Pukara, Puno

This article is about the archaeological site and its associated 'Pukara culture' in the Puno Region, Peru. For other uses, see Pukara (disambiguation).
Pukara

Iglesia de Santa Isabel de Pucará, Perú
Location Peru, Puno Region
Region Andes
Coordinates 15°02′43″S 70°22′22″W / 15.04528°S 70.37278°W / -15.04528; -70.37278Coordinates: 15°02′43″S 70°22′22″W / 15.04528°S 70.37278°W / -15.04528; -70.37278

Pukara, Puno (Aymara and Quechua for fortress, Hispanicized spellings Pucara, Pucará, also Pukará) is a town in the Puno Region, Lampa Province, Pucará District, Peru. It is located to the north-west of Lake Titicaca.

The ancient archaeological site of Pukara, dated as early as 1,800 BC, is located to the west of the town. The site is very large, spread in the area of approximately 4.2 km2. This was the first large urban center in the region. The site also gave its name to what some archaeologists refer to as a distinct 'Pukara culture'.[1] The site was declared a National Cultural Heritage (Patrimonio Cultural) of Peru by the National Institute of Culture.[1]

Ancient cultural center

The mountain overlooking the Pukara archaeological site

This was an important highland administrative and religious center.[2] There was a ceremonial sector and the urban sector or city. The ceremonial sector is composed of 9 pyramids of various shapes and sizes, the most important being the pyramid 'Kalasaya'.[3] This structure is built of large monoliths of finely crafted stone, and includes some sculptures. In front of the pyramid, there is a staircase to the upper temple decorated with stelae. There are also figures of mythological beings of men and animals, such as frogs, snakes, fish, and pumas.[4]

There was also a large sunken central court containing carved stone steles.[5]

Pukara culture

This was an influential culture north of Lake Titicaca, centred at Pukara. This culture incorporated earlier communities of the Chiripa period, and ultimately dominated the entire lake region by 200 BC.

The Pukara engaged in agriculture, herding and fishing. The population lived in small towns and villages, which was ruled from central location.[6]

Pukara ceramics are painted in various colours. They are finely made, and include many non-utilitarian forms, such as human and animal motifs.

Pukara pottery and textiles are found widely in the middle Andean, and the coastal Pacific valleys, reaching out into Peru and Chile.[6]

The rise of Tiwanaku may have contributed to the weakening of Pukara around 200 AD.

Qaluyu

The site of Qaluyu is 4 km from Pukara, and is the type-site of the Qaluyu culture that preceded the Pukara. Qaluyu is a moderate-sized mound (about 7 ha), and it was discovered by Manuel Chavez Ballon, and was test-excavated in 1955 by Alfred Kidder and Ballon.[7]

Qaluyu culture was the dominant early culture of the north Titicaca Basin, and it is dated traditionally to 1400–500 BC. There are Qaluyu occupations under the main temples at Pucara.

There are also several Qaluyu period settlements around the towns of Arapa and Taraco, and also in the Huancane-Putina river valley that have been discovered recently. Some of them are about 20ha in size, much bigger than Qaluyu. These areas are located about 40–60 km to the west of Pukara.

Near the town of Taraco, recent research[8] uncovered a long Qaluyu and Pucara archaeological sequence. There are also a great number of Qaluyu and Pucara stelae.[7]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pukara, Puno.

References

  1. 1 2 mincetur.gob.pe "Complejo arqueológico de Pukara", retrieved on January 27, 2014
  2. Complejo Arqueológico Kalasaya o Pucará rotasturisticas.com
  3. Not to be confused with the Kalasasaya structure at Tiwanaku
  4. COMPLEJO ARQUEOLOGICO DE PUKARA mincetur.gob.pe
  5. Puno: Impresionante complejo arquitectónico de kalasaya (FOTOS) peru.com
  6. 1 2 Initial Period Origins of Titicaca Basin Civilization unm.edu
  7. 1 2 Aimee M. Plourde and Charles Stanish (2005), The emergence of complex society in the Titicaca Basin: the view from the north academia.edu
  8. Stanish and Chavez, 2004
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