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INDICE
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|Data base
The relevant data for this papel derive from the ongoing Sicán
Archaeological Project, which, since 1978, has explored the
historical trajectory and material, organizational, and ideological
characteristics of the Sicán culture within its regional context
(e.g., Shimada 1980, 1990, 1995). The "Sicán"
(also known as Lambayeque) culture, a highly distinct and
influential entity centered in the Lambayeque region of the northem
North Coast, emerged around AD. 750 following the demise of the
northern Mochica (or Moche; Shimada 1990, 1994a). During the middle
or "classic" phase dating to AD. 900-1100, its
polity, centered at the site of Sicán in the mid-La Leche valley
(Figs. 1,2), established political and religious dominance ayer a
400-km stretch of the Peruvian coast, from at least the Chira
valley in the north through the Chicama in the south. In fact, the
Middle Sicán style as represented by mold-made, black, single-spout
bottles bearing the diagnostic icon of the Sicán Deity, spread
rapidly and extensively ayer a much larger area, constituting the
only coastal "horizon style" known to date. The
Late Sicán polity with its new capital at El Purgatorio (or Túcume
Viejo) remained viable until ca. AD. 1375-1400 when it was
conquered by the expanding Chimú Kingdom (Table 1).
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Figure 2. Major architecture at the
site of Sicán. Drawing by I. Shimada.
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Holistic understanding of Sicán ceramic and metallurgical
production through sustained, interdisciplinary investigation has
been a basic, long-term aim of the Sicán Archaeological Project;
i.e., reconstruction of the technology and organization of these
crafts at all stages of production and to define the meaning and
roles of their products (e.g., Cleland and Shimada 1994, in press;
Merkeletal. 1994; Shimada 1985, 1994b; Shimada et al. 1982; Shimada
and Griffin 1994; Shimada and Merkel 1991). Much of the relevant
data have been derived from surveys and/or excavations of various
Sicán metallurgical (both arsenical correr and gold alloy) and
ceramic production sites. Our investigation of other crafts such as
weaving and lapidary has lagged behind largely due the paucity of
relevant materials and sites. However, ongoing investigations
following the recent discoveries of cotton cloth and massive
quantities of diverse beads in Middle Sicán elite tombs (e.g.,
Shimada et al. 1997) should redress the latter.
Excavations of three Middle Sicán elite tombs at or near the
monumental adobe-and-fill truncated pyramids of Huaca Loro and
Huaca Las Ventanas (Fig. 2) in 1991-2 and 1995 yielded specific
examples of cross-craft interplay considered in this paper. These
excavations are part of an interdisciplinary study of Middle Sicán
funerary practices and grave goods aimed at the clarification of
Sicán social organization that began in 1990 (e.g., Shimada 1995).
To date, tombs of varied size, shape and contexts have been sampled
at the site of Sicán.
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Figure 4. Reconstruction drawing of
the organization and content of the East Tomb. The superimposed
grave goods were compacted to a thickness of less than a meter.
Drawing by I. Shimada and C. Samillán.
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