Wari culture
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Huari Culture Wari | |||||||||||||
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6th century–10th century | |||||||||||||
Middle Horizon | |||||||||||||
• Established | 6th century | ||||||||||||
• Disestablished | 10th century | ||||||||||||
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Today part of | Peru |
The Wari (
However, there is still a debate whether the Wari dominated the Central Coast or the polities on the Central Coast were commercial states capable of interacting with the Wari people without being politically dominated by them.
History
Archaeological evidence points toward the Wari empire taking control of a number of small villages in Peru's Carahuarazo Valley in approximately 600 A.D., during the empire's initial expansion. The incursion caused a number of the valley's existing villages to be abandoned, with one partially destroyed to make room for a Wari administrative center known as Jincamocco. The Wari introduced terracing agriculture to the area, shifting the staple crops of the valley from tubers to both tubers and maize. Wari storage structures have been found in the area, seemingly "paired" with some of remaining villages' agricultural sites; these were likely used to store both staple crops. Wari occupation of the Carahuarazo Valley lasted until roughly 800 A.D., leading to the abandonment of most of the valley's sites after that time.[2]
Early on, the Wari expanded their territory to include the ancient
As a result of centuries of drought, the Wari culture began to deteriorate around 800 AD. Archeologists have determined that the city of Wari was dramatically depopulated by 1000 AD, although it continued to be occupied by a small number of descendant groups. Buildings in Wari and in other government centers had doorways that were deliberately blocked up, as if the Wari intended to return, someday when the rains returned.
Government
Little is known about the details of the Wari administrative structure, as they did not appear to use a form of written record. Instead, they used a tool called
The discovery in early 2013 of an undisturbed royal tomb, El Castillo de Huarmey, offers new insight into the social and political influence of the Wari during this period. The variety and extent of the burial items accompanying the three royal women indicate a culture with significant material wealth and the power to dominate a significant part of northern coastal Peru for many decades.[7]
Another example of burials helping to establish social stratification is in the city of Conchopata where the remains of more than 200 individuals have been found. This city is located about 10 km from the capital city. Prior to its excavation, the city was believed to be that of potters, but the burials studied instead showed that there were servants, middle-class, elite, and even perhaps low kings or governors occupying the city.[8] Further investigations on a random selection of the burials from the site have shown that 26 percent of both male and female adult crania studied had at least one posterior wound, while only females had been subject to anterior wounds.[3] The different levels of violence based on sex is evidence of some type of systematic hierarchy.
Architecture
During its expansion period, the Wari state established architecturally distinctive administrative centers in many of its provinces, but they often did not have formal planning as many other Andean cities did. These centers are clearly different from the architecture of Tiwanaku, which is believed to have been a more federalized state by some scholars (such as John W. Janusek). Wari architecture was most often made of rough fieldstones that had been coated in white plaster. The compounds were usually large, rectangular enclosures with no windows, just a few entries, and the sites had no central place for people to gather for rituals or ceremonies. This is in almost direct contrast with Tiwanaku where there was a more open architectural plan that could easily accommodate multiple people at once. A form of architecture distinctive to Wari was the use of D-shaped structures. These structures were commonly used for temples and were relatively small at only 10 meters.[9] Using administrative centers like their temples, the Wari greatly influenced the surrounding countryside. Scholars were able to look at the Inca to reconstruct some of the architecture of the Wari. Along the Inca highway system, several Wari provincial sites were found, suggesting that the Wari used a similar road network.[2] They also created new fields with terraced field technology, which the Inca also drew inspiration from.[10]
Social Life
