Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T00:47:20.882Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Core–periphery relations in the Recuay hinterlands: economic interaction at Chinchawas, Peru

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 March 2015

George F. Lau*
Affiliation:
Sainsbury Research Unit, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, UK (Email: [email protected])
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

The author explores a changing core–periphery relationship in first millennium AD Peru, from the viewpoint of a small North Highlands village.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2005

References

Adams, R. MCC. 1965. Land behind Baghdad. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Algaze, G. 1993. Expansionary dynamics of some early pristine states. American Anthropologist 95: 304–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anders, M.B. 1989. Wamanga pottery: symbolic resistance and subversion in Middle Horizon Epoch 2 ceramics from the planned Wari site of Azángaro (Ayacucho, Peru), in Tkaczuk, D.C. & Vivian, B.C. (ed.). Cultures in conflict: current archaeological perspectives: 718. Proceedings of the twentieth annual Chacmool conference, Calgary: Archaeological Association of the University of Calgary.Google Scholar
Bawden, G. 1996. The Moche. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.Google Scholar
Bennett, W.C. 1944. The North Highlands of Peru: Excavations in the Callejón de Huaylas and at Chavín de Huántar. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 39 (1). New York.Google Scholar
Bermann, M. 1994. Lukurmata: Household archaeology in prehispanic Bolivia. Princeton (NJ): Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bray, T. 2003. Inka pottery as culinary equipment: food, feasting, and gender in imperial state design. Latin American Antiquity 14: 328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burger, R.L. 1985. Prehistoric stylistic change and cultural development at Huaricoto, Peru. National Geographic Research 1: 505–34.Google Scholar
Burger, R.L. 1992. Chavín and the origins of Andean civilization. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Burger, R.L. 1993. The Chavín horizon: stylistic chimera or socioeconomic metamorphosis?, in Rice, D.S. (ed.). Latin American horizons: 4182. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks.Google Scholar
Burger, R.L. & M.D. GLASCOCK. 2000. Locating the Quispisisa obsidian source in the Department of Ayacucho, Peru. Latin American Antiquity 11: 258–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burger, R.L. & Matos, R.M.. 2002. Atalla: a center on the periphery of the Chavín Horizon. Latin American Antiquity 13: 153–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Castillo Butters, L.J. 1993. Prácticas funerarias, poder e ideología en la sociedad Moche Tardía. Gaceta Arqueológica Andina 7: 6773.Google Scholar
Chase-Dunn, C. & Hall, T.D. (ed.). 1991. Core/periphery relations in the precapitalist world. Boulder (CO): Westview Press.Google Scholar
Chase-Dunn, C. & Hall, T.D. 1997. Rise and Demise: Comparing World-Systems. Boulder (CO): Westview Press.Google Scholar
Czwarno, R.M. 1983. Ceramic Indications of Cultural Interaction: Evidence from Northern Peru. Unpublished M.A. Thesis, Trent University, Peterborough, Canada.Google Scholar
D’Altroy, T.N. 1992. Provincial power in the Inka empire. Washington, D.C: Smithsonian.Google Scholar
D’Altroy, T.N. 2002. The Incas. Malden (MA): Blackwell Publishers.Google Scholar
D’Altroy, T.N. & Earle, T.K.. 1985. Staple finance, wealth finance, and storage in the Inka political economy. Current Anthropology 26: 187206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donnan, C.B. 1971. Ancient Peruvian potters’ marks and their interpretation through ethnographic analogy. American Antiquity 36: 460–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donnan, C.B. 2003. The long duration and subsequent collapse of Moche borders. Paper presented at Sainsbury Research Unit Americas symposium ‘Objects of Contention: Boundaries, Interaction and Appropriation in the Andes’, University of East Anglia, Norwich (UK), 9 May 2003.Google Scholar
