Huanca (monolith)

Last updated
Huanca in the Uquian ravag, on the way from Olleros to Chavin de Huantar, in the Huascaran National Park in Peru. Huanca en quebrada Uquian.jpg
Huanca in the Uquián ravag, on the way from Olleros to Chavín de Huántar, in the Huascarán National Park in Peru.

A huanca (in Quechua ancashino: wanka) [1] or chichic (tsitsiq) [2] is an elongated vertical stone considered sacred, with multiple symbolisms, in the Andean worldview. Huancas were worshipped and given rituals and offerings. [3] The stone placed at the top is called chacrayoc; (in Quechua of Ancash, chakrayuq or "lord of the chakra").

Contents

Huanca, while monoliths, are similar to totems (from the Ojibwa word ototeman, meaning 'he is my kinship') of the Native American peoples of North America, as they are considered sacred and can symbolize the ancestor of a community, and thus fulfil a tutelar function. They also resemble menhir , megalithic monuments built in the late Neolithic and Bronze Age in the western Mediterranean and Atlantic Europe. [4]

Geographical Distribution

Huancas are present in several places in the Ancash Andes. Many have been found in the Callejón de Huaylas in the provinces of Recuay, Huaraz (Huancajirca, Pesebre, Markahirka), Carhuaz (Piruro II), Yungay (Cotu, Marcayoc, Keushu), Caraz (Pueblo Viejo) and Sihuas (Huayubamba). Also, huancas have been discovered in Huamanga Province in Ayacucho, in the northern basin of Lake Titicaca in Peru's Puno region, and in Argentina's Salta and Tucumán provinces. [5]

Age

According to Francisco Bazán del Campo, the oldest huancas are approximately 5000 years old (from 4000 to 2000 BC), in the Late Precephalic, in places such as Caral and Bandurria. [6]

Meanings

The huanca in the Ancient Temple of Chavin de Huantar, still positioned in a place that would adapt to the concept of axis mundi referred to by Mircea Eliade. El Lanzon.jpg
The huanca in the Ancient Temple of Chavín de Huántar, still positioned in a place that would adapt to the concept of axis mundi referred to by Mircea Eliade.

Colonial chronicles and idolatry removal documents give us an idea of the meanings of huancas in the original Andean world. Rodrigo Hernández Príncipe, an idolatry visitor who lived between 1578 and 1638, told of the existence of a huanca in early Colony in Peru in the Callejón de Huaylas area:

"... a un cuarto de legua desta población muy antigua donde en un adoratorio rodeado de cantería y en medio hecho un caracol estaba su respetada y principal Huanca llamada Llamoq que era una piedra al modo de una calavera tan pesada como fiera que mirarla ponia horror estaba rodeada de muchos sacrificios adoráanla con airjuas y trompetas estos llactas y era huaca e la madre del cacique y los deste ayllo dijeron proceder de esta huaca..."

Hernandez Principe 1622 [7]

The term huaca today is popularly used to designate an archaeological site. However, according to ethnohistomical documents this concept referred to the sacrality of different things: stones, trees, places of nature, temples, people, animals and human experiences such as crying. Therefore, huancas are huacas: stones considered sacred to which rites and offerings were dedicated, had their own name and even indicated the place of origin of a community.

Likewise, according to a quote from another idolatry remover, the Spanish Jesuit Pablo José de Arriaga (who claimed to have destroyed 189 Huancas monoliths), who lived between 1564 and 1622, it follows that the stone represents the ancestors, who act as intermediaries between the terrestrial world and the divine world, and assist and complement the agricultural work by 'fertilising' the land.

"Chíchic o Huanca llaman una piedra larga, que suelen poner empinada en sus Chácaras, y la llaman también Chacrayoc, que es el Señor de la Chácara, porque piensan que aquella Chácra fué de aquella Huaca, y que tiene a cargo su augmento, y como tal la reverencian, y especialmente en tiempo de las sementeras le ofrecen sus sacrificios".

Arriaga, 1621 [8]

The cult of huancas was an Andean manifestation of the cult of the ancestors, which are a set of universal religious practices centered on the ancestors under the belief that they continue to care for their descendants. In the Andean world, each collective or ayllu had its own ancestors, and in the greater rank of these the founding ancestor was positioned, often depicted in stone as a huanca. Since the Andean worldview is animistic, the hills, lagoons and stones have life and are therefore subjects of worship. Centuries later, according to current studies, other practices such as the cult of the Mallqui (momias) are incorporated in chullpas, such as in the necropolis of Marcajirca in the province of Huari in Peru. [9]

Types and Functions

Huancas are typed accordingly:

by morphology:

By their function: [13]

Emblematic Huancas

Huanca Stone in Caral. PeruCaral14.jpg
Huanca Stone in Caral.

La Huanca de Caral

Another important huanca is located in front of one of the pyramidal buildings of Caral, an archaeological site on the central north coast of Peru, in the district of Supe, Barranca Province. In the Plazuela de La Huanca, at the front of the facade of one of the pyramids (Pyramidal Building La Huanca, Sector I in Caral Alto) is precisely a swell on the ground and is 2.15 m high. [16]

La Huanca de Chavín

The most emblematic huanca in the Andes of Peru is popularly known as the monolithic Lanzón, belonging to the archaeological Chavín culture that developed during the Early Horizon. It was the German explorer Ernst Wilhelm Middendorf  [ de ] who picked up the name huanca for perhaps the most important element of the Chavín de Huántar ceremonial center when he visited the village of the same name in the late nineteenth century. [18]

Related Research Articles

Department of Ancash Departments of Peru

Ancash is a department and region in northern Peru. It is bordered by the departments of La Libertad on the north, Huánuco and Pasco on the east, Lima on the south, and the Pacific Ocean on the west. Its capital is the city of Huaraz, and its largest city and port is Chimbote. The name of the region originates from the Quechua word anqash, from anqas ('blue') or from anka ('eagle').

Huaraz City in Ancash, Peru

Huaraz, founded as San Sebastián de Huaraz, is a city in Peru. It is the capital of the Ancash Region and the seat of government of Huaraz Province. The urban area's population is distributed over the districts of Huaraz and Independencia. The city is located in the middle of the Callejon de Huaylas valley and on the right side of the Santa river. The city has an elevation of approximately 3050 metres above sea level. The built-up area covers 8 km2 and has a population of 120,000 inhabitants, making it the second largest city in the central Peruvian Andes after the city of Huancayo. It is the 22nd largest city in Peru. Huaraz is the seat of the province's Roman Catholic Bishop and the site of the cathedral.

Yungay, Peru Town in Ancash, Peru

Yungay is a town in the Ancash Region in north central Peru, South America.

The Santa Valley is an inter-andean valley in the Ancash Region in the north-central highlands of Peru. Due to its location between two mountain ranges, it is known as Callejón de Huaylas, the Alley of Huaylas, whereas "Huaylas" refers to the territorial division's name during the Viceroyalty of Peru.

Lake Conococha

Lake Conococha is a South American lake located in the Andes mountains of northwestern Peru. It is located in the region of Ancash near the junction of the roads going from Callejón de Huaylas to Chiquián.

Huaraz Province Province in Ancash, Peru

The Huaraz Province is one of twenty provinces of the Ancash Region in Peru. It was created on August 5, 1857 during the presidency of Ramón Castilla. Geographically, the province is located over the Callejón de Huaylas and the western slopes of the Cordillera Negra.

Recuay District is one of ten districts of the province Recuay in Peru.

Recuay is a town in the Ancash Region, Peru. It is located at the border of the Santa River, 3422 msnm, and it the capital of the Recuay Province. it was created by law 11326 on April 14, 1950.

