Artículos de revistas
Rituals and abandonment in Juella with the Inca conquest of Humahuaca, Jujuy, Argentina
Fecha
2017-11Registro en:
Leibowicz, Ivan Federico; Rituals and abandonment in Juella with the Inca conquest of Humahuaca, Jujuy, Argentina; Taylor & Francis; Time and Mind; 10; 4; 11-2017; 357-378
1751-696X
1751-6978
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Leibowicz, Ivan Federico
Resumen
The opening and closing of spaces have been extensively documented at an ethnographic level in the Andes. In an archaeological context, though I have numerous examples, there are not many examples that testify to the abandonment of a particular enclosure or settlement. However, with research and fieldwork undertaken in Juella, Quebrada de Humahuaca, Jujuy Province, I have made a significant archaeological discovery – that of Enclosure 94 (R94), which includes a door closure, the interment of a foetus in the occupation floor, and the intentional burial of some goods. I consider this activity as part of an occupation that is restricted to the Late Intermediate Period (ad 1250–1450), that the material found and analyzed here is related to ritual and ceremonial activity of the closure and also the symbolic ‘death’ of this space. Based on radiocarbon dates obtained from this particular enclosure and its relationship to the overall site, I believe that this deposition is not only associated with the abandonment of the structure, but it is closely linked to the site at a time of the Inca conquest of the region.