Based on remains from multiple Wari sites, archaeologists have determined that feasts and offerings of food were a powerful driving force in the social life of the Wari. Multiple instances of camelid remains found in the province of Cotocotuyoc point toward the usage of such animals as symbols of social capital, especially because they were uncommon in the area.[11] Some camelid remains were found devoid of cut marks and stacked on top of human bones, leading researchers to think they were intentionally not fully eaten to display the feast's host's wealth,[11] in a process known as ritual wasteful consumption.[12]
Religion
The Wari worshipped the Staff god, a chief deity in many Andean cultures.[13] Some of the oldest depictions of the Staff god appear on Wari textiles and pottery urns, estimated to be over 3,000 years old.[14] Some scholars believe that the Wari Staff god was a predecessor of the three Incan principle gods, Sun, Moon, and Thunder.[13]
The Wari practiced animal sacrifice. Complete skeletal remains of a young camelid and thirty-two guinea pigs were found buried in a "lineage house" in the city of Conchopata, ten kilometers from the capital city of Wari. The complete nature of the remains, as well as the age of the camelid, point toward the animals being sacrificed at the end of the Ayachuco valley's rainy season.[11]
Art
The Wari are particularly known for their textiles, which were well-preserved in desert burials. The standardization of textile motifs serves as artistic evidence of state control over elite art production in the Wari state.[15] Surviving textiles include tapestries, hats and tunics for high-ranking officials. There are between six and nine miles of thread in each tunic, and they often feature highly abstracted versions of typical Andean artistic motifs, such as the Staff God. It is possible that these abstract designs served "a mysterious or esoteric code to keep out uninitiated foreign subjects" and that the geometric distortions made the wearer's chest appear larger to reflect their high rank.[15]
The Wari also produced highly sophisticated metalwork and ceramics, with similar designs to the textiles. The most common metals used were silver and copper, though gold Wari artifacts also survive. The most common metal objects were
Gallery
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Four-cornered hat, 650–1000 AD, Brooklyn Museum
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Huari earthenware pot with painted design, 650–800 AD (Middle Horizon)
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Wari tunic, Peru, 750–950 AD: This tunic is made of 120 separate small pieces of cloth, each individually tie-dyed. Ceramics of the period depict high-status men wearing this style of tunic.
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Monoliths Wari
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Wari funeral bundle
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Pikillaqta administrative center, built by the Wari civilization in Cusco
See also
- Wari Empire
- Willkawayin
- Tiwanaku
- Tiwanaku empire
- Middle Horizon
- Pocra culture
- Chuqi Pukyu
References
- ISBN 978-0-500-51656-0. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- ^ S2CID 155131409.
- ^ PMID 17506491.
- ISBN 9780784408513.
- S2CID 129334201.
- ISBN 9781444331158.
- ^ "First Unlooted Royal Tomb of Its Kind Unearthed in Peru". 2013-06-28. Archived from the original on June 30, 2013. Retrieved 2013-06-30.
- S2CID 155495978.
- ^ ISBN 9781317935247.
- ISBN 9780877459316.
- ^ S2CID 153558961.
- ^ Galik, Alfred (2002). Age bone assemblage from Durezza Cave, Carinthia, Austria: detecting ritual behaviour through archaeozological and taphonomical analyses. Oxford: Oxbow Books. pp. 54–61.
- ^ )
- ISSN 1476-4687.
- ^ ISBN 9780500203637.
Further reading
- Collier, Simon et al. (Ed.) (1992). The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Latin America and the Caribbean (Second ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-41322-0.
- Wendell C. Bennett, Excavations at Wari, Ayacucho, Peru (1953).
- Gordon F. McEwan, The Middle Horizon in the Valley of Cuzco, Peru: The Impact of the Wari Occupation of the Lucre Basin (1987).
- William H. Isbell and Gordon F. McEwan, eds., Huari Administrative Structure: Prehistoric Monumental Architecture and State Government (1991).
- Katharina J. Schreiber, Wari Imperialism in Middle Horizon Peru (1992).
- Tung, Tiffiny (2012). Violence, Ritual, and the Wari Empire: A Social Bioarchaeology of Imperialism in the Ancient Andes. University Press of Florida.
External links
- Brian Finucane, "Ayacucho Archaeo-Isotope Project" Archived 2009-02-05 at the Wayback Machine
- "Archaeological chemists settle trophy-head debate
- "Pre-Incan female Wari mummy unearthed in Peru", Reuters
- "A Champion of the Wari," about curator Susan E. Bergh, by Judith H. Dobrzynski, The Wall Street Journal, October 24, 2012
- "Who Was Who in the Middle Horizon Andean Prehistory" by Patricia J. Knobloch