Druc, I.C. 1998. Ceramic production and distribution in the Chavín sphere of influence (North Central Andes). Oxford: BAR International Series 731.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Druc, I.C., Hugh, Q & Gwyn, J. 1998. From clay to pots: a petrographical analysis of ceramic production in the Callejón de Huaylas, north-central Andes, Peru. Journal of Archaeological Science 25: 707–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilmore, R.M. 1950. Fauna and ethnozoology of South America, in Steward, J.H. (ed.). Handbook of South American Indians, vol 6: 345464. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 143, Washington D.C.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. 1977. Perspectives in Marxist anthropology. Cambridge: CUP.Google Scholar
Goldstein, P. 1993. Tiwanaku temples and state expansion: a Tiwanaku sunken-court temple in Moquegua, Peru. Latin American Antiquity 4: 2247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldstein, P.S. 2000. Exotic goods and everyday chiefs: long-distance exchange and indigenous sociopolitical development in the South Central Andes. Latin American Antiquity 11: 335–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
González Carré, E., Braygarac Davila, E. Vivanco Pomacanchari, C. Tiesler Blos, V. & Lopez Quispe, M.. 1999. El Templo Mayor en la Ciudad de Wari: Estudios Arqueológicos en Vegachayoq Moqo-Ayacucho. Universidad Nacional de San Cristóbal de Huamanga, Ayacucho.Google Scholar
Grieder, T. 1978. The art and archaeology of Pashash. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Hyslop, J. 1984. The Inka road system. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Hyslop, J. 1990. Inka settlement planning. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Ibarra, B. (ed.). 2003. Arqueología de la Sierra de Ancash: Propuestas y Perspectivas. Lima: Instituto Cultural Runa.Google Scholar
Isbell, W.H. 1977. The rural foundation for urbanism: economic and stylistic interaction between rural and urban communities in eighth-century Peru. Illinois Studies in Anthropology 10. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Isbell, W.H. 1988. City and state in Middle Horizon Huari, in Keatinge, R.W. (ed.). Peruvian prehistory: 164–89. Cambridge: CUP.Google Scholar
Isbell, W.H. 1991. Honcopampa: monumental ruins in Peru’s North Highlands. Expedition 33: 2736.Google Scholar
Isbell, W.H. & Mcewan, G.F. (eds.). 1991. Huari administrative structure: prehistoric monumental architecture and state government. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks.Google Scholar
Janusek, J.W. 2002. Out of many, one: style and social boundaries at Tiwanaku. Latin American Antiquity 13: 3561.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jennings, J.D. & Craig, N. 2001. Politywide analysis and imperial political economy: The relationship between valley political complexity and administrative centers in the Wari Empire of the Central Andes. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 20: 479502.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolata, A.L. (ed.). 2003. Tiwanaku and its hinterland: archaeology and paleoecology of an Andean civilization 2: Urban and rural archaeology. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
Kuznar, L.A. 1996. Periphery/core relations in the Inca Empire. Journal of World Systems Research 2: 120.Google Scholar
La Lone, D. 1994. An Andean world-system: production transformations under the Inca Empire, in Brumfiel, E.M. (ed.). The Economic Anthropology of the State: 1742. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America.Google Scholar
Lanning, E.P. 1967. Peru before the Incas. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
Lau, G.F. 2001. The ancient community of Chinchawas: economy and ceremony in the North Highlands of Peru. Ph.D. Dissertation, Yale University, University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Lau, G.F. 2002. Feasting and ancestor veneration at Chinchawas, North Highlands of Ancash, Peru. Latin American Antiquity 13: 279304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lau, G.F. 2004. The Recuay culture of Peru’s North-Central Highlands: a reevaluation of chronology and its implications. Journal of Field Archaeology 29: 177202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lau, G.F. in press. Animal resources and Recuay cultural transformations at Chinchawas (Ancash, Peru). Andean Past 9.Google Scholar
Lumbreras, L.G. 1960. La cultura de Wari, Ayacucho. Etnología y arqueología 1: 130227.Google Scholar
