Book contents
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Tables
- Contributors to Volume I
- General Editor’s Acknowledgements
- General Editor’s Introduction to the Series
- Introduction to Volume I
- Part I Themes of Genocide through History
- Part II The Ancient World
- Part III The Medieval World and Early Imperial Expansions
- 15 William the Conqueror’s Harrying of the North, 1069–1070
- 16 Genocidal Massacres of Jews in Medieval Western Europe, 1096–1392
- 17 Crusaders and Mass Killing at Jerusalem in 1099
- 18 The Albigensian Crusade and the Early Inquisitions into Heretical Depravity, 1208–1246
- 19 Mongol Genocides of the Thirteenth Century
- 20 Việt Nam and the Genocide of Champa, 1470–1509
- 21 Genocidal Massacres in Medieval India
- 22 Mass Extermination in Prehistoric Andean South America
- 23 The Spanish Destruction of the Canary Islands
- 24 Genocidal Massacres in the Spanish Conquest of the Americas
- Index
22 - Mass Extermination in Prehistoric Andean South America
from Part III - The Medieval World and Early Imperial Expansions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 June 2023
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Tables
- Contributors to Volume I
- General Editor’s Acknowledgements
- General Editor’s Introduction to the Series
- Introduction to Volume I
- Part I Themes of Genocide through History
- Part II The Ancient World
- Part III The Medieval World and Early Imperial Expansions
- 15 William the Conqueror’s Harrying of the North, 1069–1070
- 16 Genocidal Massacres of Jews in Medieval Western Europe, 1096–1392
- 17 Crusaders and Mass Killing at Jerusalem in 1099
- 18 The Albigensian Crusade and the Early Inquisitions into Heretical Depravity, 1208–1246
- 19 Mongol Genocides of the Thirteenth Century
- 20 Việt Nam and the Genocide of Champa, 1470–1509
- 21 Genocidal Massacres in Medieval India
- 22 Mass Extermination in Prehistoric Andean South America
- 23 The Spanish Destruction of the Canary Islands
- 24 Genocidal Massacres in the Spanish Conquest of the Americas
- Index
Summary
Gruesome instances of mass killing have punctuated the 6000 year-long sequence of the prehistoric South American Andes, an area that encompasses modern-day Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and northern Argentina and Chile. Accurately gauging the intensity and intent of violence—in particular mass extermination—among people who left no form of written language, requires a forensic skeletal approach that informs on both the cause and manner of death, as well as the nature of corpse disposal or burial, which itself reveals how bodies were treated after death.
Time and again, aggressors in the Andes marshalled common tactics, including the sacking of towns and sanctuaries, instituting systems of mass displacement, controlling reproduction among women, moving children from subservient groups, and orchestrating the maiming and murder of both formidable rivals and civilian noncombatants alike. These violent episodes of eradication may best be understood as outbreaks of local communal strife, limited in both place and time. These genocidal moments capture the collective murder of targeted sub-population groups. The physical and material record helps us identify catastrophic death assemblages, reconstruct the profiles of victim and perpetrators, discern the methods of murder, and even deduce underlying motivations for attack.
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- The Cambridge World History of Genocide , pp. 572 - 593Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023