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Mummies and mortuary monuments

Autor William H. Isbell

Editorial UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS PRESS

Mummies and mortuary monuments
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69,94€
Ahorra 3,68€
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Since prehistoric times, Andean societies have been organized around the ayllu, a grouping of real or ceremonial kinspeople who share labor, resources, and ritual obligations. Many Andean scholars believe that the ayllu is as ancient as Andean cultur...

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  • Editorial UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS PRESS
  • ISBN13 9780292738706
  • ISBN10 0292738706
  • Tipo LIBRO
  • Páginas 371
  • Año de Edición 1996
  • Encuadernación Tela

Mummies and mortuary monuments

Autor William H. Isbell

Editorial UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS PRESS

Since prehistoric times, Andean societies have been organized around the ayllu, a grouping of real or ceremonial kinspeople who share labor, resources, and ritual obligations. Many Andean scholars believe that the ayllu is as ancient as Andean cultur...

-5% dto.    73,62€
69,94€
Ahorra 3,68€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular

Detalles del libro

Since prehistoric times, Andean societies have been organized around the ayllu, a grouping of real or ceremonial kinspeople who share labor, resources, and ritual obligations. Many Andean scholars believe that the ayllu is as ancient as Andean culture itself, possibly dating back as far as 6000 B.C., and that is arose to alleviate the hardships of farming in the mountainous Andean environment. In this boldly revisionist book, however, William Isbell persuasively argues that the ayllu developed during the latter half of the Early Intermediate Period (around A.D. 200) as a means of resistance to the process of state formation. Drawing on archaeological evidence, as well as records of Inca life taken from the chroniclers, Isbell asserts that prehistoric ayllus were organized around the veneration of deceased ancestors, whose mummified bodies were housed in open sepulchers, or chullpas, where they could be visited by descendants seeking approval and favors. By charting the temporal and spatial distribution of chullpa ruins, Isbell offers a convincing new explanation of where, when, and why the ayllu developed. Sure to provoke lively debate in many quarters, this book will promote a serious revision of Andean prehistory. It holds broad ramifications for anthropologists, archaeologists, ethnohistorians, art and architectural historians, and geographers interested in the Andes.