Lumbreras, L.G. 1974. The peoples and cultures of ancient Peru. Washington, D.C: Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
Malpass, M.A. (ed.). 1993. Provincial Inca: archaeological and ethnohistorical assessment of the impact of the Inca state. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mcguire, R. 1996. The limits of world-systems theory for the study of prehistory, in Peregrine, P.N. & Feinman, G.M. (ed.). Pre-Columbian world systems: 5164. Madison (WI): Prehistory Press.Google Scholar
Meddens, F.M. 1989. Implications of camelid management and textile production for Huari, in Meddens, F. Czwarno, R.M. & Morgan, A (ed.). Nature of Wari: a reappraisal of the Middle Horizon Period in Peru: 146165. Oxford: BAR International Series 525.Google Scholar
Menzel, D. 1959. The Inca occupation of the south coast of Peru. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 15: 125–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menzel, D. 1964. Style and time in the Middle Horizon. Nawpa Pacha 2: 1105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menzel, D. 1977. The archaeology of ancient Peru and the work of Max Uhle. Berkeley: Lowie Museum of Anthropology.Google Scholar
Miller, G.R. 1979. An introduction to the ethnoarchaeology of the Andean camelids. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Miller, G.R. & Gill, A.L.. 1990. Zooarchaeology at Pirincay, a Formative Period site in highland Ecuador. Journal of Field Archaeology 17: 4968.Google Scholar
Moore, J.D. 1996. Architecture and power in the ancient Andes: the archaeology of public buildings. Cambridge: CUP.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morris, C. 1986. Storage, supply and redistribution in the economy of the Inka state, in Murra, J. Wachtel, N. & Revel, J (ed.). Anthropological History of Andean Polities: 5968. Cambridge: CUP.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morris, C. & Thompson, D.E.. 1985. Huánuco Pampa: an Inca city and its hinterland. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Peregrine, P.N. & Feinman, G.M. (eds.). 1996. Pre-Columbian world systems. Madison (WI): Prehistory Press.Google Scholar
Pillsbury, J. (ed.). 2001. Moche art and archaeology in ancient Peru. Studies in the history of art: 63. Washington, D.C: National Gallery of Art.Google Scholar
Reichert, R.X. 1977. The Recuay ceramic style: a reevaluation. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California at Los Angeles, University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Rostworowski, M. 1988. Historia del Tahuantinsuyu. Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos.Google Scholar
Rowe, J.H. 1946. Inca culture at the time of the Spanish conquest, in Steward, J (ed.). Handbook of South American Indians 2: The Andean civilizations: 183330. Washington, D.C.: Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 143.Google Scholar
Rowe, J.H. & Menzel, D (eds.). 1967. Peruvian archaeology: selected readings. Palo Alto: Peek Publications.Google Scholar
Rowlands, M. 1987. Centre and periphery: a review of a concept, in Rowlands, M. Larsen, M. & Kristiansen, K (ed.). Centre and periphery in the ancient world: 112. Cambridge: CUP.Google Scholar
Schaedel, R.P. 1952. An analysis of Central Andean stone sculpture. Ph.D. Dissertation, Yale University, University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Schaedel, R.P. 1993. Congruence of horizon with polity: Huari and the Middle Horizon, in Rice, D.S. (ed.). Latin American Horizons: 225–61. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks.Google Scholar
Schreiber, K.J. 1991. Association between roads and polities: evidence for Wari roads in Peru, in Trombold, C.D. (ed.). Ancient road networks and settlement hierarchies in the New World: 243–52. Cambridge: CUP.Google Scholar
Schaedel, R.P. 1992. Wari imperialism in Middle Horizon Peru. Anthropological Paper 87, Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Schwartz, G.M. & Falconer, S.E. (ed.). 1994. Archaeological views from the countryside: village communities in early complex societies. Washington, D.C: Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Shady Solís, R. 1988. La época Huari como interacción de las sociedades regionales. Revista Andina 6: 6799.Google Scholar
