Inca rule in Caspana: an approach to Andean political thinking (Loa River, northern Chile)
Abstract
This paper presents the archaeological record for five late pre-Hispanic sites located in Caspana, in order to discuss Inca expansion in the upper river Loa basin (Atacama Desert). A first categorization of these sites enables to establish a distinction between: a) locals settlements with low presence of inca features –the case of Aldea Talikuna and Estancia Mulorojte; b) pure inca settlements, which include Cerro Verde, Incahuasi Inca and Vega Salada –mineral, agricultural and/or cattle sites, and c) shared settlements where both identities are displayed in a symbolically laden context –like Los Abuelos cemetery. Our analysis of the material culture associated to these sites suggests a set of significant differences and similarities that would be the result of a direct and planned ruling strategy deployed by the Inca State through elaborately complex symbolical means.Downloads
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Published
2005-03-27
Issue
Section
Arqueología
License
All works published in Revista Estudios Atacameños (ISSN on line:0718-1043) Revista Estudios Atacameños Creative Commons International 4.0 attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence.
Authors remain the owners of their work and may republish their articles elsewhere without having to request permission, as long as they indicate that the work was originally published in Revista Estudios Atacameños (ISSN on liine:0718-1043).
How to Cite
Adán Alfaro, L., & Uribe Rodríguez, M. I. (2005). Inca rule in Caspana: an approach to Andean political thinking (Loa River, northern Chile). Estudios atacameños, 29, 41-64. https://estudiosatacamenos.ucn.cl/index.php/estudios-atacamenos/article/view/566