 1987), bk. 1, ch. 48, p. 171, bk. 1, ch.
50, p. 177, bk. 1, ch. 56, p. 200; Pachacuti
Yamqui ([1613] 1993), f. 38r. It is not quite
clear why the Chachapoyas deserved this
special treatment, because other soldiers
ighting for Guascar were apparently allowed
to return to their homes unmolested.
Kerstin Nowack
What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
25
His name suggests this descent,
apparently from a secondary wife of Guayna
Capac. It was an Inca custom to name a
person after his or her birthplace or the
ethnic origin of the mother, see Garcilaso
([1609] 1995, bk. 1, ch. 26, p. 63), and
Pachacuti Yamqui conirms this by saying
that Guanca Auqui was feasted by the
Guancas, his uncles ([1613] 1993, f. 38v). For
Atagualpa‘s revenge, see Betanzos ([155157] 2004, bk. 2, ch. 8, p. 264; Cieza [154854] 1986, ch. 46, p. 161; Murúa [1616] 1987,
bk. 1, ch. 63, p. 118; Pizarro [1571] 1978,
ch. 11, p. 58). The Guancas were strategically
located on the main route between the Inca
heartland and the northern regions of the
empire, but their support of Guascar is not
more exceptional than that of other major
groups in the central-southern highlands,
for example the Yauyos, Soras, Lucanas
etc. (Cieza [1548-54] 1986, ch. 39, p. 141;
Murúa [1616] 1987, bk. 1, ch. 52, p. 184;
Pachacuti Yamqui [1613] 1993, f. 38v) The
punishment reserved for the Guancas seems
to have been a consequence of Guanca
Auqui‘s involvement. It should be noted
that Atagualpa also punished the Paltas in
southern Ecuador who did not actively ight
him, but apparently refused to cooperate
(Betanzos [1551-57] 2004, bk. 2, ch. 9, pp.
268, 269), and subdued a rebellion in the
valley of Saña on the coast (Betanzos [155157] 2004, bk. 2, ch. 10, p. 270).
28
26
Betanzos ([1551-57] 2004), bk. 2, ch.
16, pp. 286, 287. See also Sarmiento ([1562]
1906), ch. 64, pp. 116, 117. A local source
conirms this information, see Castro de
Trelles (ed.) ([1560-61] 1992), p. 20.
27
Betanzos ([1551-57] 2004), bk. 2, ch.
16, p. 288, bk. 2, ch. 18, pp. 294, 295, bk. 2,
ch. 19, pp. 296-298; Cabello Balboa ([1586]
1951), bk. 3, ch. 31, pp. 459-463; Murúa
([1616] 1987), bk. 1, ch. 54, pp. 193, 194,
bk. 1, ch. 55, pp. 194-196, bk. 1, ch. 57,
pp. 200-203; Sarmiento ([1572] 1906), ch.
64, pp. 120, 121, ch. 66, pp. 122-123. The
killings are noted by other sources as well,
but mostly with few details, see, for example,
Pizarro ([1571] 1978), ch. 11, p. 59.
This is mostly an assumption, because
sources call Ragua Ocllo, Guascar‘s mother,
a sister of Guayna Capac, which makes her
a member of Tupac Inca‘s panaca (see for
example Murúa [1616] 1987, bk. 1, ch.
31, p. 112, bk. 1, ch. 44, pp. 151-155).
The exception is Betanzos. According to
him, Ragua Ocllo‘s principal descent was
from Hurin Cusco. He is also very clear that
Atagualpa‘s mother came from Pachacuti‘s
panaca ([1551-57] 2004, bk. 1, ch. 46, p. 229).
29
Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk. 3, ch.
31, p. 464; Sarmiento ([1572] 1906), ch. 66,
p. 123; Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk. 1, ch. 57,
pp. 202, 203. As Ziólkowski (1996, p. 351)
notes, the burning of the mummy was like
the destruction of the founding document
of this panaca. The incineration only makes
sense when it is seen as a punishment for
political choices of Tupac Inca‘s descendants.
277
278
What Would Have Happened?
These and other elaborate public acts of punishment served as a warning and prognosis of the fate of those individuals and groups who had challenged the winner’s power.
Consequently, one of the principal tasks of Atagualpa would have been to rebuild his relations with the Inca and provincial elites who had opposed him. Both the ethnic groups
and Inca nobles belonging to Guascar’s party needed prospects for personal and political
survival. If they had to fear continuously for their lives and positions, they were more
likely to resist Atagualpa’s rule, would have needed more supervision, and thereby would
have produced additional costs for the Inca empire. 30 If ethnic groups like the Cañaris
and Guancas lost too many of their adult members due to killings or resettlement, they
would not be able to supply the Inca state with labor services. Human beings were a valuable resource, and the Inca usually avoided excesses of killing and destruction during
their wars. It can be assumed that Atagualpa was not planning to continue his policy of
revenge. For example, his military leaders apparently allowed the ordinary soldiers from
Guascar’s army to return to their homelands unharmed. Especially the ethnic groups in
the Collasuyu quarter would not have expected to be severely punished, because they
had hardly any alternative other than to give in to Guascar’s demands for troops and
supplies.
Atagualpa did not only face enemies. During the period of rebuilding, he could rely on
the loyalty of his troops from central and northern Ecuador, as well as on the powerful
panaca of Pachacuti. However, all of them expected to be rewarded for their support.
Atagualpa had to be careful when he dealt with his military leaders, especially with
Chalcochima and Quizquiz. He had to find adequate ways to bind them permanently to
him, for example by honoring them with privileges like the right to be carried in a litter,
and he had to make sure that these leaders did not use their ties to the soldiers under
their command to overthrow Inca rule and become independent war lords. 31 Such a
danger was not completely unimaginable, and might be the reason why Atagualpa kept
significant military forces at his side, and why he gave the command of his advancing
forces to Chalcochima and Quizquiz. 32 The choice of two commanders may have had
tactical reasons – this command structure allowed them more complex maneuvers because forces could be divided between the leaders. However, it may also have been a
measure to prevent an accumulation of power in the hands of a single person.
30
My idea of costs goes back to an
argument developed by Tainter (1988), p. 93.
31
See Hemming (1993), p. 147 about
another commander‘s activities in Ecuador
during the Spanish conquest.
Murúa writes that Quizquiz was the
“general” and Chalcochima his “teniente”
(lieutenant) and “maese de campo” (ield
commander) ([1616] 1987), bk. 1, ch. 51, p.
181. Betanzos calls these two and others the
“capitanes” of Atagualpa ([1551-57] 2004),
bk. 2, ch. 4, p. 251, but lists Quizquiz irst.
Sarmiento does the same ([1572] 1906), ch.
63, p. 113. In most accounts, the two leaders
seem to have acted as near equals.
32
Kerstin Nowack
What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
279
According to Betanzos, a conflict broke out between Atagualpa and Chalcochima at the
end of the war when his commanders were involved in hard fighting with Guascar’s army
on their approach to Cusco. As Betanzos describes it, Chalcochima sent a messenger to
Atagualpa asking for new supplies of weapons. Atagualpa became very angry and would
have killed the messenger if he had not been a close relative of his. He felt that Chalcochima’s request undermined his authority (Betanzos [1551-57] 2004, bk. 2, ch. 10, p. 270;
Ziólkowski 1996, pp. 362-365). When the messenger tried to explain about the difficult
battles before, Atagualpa replied that the troops had been victorious and could have taken the arms of the defeated enemies. He then gave order that a principal lord with twenty
men should march south to apprehend Chalcochima. The lord dispatched did not hurry
to reach Chalcochima, and decided to wait at Xauxa for a new order or Atagualpa’s personal arrival (Betanzos [1551-57] 2004, bk. 2, ch. 10, p. 271). Nothing came of this episode,
and Atagualpa seems to have accepted that Chalcochima kept his command.
While rewarding his loyal supporters, Atagualpa also had to be careful not to lavish too
many honors and privileges on his northern followers, because he was increasing an
existing imbalance in the Inca empire. When his father had spent ten years on his campaigns in Ecuador, the power center of the empire had shifted to the north (D’Altroy 2015,
pp. 361). The Inca empire was conceptually and ritually oriented toward the person of the
ruler and the capital Cusco. 33 Both could create doubles of themselves, with governors
representing the ruler and cities serving as “other Cuscos” (Guaman Poma [ca. 1615] 1987,
f. 185 [187]; Hyslop 1990, pp. 303-306). Tomebamba apparently had become such an
“other Cusco”, but the symbolic value of these replacement places and persons depended
on the supreme significance of the originals. For ten years, the inhabitants of Cusco, as
well as the provinces from central Peru to the southern margin of the empire, had to content themselves with surrogates that represented the ruler at Cusco.
33
For Cusco as the sacred center see
Julien (1998), pp. 34-45; Julien (2000),
pp. 256-258.
34
Betanzos ([1551-57] 2004), bk. 2, ch. 16,
p. 288, bk. 1, ch. 19, p. 299.
This becomes important in view of a second extraordinary event reported by Betanzos.
While dealing with the huaca of Catequil in Guamachuco, Atagualpa detailed his revenge
plans for Guascar’s family, and added that he would return to Cajamarca and that Chalcochima and Quizquiz should depopulate Cusco and its environs, and send all the inhabitants to him, because he planned to return to Quito to build a new Cusco there. Betanzos
continues his account saying that Atagualpa’s order were faithfully executed, and that the
two military leaders assembled the rulers of the ethnic groups telling them that they and
their people had to go to Quito and gave them twenty days to prepare for the journey. 34
280
The resettlement ordered by Atagualpa might be nothing more than the selection of
mitimaes from these groups, an interpretation supported by Xerez who wrote that 4,000
married men from the Cusco region had been assigned to move to the area of Tomebamba. Xerez also reports that Atagualpa planned to return to his homeland to have
some rest (Xerez [1534] 1988, p. 122). Apart from these direct statements, it is notable
that Atagualpa did not advance with any urgency in the direction of Cusco, and that he
traveled back from Guamachuco to Cajamarca. What Atagualpa wanted most was to meet
his brother – and the defeated ruler was being transported to him when the Spaniards
intervened. 35 This seems to confirm Betanzos’s account.
Although the sources say that Atagualpa had been inaugurated as a ruler somewhere in
Ecuador (they do not agree where and when), to become a legitimate ruler a ritual investiture in Cusco seemed to be necessary. This would also have been the occasion for
Atagualpa to take one of his half-sisters as a principal wife. 36 It is hard to believe that
Atagualpa would forgo the chance to legitimize his rule by a properly staged ritual in
Cusco, and it seems to be inconceivable that Atagualpa intended to forsake the capital
favor of a new center at the far end of the realm, in view of the centrality of Cusco in Inca
religious ideology, the empire’s geographical extension, and the communication technology available. 37 Betanzos’s report of Atagualpa’s plans remains enigmatic.
The Stability of the Inca Empire
Nothing can be said about the contingencies which might have befallen the Inca empire.
Atagualpa could have died from an illness. He had no adult sons, especially none from
a high-ranking wife, and if the sons of Guayna Capac continued to be killed at the rate
they had, there would hardly have been anybody left with enough legitimation and power to succeed. This could have led to further internal strife and could have resulted in a
complete reconfiguration of the empire. On the other hand, the creativity and flexibility
of the Inca political system should not be underestimated. After the crisis of civil war
and intervention of the Spanish, the Inca were still able to produce able politicians and
military commanders, as the war organized by Manco Inca shows (Hemming 1993). It is
not evident that the Inca would not have been able to deal with the problems that arose
during the last two decades of their rule.
35
Betanzos ([1551-57] 2004), bk. 2, ch.
16, p. 288; Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk.
3, ch. 32, p. 465; Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk.
1, ch. 68, pp. 206; Sarmiento ([1572] 1906),
ch. 67, p. 124.
Betanzos‘s self-serving claims that his
wife Doña Angelina had been Atagualpa‘s
wife should be ignored (see Nowack 2002).
36
37
Julien (1998), pp. 34-45; Rostworowski
and Morris (1999), pp. 786-791. One
explanation could be that Atagualpa intended
to embark on a campaign of conquests in
the north so that he could later enter Cusco
accompanied by booty and prisoners, as it
behooved an Inca ruler.
Kerstin Nowack
What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
281
These problems can be divided into those within the Inca elite and those within the empire on the whole. Problematic within the Inca elite was the nomination of a successor
and the transferal of power to the next generation. This was, however, a problem common to all imperial systems ruled by monarchs, and not specific to the Inca. Monarchies
always veered between the alternatives of having too few or too many potential heirs. If
the ruler restricted the number of candidates by determining that only one woman could
be the mother of the heir, then there existed the danger that no surviving son would be
available, as it happened with Guayna Capac. Alternatively, children by different women
could inherit, which nearly inevitably would lead to conflicts between the sons, aided by
their mothers’ families. This was the cause of the civil war. The Inca had already recognized the possibly catastrophic consequence of this dilemma and tried to solve it by the
introduction of sister marriage. 38 This did not prevent a new succession conflict, which
then escalated into a civil war, but the war ended with a victory by one of the contenders,
not with the collapse of the empire.
In addition, Pachacuti at irst had
nominated his son Amaro Tupac as his
successor, but later replaced him with Tupac
Inca. Amaro Tupac then became a member
of Tupac Inca‘s descent group instead of his
father‘s. It was a political solution which tied
Amaro Tupac‘s interests to the fate of his
brother, a possible way to compensate a rival
in future succession con icts (Nowack 2002;
Rowe 1985a).
38
39
Cabello Balboa ([1586] 1951), bk. 3, ch.
22, pp. 373-76; Murúa ([1616] 1987), bk.
1, ch. 34, pp. 122-125; Sarmiento ([1572]
1906), ch. 60, p. 107.
The increasing power of the panaca has also been cited as a potential source of unsolvable conflicts. The panaca served as interest groups who competed for influence
over the person of the ruler and amassed landholdings and retainers. Guascar realized
that they had become a threat for the integrity of the empire, and threatened to take
their land away (Pizarro [1571] 1978, ch. 10, pp. 52-54). Before him, Guayna Capac had
already discovered that the Inca nobility enjoyed privileges it no longer deserved. His
nobles had deserted him in a battle, and when he punished them later by withholding
the accustomed supplies, they threatened to leave his campaign and return to Cusco.
Guayna Capac had to relent, and pleaded them to stay, distributing gifts and supplies. 39
However, it can be asked if Guayna Capac really lost this power struggle, because ultimately he had shown the Inca nobility its dependence on him. The nobles might threaten to leave, but in a long and complicated campaign like that against the Carangue alliance more was needed than the fighting power and leadership of their limited numbers.
The empire at this point was consolidated to an extent that Guayna Capac could draw on
other resources – troops and leaders from subject groups or on newly invented religious
forms like the cult of his mother which he established at the beginning of the campaign
and invoked at the moment of the conflict. He thus overcame the nobles’ resistance
and was ultimately victorious in his campaign (D’Altroy 2015, pp. 105, 106; Ziólkowski
1996, pp. 203, 204).
282
When Atagualpa ordered the destruction of Tupac Inca’s descent group, this could be seen
as a punishment for the panaca’s political decisions, but this act allowed him to eliminate
one of the most powerful and richest descent groups, and gave him land and people to
distribute afterwards. At the same time, the annihilation of Tupac Inca’s panaca taught
the whole Inca nobility that it was expendable. The power of the panaca was not an insurmountable obstacle to Inca rule. It could be checked, and the last three rulers, Guayna
Capac, Guascar, and Atagualpa apparently already attempted to limit the nobility’s power.
For administrative and military personnel, rulers could rely on other groups like the incas
de privilegio (honorary Incas) in the environs of Cusco. 40
Turning to the empire as a whole, as described in the studies reviewed at the beginning
of this essay, future Inca rulers faced a number of problems: limits on human and land
resources, an increasing number of mitimaes and yana, lack of cohesion within the empire and little identification with it, provincial rebellions, and rising costs of military campaigns. In many ways, these problems can be subsumed under the term overextension. 41
By the time the Spanish arrived, the extension of the territory and the number of subjects
apparently had reached the limits the Inca were able to control with their means of communication, their military technology, and their economic system.
However, whether the resources, either human or territorial, within the empire were really
reaching their limits is difficult to say on the basis of the studies available. For example,
it is not known how much land was left that could be used for cultivation and herding,
but, for example, the large-scale project in Cochabamba involving 14,000 mita workers
from the adjacent highlands shows that the Inca had recognized the need to develop new
sources of revenue for their state (D’Altroy 2015, p. 401). Guascar also appears to have
tapped into new resources for the rulers. According to Murúa, he took the Yauyos, Cajas,
Huambos, Chumbivilcas, Canas, and Soras (of highland Bolivia) as “aylloscas”, that is, as
personal properties. 42 The scale of Guascar’s acquisitions was completely new, because
they included whole provinces. If this is true, Guascar initiated a new policy, probably to
win resources for himself, but perhaps also as part of his attempt to curb the power of
the panaca. Whatever the exact background, this example again indicates that Inca institutions and practices were flexible enough to accommodate new situations.
The strain on the available resources might still have been too great. On the coast, people
questioned about Inca rule explained that had the Spaniards come a little later, everything
40
Even ritual systems like the association
of Cusco‘s ceques and huacas with the
panacas and non-royal ayllus were adaptable
to changes and new situations, as Rowe‘s
(1985b) reconstruction of the developmental
stages of the ceque system shows.
41
What Tainter (1988, p. 125) wrote applies
to an overextended empire, “A complex
society pursuing the expansion option, if
it is successful, ultimately reaches a point
where further expansion requires too high
a marginal cost. Linear miles of borders to
be defended, size of area to be administered,
size of the required administration, internal
paciication costs, travel distance between
the capital and the frontier, and the presence
of competitors combine to exert a depressing
efect on further growth.” “Once conquered,
subject lands and their populations must
be controlled, administered, and defended.
Given enough time, subject populations
often achieve, at least partially, the status
of citizens, which entitles them to certain
beneits in return for their contributions to
the hierarchy, and makes them less suitable
for exploitation” (p. 126).
42
Guascar‘s properties: Murúa ([1616]
1987), bk. 1, ch. 46, p. 163. The aylloscas
were won from the sun by a game with a
bola and a cord in a ritual which allowed
the appropriation of land for an individual
person. See Albornoz ([1583-84] 1984),
p. 201; Ziólkowski (1996), pp. 257-285.
On Tupac Inca‘s properties and this game
see Cobo ([1653] 1964), bk. 12, ch. 15, pp.
86, 87; D‘Altroy (2015) pp. 214-244; Julien
(1993), p. 184.
Kerstin Nowack
What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
283
would have belonged to the sun, the Inca rulers and their wives, or the huacas, because all
of them needed personnel, houses, and fields (Castro and Ortega Morejón [1558] 1936, p.
239). This single remark is impressionistic, but this might have been the situation as seen
from the local perspective. In the long run, it is not unthinkable that the demands by the
Inca government would have over-exploited the empire and its subjects.
The burden of Inca extractions was not only felt by the common ayllu members, but also
by the local elites. They lost influence and power, and the more resources were directed
towards the Inca, the less were left for them. The extent of these expropriations differed
probably from province to province, and it is not clear if territorial losses affected the
elite and commoners alike. In addition, the control of more and more inhabitants in the
empire was taken over directly by the Inca, like in the case of yana retainers and mitimaes, and was lost to the local elites. This has been cited as another instance of stress
within the fabric of the Inca empire, but again, the consequences are far from obvious (for
local elites see Rostworowski 1999, pp. 225, 226; for yana and mitimaes: p. 223). A weakening of local power structures might have been compensated by an increasing reliance
on a formal bureaucracy. Indicative of widespread dissatisfaction with Inca rule might
be that with the arrival of the Spanish, many members of the local elites tried to regain
their former independence. As it seems, independent rule outweighed the advantages of
belonging to the Inca empire. But this was an empire in a process of disintegration and
in a moment of transition, and such a decision is not the same as a willingness to rebel
against a fully functioning state.
The rapid break-up of the empire emphasizes the lack of cohesion and identification with
the Inca which are also cited as endangering the stability of Inca rule. It is probable that
the Inca did not agree with this view, because they regarded the retaining of ethnic differences as important for the welfare of their state. Diversity prevented their subjects from
uniting against them (Nowack 2013b; Rostworowski 1993; Topic 1998). Even if, as Rowe
argued, the rising number of yana and mitimaes ultimately contributed to a dissolution
of ethnic ties, this was not a result the Inca welcomed. They seem to have seen greater
disadvantages than advantages in such a situation.