Shimada, I. 1994. Pampa Grande and the Mochica culture. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Shimada, M. 1982. Zooarchaeology of Huacaloma: behavioral and cultural implications, in Terada, K & Onuki, Y (ed.). Excavations at Huacaloma in the Cajamarca Valley, Peru: 303–36. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press.Google Scholar
Shimada, M. 1985. Continuities and changes in patterns of faunal resource utilization: Formative through Cajamarca Periods, in Terada, K & Onuki, Y (ed.). The Formative Period in the Cajamarca Basin, Peru: excavations at Huacaloma and Layzón, 1982: 289305. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press.Google Scholar
Smith, J.W. JR. 1978. The Recuay culture: a reconstruction based on artistic motifs. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Texas at Austin, University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Stanish, C. 1997. Nonmarket imperialism in a prehispanic context: the Inca occupation of the Titicaca Basin. Latin American Antiquity 8: 195216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stanish, C. 2001. Regional research on the Inka. Journal of Archaeological Research 9: 213–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stanish, C. 2003. Ancient Titicaca: the evolution of complex society in Southern Peru and Northern Bolivia. Berkeley (CA): sUniversity of California Press.Google Scholar
Tello, J.C. 1929. Antiguo Peru: primera época. Comisión Organizadora del Segundo Congreso de Turismo, Lima.Google Scholar
Topic, J.R. 2003. From stewards to bureaucrats: architecture and information flow at Chan Chan, Peru. Latin American Antiquity 14: 243–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Topic, J.R. 1983. Coast-highland relations in northern Peru: some observations on routes, networks, and scales of interaction, in Leventhal, R & Kolata, A (ed.). Civilization in the ancient Americas: 237–59. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico.Google Scholar
Topic, J.R. & Topic, T.L.. 1992. The rise and decline of Cerro Amaru: an Andean shrine during the Early Intermediate Period and Middle Horizon, in Goldsmith, A.S. Garvie, S. Selin, D., & Smith, J (ed.). Ancient images, ancient thought: the archaeology of ideology: 167180. Proceedings of the 23rd annual conference of the Archaeological Association of the University of Calgary, Calgary.Google Scholar
Topic, J.R. & Topic, T.L. 2000. Hacia la comprensión del fenómeno Huari: una perspectiva norteña. Boletín de Arqueología PUCP 4: 181217.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Topic, T.L. 1985. The kaolin ceramic tradition in northern Peru. Paper presented at the fourth annual Northeast conference on Andean Archaeology and Ethnohistory. Albany: SUNY.Google Scholar
Topic, T.L. 1991. Middle Horizon in Northern Peru, in Isbell, W.H. & Mcewan, G.F. (ed.). Huari administrative structure: prehistoric monumental architecture and state government: 233246. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks.Google Scholar
Topic, T.L. & Topic, J.R.. 1984. Huamachuco archaeological project: preliminary report of the third season, June-August 1983. Trent University Occasional Papers in Anthropology 1, Peterborough, Ontario.Google Scholar
Tschauner, H. 2003. Honco Pampa: arquitectura de élite del Horizonte Medio del Callejón de Huaylas, in Ibarra, B (ed.). Arqueología de la sierra de Ancash: propuestas y perspectives: 193220. Lima: Instituto Cultural Runa.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 197480. The modern world system I-II. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Wegner, S.A. 1988. Cultura Recuay, Exhibit catalog. Banco Continental and Museo Arqueológico de Ancash (Lima, September-October 1988).Google Scholar
Wegner, S.A. 2003. Identificando el área de dominio Recuay: un extendido inventario cerámico para la identificación de asentamientos Recuay, in Ibarra, B (ed.). Arqueología de la sierra de Ancash: propuestas y perspectives: 121–34. Lima: Instituto Cultural Runa.Google Scholar
Wing, E. 1972. Utilization of faunal resources in the Peruvian Andes, in Izumi, Seiichi & Kazuo, Terada (ed.). Andes 4: Excavations at Kotosh, Peru: 327351. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press.Google Scholar
Wing, E. 1980. Faunal remains, in Lynch, T (ed.). Guitarrero Cave: Early Man in the Andes: 149–72. New York: Academic Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar