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The Art and Archaeology of Pashash (Paperback)
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The Art and Archaeology of Pashash (Paperback)
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Among the vast treasures discovered in Peru since its conquest by
Pizarro, only a small fraction has been excavated scientifically.
The Art and Archaeology of Pashash is an account of the discovery
and excavation of the richest Pre-Columbian burial ever
scientifically excavated in Peru. The tomb and its offerings
unearthed at Pashash, in the northern Andes, provide new
perspectives on the cultural meaning of Andean funerary treasure.
About A.D. 500 the flexed body of an aristocrat was wrapped in
cloth and set in a small tomb sealed by a heavy stone. Three
separate offerings were put in place during the construction of the
funerary temple above the tomb. Near the body were placed about
fifty large gold pins with elaborately sculptured heads, the most
important set of Peruvian metalwork scientifically recorded in
context. Decorated pottery also accompanied the body. Beneath the
doorway to the temple chamber above the tomb a second offering was
placed, composed of vessels modeled as jaguars, snakes, and
dragonlike combinations of the two, with other fine pottery,
unfired clay bowls, and stone bowls. The images in this offering
represented the theology of a shamanistic religion. A third
offering of broken ritual vessels was placed in the earth fill just
before the temple floor was built. This collection of several
hundred works of art found together and dated by radiocarbon,
related to a stratigraphic sequence for the site as a whole, makes
possible a unique history of the art of this highland Andean
region. Professor Grieder describes the phases of development and
the symbolism of the previously little-known Recuay style of
pottery and attributes many works to individuals, illuminating the
role of artists and their relations with their patrons. Among the
author's discoveries is evidence of the use of potters' wheels and
lathes to make ceramic and stone vessels and ritual objects,
reversing the long-held contention that these tools were unknown in
Pre-Columbian America. The site and its contents are thoroughly
illustrated. The Art and Archaeology of Pashash will be valuable to
specialists in Andean archaeology as well as to those interested in
the art and culture of Pre-Columbian America.
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