This does not mean that the Inca were completely uninterested in presenting their empire as an integrated whole. Its name, Tahuantinsuyu, indicates such a generalized concept of their realm, as does the development of standardized styles in architecture,
284
textiles, and ceramics. It can also be assumed that the Inca developed a meta-version
of Andean origin myths, where the god Viracocha created the ancestors of the different
ethnic groups and then sent them underground to their places of emergence (pacarinas). 43 On the question of cultural unity and ethnic diversity, a conclusion is difficult.
Inca policies worked – consciously and unconsciously – in both directions, favoring
diversity and eradicating it as well. 44
The civil war could also be viewed as a result of the empire’s size. Guayna Capac was
absent from Cusco for about a decade and because of this absence practically installed
a second seat of government in Ecuador. His potential successors were also distributed
between Ecuador and Cusco, thus creating a situation that made the following civil war
possible. Because of his long absence, Guayna Capac failed to select a successor because
he had not met the sons left in Cusco during this time, and apparently wanted to satisfy
himself about their potential as rulers before he made his choice. This initial situation
turned what was traditionally a conflict among the nobility of Cusco into an empire-wide
contest.
Over-extension also forced the Inca to rely increasingly on professional soldiers who
were no longer members of the Inca nobility. The principal commanders of Atagualpa,
Quizquiz and Chalcochima, belonged to this group. 45 This was a great novelty, because
Inca armies traditionally were commanded by close relatives of the ruler. Guascar still adhered to this practice and his commander Guanca Auqui was his half-brother. Atagualpa’s
selection of personnel points to a greater professionalization of the Inca army.
43
Molina ([1572-1576] 2010), pp. 36,
37. This myth allowed for the continuance
of the local origin myths, and provided an
explanation for the ethnic diversity within
the empire and a commonality among all
Inca subjects.
44
It can also be asked if cultural unity
under all circumstances contributes to
the stability of a state. Diversity was
characteristic of empires, empires often
lasted for centuries, and, thus, the continued
existence of diversity did not automatically
lead to the downfall of empires.
45
This finally leads to the last major problem resulting from the size of the Inca empire:
There was hardly any territory left to conquer. The empire seems to have reached the limits of its extension. Only to the north, beyond the Carangues and their allies, lived people
that were worth the efforts of a conquest. 46 Already the conquest of the Carangues had
proven to be extremely costly. Extending Inca rule into the territory of modern Columbia
would have stretched the lines of communication and supply even more. Other territories
were even less promising, mostly because of the terrain and relative low density of population which made such conquest difficult and not very profitable.
It can be argued that the Inca were forced to continue their policy of expansion because
they were only able to stay in power as along as their subjects were occupied with new
The origin places of these men are not
known. Strangely, Murúa mentions the origins
of two other commanders, Yura Hualpa who
was a “natural chirque” (of the Chilque ethnic
group) and Rumi Ñaui who came from “quiles
cache” ([1616] 1987, bk. 1, ch. 51, p. 181).
According to Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala
([ca. 1615] 1987), both groups belonged to
the group of honorary Inca (see for example
f. 337 [339]).
46
Cieza mentioned rumors that Guayna
Capac had planned to expand further to the
north and that this was one of the reasons
why he left Atagualpa as governor of Quito
(Cieza [1548-54] 1985, ch. 68, p. 194).
Kerstin Nowack
What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
285
conquests (Demandt 1997, pp. 223, 224). Due to their constant warfare, the Inca had a
combat-trained army at hand which was useful to prevent provincials from rebelling.
However, troops were raised for individual military campaigns and disbanded when they
were no longer needed. If the Inca had forsaken new wars of conquest, they probably
would have had to finance a standing army (Kuchler 2013, p 53).
A policy of consolidation was perhaps costly, but there are several arguments for a favorable outcome. The Inca empire had no rivals, and had to fear no known outside threats.
The slowness of communication that hampered Inca expansion also protected the empire,
because the news of a defeat, of a failed campaign, or other problems could not spread
rapidly. The Inca empire was not under constant surveillance by its subjects and potential
outside enemies who waited for a sign of weakness. It could accept a defeat, or an unsuccessful offensive with a certain equanimity. If no new conquests took place in the future,
this was not necessarily perceived as a weakness which provoked every provincial lord to
rebel (Kuchler 2013, pp. 154-163).
