Explorando por Autor "Noack, Karoline"
Mostrando 1 - 3 de 3
- Resultados por página
- Opciones de ordenación
Ítem Acceso Abierto El cacicazgo de Huamán dentro de la juridicción de Trujillo, siglo XVII : desarrollo de su estructura y principios de organización(Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Instituto Riva Agüero, 1997) Noack, KarolineNo contiene resumenÍtem Acceso Abierto Los caciques ante el notario : transformaciones culturales en el siglo XVI(Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2001) Noack, KarolineUn propósito principal de los etnohistoriadores que trabajamos sobre América Latina es el estudio de la sociedad indígena, aplicando una combinación interdisciplinaria de métodos históricos dentro de un marco teórico antropológico de análisis. Para muchos investigadores, más tentadora sería, todavía, la posibilidad de reconstruir el pasado prehispánico de los Andes a partir de los documentos administrativos y jurídicos coloniales, ya que carecemos de fuentes primarias escritas del periodo anterior a la conquista.Ítem Texto completo enlazado Paisajes de dependencia en Cochabamba durante el Tawantinsuyu y la colonia temprana(Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2024-11-01) Gabelmann, Olga; Noack, KarolineOne of the major transformations of the landscape and ecosystem that the Cochabamba Valley underwent was due to the conquest by the Incas, which caused the displacement of its population and the relocation of mitimaes from all parts of Tawantinsuyu to work the newly expropriated state lands. Thus, the valley became a new centre of dependency and consolidation of the Inca state. Only shortly afterwards, the Spanish conquest, through new displacements of labour, created colonial dependencies, but based on already-existing structures, especially on the state farms. The lands themselves became the nucleus of colonial exploitation and therefore the focus of conflicts between Spaniards and indigenous people, but also between the indigenous people themselves. Our aim is to understand the intertwining of the dependencies created in the course of both conquests, which were reflected in various modifications of the landscape and ecosystem. To do so, we innovatively use combined archaeological (GIS mapping, survey, excavation) and ethnohistorical (data systematisation and toponymy) methods, so as to understand the location and use of land in the changing dependency landscapes of the Cochabamba valley from the Late Intermediate Period (1000/1100-1470 AD) to the early colonial period (1538-1700 AD).