Rafael Larco Hoyle

Rafael Larco Hoyle, raised at Chiclin, his family's estate, was sent to school in Maryland, United States, at the age of twelve. He later entered Cornell University to study agricultural engineering and by 1923 returned to Peru to work on the family's sugar cane plantation. After spending most of his youth abroad, Larco Hoyle arrived to Peru with the eyes of an outsider. With this foreigner's curiosity he explored the country and discovered an ancient cultural patrimony in the north coast. Larco Hoyle recognized the need to house these objects in a safe place. It was at that point, Larco Hoyle dreamt of a museum, one like he had seen in the United States.

Huaca de Chena Former Inca fortress in Maipo Province, Chile

Huaca de Chena, also known as the Chena Pukara, is an Inca site on Chena Mountain, in the basin of San Bernardo, at the edge of the Calera de Tango and Maipo Province communes in Chile. Tala Canta Ilabe was the last Inca who celebrated Inti Raymi in its Ushnu.

Guitarrero Cave Archaeological site in Peru

Guitarrero Cave is located in the Callejón de Huaylas valley in Yungay Province, in the Ancash region of Peru. The cave stands 50 m (160 ft) above the Santa River and 2,580 m (8,460 ft) meters above sea level.

Taki Unquy was a millenarian Indigenous movement of political, religious and cultural dimensions which arose in the Peruvian Andes during the 16th century in opposition to the recent Spanish arrival.

Pocras were the ancient Wari culture inhabitants of the modern-day city of Huamanga, Peru before the Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire, bounded on the northwest by the Warivilcas, and on the southeast by the Rucanas and the Soras and on the east by the Mayonmarka near the Andahuaylas in La Mar (Chungui) in the current Peruvian province of Ayacucho. This culture was developed in the Middle Horizon and Late Intermediate cultural periods of Peru, from about CE 500 to 1000. Culturally the Pocras were outstanding in pottery, especially that found in Conchopata, Akuchimay, and behind Los Caballitos on the banks of Piñawa, Tenería or contemporary Alameda.

Mururaju, Murrorajo or Pongos Sur is a mountain in the Cordillera Blanca in the Andes of Peru, about 5,688 metres (18,661 ft) high. It is situated in the Ancash Region, Huari Province, Chavín de Huantar District and in the Recuay Province, Catac District. Mururaju lies southeast of Lake Querococha, northeast of the lake Qishqiqucha and south of Queshque.

Honcopampa or Joncopampa is an archaeological site in Peru. It is situated in the Ancash Region, Carhuaz Province, Aco District, at a height of about 3,500 metres (11,483 ft). Hunqupampa is considered one of the most important archaeological sites of the Callejón de Huaylas. It lies in the little populated place named Hunqupampa (Joncopampa).

Yanaqucha is a lake in the Cordillera Blanca in the Andes of Peru located in the Ancash Region, Huari Province, Chavín de Huantar District. It is situated at a height of about 4,314 metres (14,154 ft), about 800 metres (2,625 ft) long and 280 metres (919 ft) at its widest point. It has a depth of about 12 metres (39 ft). Yanaqucha lies in the Chacpar gorge north-west of Chavín de Huantar belonging to the Huascarán National Park. It supplies the local people with drinking water.

Andavite

Andavite or Chopiraju is a 5,518-metre-high (18,104 ft) mountain in the Cordillera Blanca in the Andes of Peru. It is located northeast of the village of Pitec, between Huaraz and Huari provinces in Ancash. Andavite lies northwest of Cayesh and southeast of Tullparaju. It is situated at the end of the Quilcayhuanca valley, southeast of a lake named Tullpacocha.

Recuay culture

The Recuay culture was a pre-Columbian culture of highland Peru that flourished from 200 BCE to 600 CE and was related to the Moche culture of the north coast. It is named after the Recuay District, in the Recuay Province, in the Ancash Region of Peru.

Caballo Muerto Archaeological site in Peru

Caballo Muerto is an archaeological complex located on the northern coast of Peru, in the Moche Valley, in the Laredo District of La Libertad Region. It represents a series of mound sites that span both the Initial Period and the Early Horizon.