There is no reason to become obsessed with the notion of collapse. The worst enemies of
empires, as the German historian Jürgen Osterhammel wrote, are other empires (Osterhammel 2013, p. 615). Empires without rivals were usually quite stable, and the predecessors of the Inca, the empires of the Wari and Chimu apparently lasted for several hundred
years. Even if the Inca empire would have entered a stage of stagnation, this could have
meant that it lost marginal provinces or, broke up into several states, but not necessarily
collapse and disappearance (Demandt 1997, p. 224). Without the arrival of the Spaniards,
it is imaginable that Inca rule over the Andes would have continued for one, two, or more
centuries. To answer the question posed in this articles’s title: What would have happened
is that the Inca would have solved their problems to an extent that would have allowed
the empire to continue.
286
My heartfelt thanks go to Inés de Castro and Doris Kurella for organizing the magnificent
exhibit on the Inca in the Linden-Museumm Stuttgart in 2014. I also like to thank them
and Karoline Noack for inviting me to the attendant conference and to Ann Peters for her
comments on my paper. Finally, I owe special thanks to Monca Barnes and Doris Kurella for
correcting my article and preparing the publication.
Kerstin Nowack
What Would Have Happened after the Inca Civil War?
287
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Amado Gonzáles, Donato: Candidato a Doctor en Estudios Andinos por la Pontificia Universidad
Católica del Perú. Miembro Correspondiente de la Academia Nacional de Historia. Coordinador del Área
de Investigación del Sistema Vial Andino Programa Qhapaq Ñan (2004-2012). Actual, Responsable de
Investigación Histórica del Santuario Histórico de Machupicchu, de la Dirección Desconcentrada de
Cultura Cuzco, del Ministerio de Cultura (2013-2014). Especialista en la Historia Rural Andina del Siglo
XVI-XIX y la formación y establecimiento de las parroquias cuzqueñas y la nobleza inca durante el
periodo colonial.
donatoamado@hotmail.com
Astuhuamán Gonzáles, César, Ph.D.: Profesor de arqueología en la Universidad Nacional Mayor de
San Marcos y director del Proyecto Integral Aypate, Ministerio de Cultura, Perú. Sus proyectos de
investigaciones se centran en los Inca, el periodo del contacto Europeo-Americano y la historia de la
arqueología.
cesar_astuhuaman@yahoo.es
Bauer, Brian S., Ph.D.: Professor of archaeology at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Expert on the
Inca and author of many publications on that topic. Research on the development of complex societies
in the Americas as well as on myths and the European-American contact period.
bsb@uic.edu
Barnes, Monica: Lead editor of Andean Past and an Associate of the American Museum of Natural
History where her work centers on the “Study of Inca Provincial Life” project directed by John
Victor Murra in Peru’s Huánuco Region from 1963 to 1966. She has about 200 articles, book chapters,
obituaries, book reviews, edited volumes, and translations to her credit. She has also curated several
photographic exhibitions.
monica@andeanpast.org
Ceruti, Constanza, Ph.D.: Argentinean anthropologist. She is a Professor of Inca Archaeology at the
Catholic University of Salta and a Scientific Investigator of the National Council for Scientific Research
(CONICET) in Argentina. She is the author of more than one hundred scientific publications, including
fifteen books, and she has received numerous international awards.
constanza_ceruti@yahoo.com
291
Covey, R. Alan, Ph.D.: Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Texas at Austin, and
a Research Associate at the American Museum of Natural History. His research focuses on the origins,
growth, and administration of the Inca empire, as well as on the transitions to Spanish rule in the
Cusco region. He has directed regional surveys and excavations in the Inca imperial heartland, as well
as archaeological studies of Inca provincial rule, and archival research in Peru and Spain.
r.alan.covey@austin.utexas.edu
Fischer, Manuela, Ph.D.: Curator of the South American Collections of the Ethnologisches Museum
(Berlin). Her research centers on the history of the museum’s collections. She has published
on collectors and Americanists, including Max Uhle, Konrad Theodor Preuss, and Otto SchultzKampfhenkel. Within the field of the history of science she is interested in the beginnings of
anthropology and the biography of objects and their present political contexts. In particular, she
focuses on the history of science in the 19th century and the history of photography.
m.fischer@smb.spk-berlin.de
Gänger, Stephanie, Ph.D.: Assistant professor (Juniorprofessorin) at the Institute for Iberian and Latin
American History at Cologne University. Her work focuses on the Andes in the late-colonial and earlyRepublican periods, with a particular interest in the history of botany, medicine, and antiquarianism.
stefanie.gaenger@gmail.com
Kosiba, Steve, Ph.D.: Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology, University of Alabama.
Director of archaeological, historical, and ethnographic research at the Inca ceremonial complex of
Huanacauri and the Inca labor colony of Rumiqolqa.
sbkosiba@ua.edu
Noack, Karoline, Ph.D.: Catedrática en el Departamento de Antrpología de las Américas de la
Universidad de Bonn y directora de la Bonner Altamerika-Sammlung (BASA, Museo de Antropología
de las Américas de Bonn). Sus focos del trabajo son los siguientes: procesos de transculturación
en los Andes en perspectiva histórica, antropología visual y cultura material, estudios museísticos,
antropología urbana, estudios de género así como historia de la ciencia. Dentro de este marco coordina
y realiza proyectos de investigación sobre la base de colecciones de los Aparai-Wayana (noreste de
Sudamérica), excavaciones arqueológicas en Cochabamba (Bolivia) así como en Trujillo y Lima (Perú).
knoack@uni-bonn.de
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List of authors
Nowack, Kerstin, Ph.D.: Independent Scholar, university lecturer at the Department for the
Anthropology of the America of the University of Bonn. Research topics include the ethnohistory
of the Andes in the 15th and 16th century with a focus on the history and culture of the Inca empire.
Currently researching the causes and the course of the civil war between Atagualpa and Guascar.
Kerstin_Nowack@gmx.de
Oshige Adams, David Ernesto: Licenciado en Arqueología, Co-Director del Proyecto Arqueológico
Pukara (www.pukara.org). Interés en el proceso de desarrollo y consolidación de las sociedades
complejas y las desigualdades sociales en la cuenca norte del lago Titicaca. Estudios concluidos de
Máster en Sociología, con una investigación sobre recicladores de basura. Interés en la sociología
cultural y política y en estudios sobre desigualdad social, poblaciones vulnerables y empleos autogenerados.
doshigea@pucp.pe
Peters, Ann H., Ph.D.: Her dissertation title is Paracas, Topará and early Nasca: Ethnicity and Society
on the South Central Andean Coast (1997). After undertaking comparative study of textile assemblages
from other Andean mortuary contexts, she returned to work on Paracas Necropolis in the early
21st century, drawing on archival data from Julio C. Tello’s original research. Between 2010 and 2014
she directed the project “Practice in Life, Presence after Death: Style and Substance at the Paracas
Necropolis”. This research has led her to explore the practices associated with preserving and honoring
ancestors at different times and places in Andean history. She is a Consulting Scholar in the American
Section of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
ann.h.peters@gmail.com
Quave, Kylie, Ph.D.: Visiting Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Beloit College and Postdoctoral
Research Fellow at the Logan Museum of Anthropology in Beloit, Wisconsin, USA. Her research is on
the archaeology and ethnohistory of the development of the Inca and Spanish empires in the Andes.
She has directed the Cheqoq, Ak‘awillay, and Yunkaray Archaeological Research Projects in the Cusco
region.
quaveke@beloit.edu
293
Reid, David: Ph.D.candidate at the University of Illinois at Chicago and Graduate Researcher at
The Field Museum of Chicago. Investigation: Andean political economy, state development and
expansion, archaeological applications of GIS and geochemistry. He is currently conducting field
research in southern Peru and is a co-author of a number of publications concerning the Inca,
the Late Preceramic, and the Peopling of the Andes.
dreid5@uic.edu
Wernke, Steven, Ph.D.: Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Vanderbilt University.
His research centers on colonialism and imperialism during the late prehispanic and Spanish colonial
eras in the Andean region, with methodological foci in spatial analysis and thematic foci in landscape
and land use, community-state relations, and religious transformation. His current research includes
archaeological and ethnohistorical projects in the Colca Valley of the southern Peruvian Andes, and
an interdisciplinary digital humanities project (co-directed with Jeremy Mumford, Brown University)
aimed at producing an analytically-rich “deep map” of the Viceroyalty of Peru.
s.wernke@Vanderbilt.Edu