COMPARISON BETWEEN TWO INCA SITES, LOCATED NORTH AND SOUTH OF THE TROPIC OF CAPRICORN
Keywords:
El Shincal – Pumpu – The Capricorn Tropics - landscape – ushnu - huacaAbstract
The importance of perceptions of geographical latitude and its calendrical properties have been emphasized
in studies of cultural astronomy (Broda 2004), as well as the link that is generated between the landscapes
that serve as horizons and the observations themselves, especially solar.
The pre-Hispanic world views, quite possibly, were heavily loaded with dualistic perspectives, especially
the astronomical phenomena among the American tropics (Isbell 1982: 354). The search for temporary refer
ents, especially seasonal associating them with contrasting moments such as sowing activities in front of
harvest, with positions of the sun, both in the zenith and in the nadir.
In this context in Inca archeology, spatial configurations have been identified, which could be qualified as
ritual landscapes, constituted by carefully designed settlements and their corresponding geography of the
environment, immediate geography as well as geographical aspects at great distances. Settlements and ge
ographies closely linked by scheduled ritual activities, such as pilgrimage tours, territorial exercises and
memory constructions. These particular configurations were denominated as Cuzco, which the Inca society
replicated in several territories and many of them to great distances at continental level (Hylop 1990, Far
rington 1999), while Cuzco represented a concept goes beyond trying to repeat Symbolic spaces in the Inca
foundations in the wamanis (spaces where certain ancestors exercised territoriality), in an attempt to hier
archize the spaces as part of a process of constitution and unification of the Tawantinsuyu. In this sense, in
the "New Cuzcos" we find manifestations of the Inka ideology, but these are not copies or repetitions of their
imperial capital, but they sought to adapt to particular situations in the conquered territories (Pino Matos
2004). The strategy of appropriation of the conquered sacred sites was based on the re-signification of the
local huacas (deities and ancestors located in notable aspects of geography) in function of a significant solar
phenomenon, (Example: In Chinchaycocha, the ushnu de Pumpu is in the direction of an important local
mountain -Nevado de Ulcumayu-, that coincides with the sunrise the day of the passage of this star by the
zenith (Pino Matos and Moreano Montalvan 2014), in the Shincal, the ushnu is oriented towards the sunrise
at the middle temporal equinox and towards huacas in the eastern and western hills.
In the present work, two sites will be analyzed, one in Argentina and the other in Peru, trying to understand
the management of time and the construction of ritual landscapes at different latitudes during the Inca period.