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The Rise of Native Lordships at Pashash, <scp>a.d</scp>. 200–600, North Highlands of Ancash, Peru

George Lau, Milton Luján Dávila, Jacob Bongers, David Chicoine

2022Journal of Field Archaeology10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article examines the rise of native, segmentary lordships in the highlands of north-central Peru. It reports on new excavations and mapping at the seat of a prehispanic polity, Pashash (Recuay culture), a large hilltop center that developed after the collapse of Chavín civilization. Fieldwork revealed monumental constructions and two special activity contexts radiocarbon-dated to ca. a.d. 200–400: an offering area in a large palatial compound and a room-complex with chambers closed off and sealed with feasting refuse. Multiple lines of evidence help reconstruct a regional picture for the establishment of wealthy local elites. Cultural innovations explicitly link new leaders to roles in defense and warfare, economic production, and early burial cult within a high-status compound. The current data underscore a major break from earlier systems of authority and elite material culture, comprising an organizational pattern that was a precursor to the ethnic polities that predominated in later Andean prehistory.

Topics & Concepts

PrehistoryCultArchaeologyEliteCivilizationExcavationPolityAncient historyRadiocarbon datingHistoryMesoamericaGeographyEthnologyPolitical scienceLawPoliticsArchaeology and ancient environmental studiesPacific and Southeast Asian StudiesArchaeology and Rock Art Studies
The Rise of Native Lordships at Pashash, <scp>a.d</scp>. 200–600, North Highlands of Ancash, Peru | Litcius