essay
Chavin, the early horizon and the initial period
origins and development of the andean state • Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] • Published In 1987 • Pages: 36-46
By: Pozorski, Thomas George, Pozorski, Shelia Griffis.
Abstract
The authors reassess existing definitions of the Initial Period and Early Horizon, considering evidence from ceramics, absolute dating, iconography, and architecture, and including a discussion of Preceramic through Early Period polities and interactions (only information pertaining to the Late Formative and Early Horizon or Period is relevant to this collection). They show that coastal sites attributed to the Early Horizon predate by up to a millennium highland sites attributed to the same time period on the basis of traits like decorative friezes. Therefore, late Early Horizon Chavín can no longer be considered the "Mother Culture" of later Andean civilizations, for states originated during the Initial Period of the north and central coast, with the Chavín phenomenon radiating from the highland site of Chavín de Huántar now appearing to be a disruptive amalgamation of existing, external traits instead of an original, unifying concept.
- HRAF PubDate
- 2015
- Region
- South America
- Sub Region
- Central Andes
- Document Type
- essay
- Evaluation
- Creator Type
- Archaeologist
- Document Rating
- 4: Excellent Secondary Data
- 5: Excellent Primary Data
- Analyst
- Sarah Berry; 2012
- Field Date
- no date
- Coverage Date
- 3800-2200 BP (1800-200 BC)
- Coverage Place
- La Libertad, Ancash, Huánaco, and Lima regions, (north-central coast and highland) Peru
- Notes
- Thomas Pozorski and Shelia Pozorski
- For bibliographical references see document 8: Haas (1987, References cited)
- LCCN
- 86019332
- LCSH
- Andes Region--Antiquities