Pampas Grande Village in Ancash, Peru

Pampas Grande, founded as San Jerónimo de Pampas, It is a Peruvian town, capital of the homonymous district, located in the central part of the so-called Callejón de Huaylas in the Ancash region, about 4 hours from Huaraz and 9 from Lima. It has an approximate population of 1044 inhabitants, located at an average altitude of 3690 m a.s.l. It has a cold climate with average temperatures of 17 °C in summer and 12 °C in winter.

References

  1. Julca Guerrero, Félix (2009). Quechua Ancashino - Una mirada actual (in European Spanish). Lima: Fondo Editorial del Pedagógico San Marcos. p. 397. ISBN   978-612-45425-4-1.
  2. Zuidema, Reiner Tom (1995). El sistema de ceques del Cuzco : la organización social de la capital de los Incas: con un ensayo preliminar (1st ed) (in European Spanish). Lima: Fondo Editorial de la Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. p. 188. ISBN   84-8390-999-5.
  3. Museo Nacional de la Cultura Peruana presenta conferencia ‘El mojón de piedra o huanca prehispánico y su pervivencia en la etnografía del Callejón de Huaylas». Ministerio de Cultura del Perú.18 June 2015.
  4. Fullola, Josep Mª; Nadal (2005). Introducción a la prehistoria. La evolución de la cultura humana (in Spanish). Barcelona: UOC. pp. 165–166. ISBN   84-9788-153-2.
  5. García Azcárate, Jorgelina (1996). Monolitos-Huancas: Un intento de explicación de las piedras de Tafí (Rep. Argentina) (in Spanish). Chungara Revista de Antropología Chilena (Arica: Departamento de Antropología de la Universidad de Tarapacá). pp. 159–174. ISSN   0717-7356.
  6. Bazán del Campo 2007: 7.
  7. Ibarra Asencios, Bebel (2013). Espacio y Cronología en la sierra de Norte del Perú: Balance de las Investigaciones Arqueológicas en la Provincia de Huari. Instituto de Estudios Huarinos. p. 42.
  8. Arriaga 1920 [1621]: 21.
  9. Ibarra Asencios, Bebel (2009). "Marcajirca: Cronología, Función y Muerte". En Ibarra Asencios, Bebel, ed. Historia Prehispánica de Huari: Desde Chavín hasta los Inkas 3000 años de Historia (Huari (Áncash, Perú) (in Spanish). Instituto de Estudios Huarinos). pp. 63–76. ISBN   978-603-45-4050-7.
  10. 1 2 3 Bazán del Campo 2007: 8-9.
  11. Sánchez García 2015: 9.
  12. 1 2 Sánchez García 2015: 4.
  13. Bazán del Campo 2007: 9-12.
  14. 1 2 Duviols 1979: 9.
  15. Albornoz en Duviols 1967: 24.
  16. 1 2 Shady Solís, Ruth; Cáceda Guillén, Daniel; Crispín Balta, Aldemar; Machacuay Romero, Marco; Novoa Bellota, Pedro; Quispe Loayza, Edna (2012). Caral. La civilización más antigua de las Américas: 15 años develando su historia, (in Spanish). Lima: Zona Arqueológica Caral-Supe: Ministerio de Cultura del Perú. p. 34. ISBN   978-612-45179-0-7.
  17. Middendorf, Ernst W (1900). Perú: observaciones y estudios del país y sus habitantes durante una permanencia de 25 años (in Spanish). Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos. p. 77. OCLC   5222026.
  18. Middendorf, Ernst Wilhelm (1895). PERU; Beobachtungen und Studien über das Land und seine Bewohner während eines 25 Jährigen Aufenthalts [PERÚ: Observaciones y estudios del pais y sus habitantes durante una permanencia de 25 años] (en alemán), Berlín: Meisenbach Riffarth & Co (in German). p. 77. ISBN   978-1-138-89899-8.