Núm. 33 (2023)

Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://54.81.141.168/handle/123456789/199362

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Nota Editorial
  • Nota Editorial Mauricio, Ana Cecilia; 1-2

  • Artículos de investigación
  • Caminos y puestos de avanzada de los Horizontes Medio y Tardío en la sierra de Nasca Edwards, Matthew J; Quiñónez Cuzcano, Patricia; 3-23
  • La cerámica del Período Intermedio Temprano en el valle de Asia, costa centro sur del Perú Angeles Falcón, Rommel; 24-42
  • Los caminos Wari entre Moquegua y Majes en el sur del Perú Williams, Patrick Ryan; 43-63

  • Estudios o reportes de caso
  • Resultados preliminares de la identificación de especies de flora y fauna del sitio Pampa de las Llamas-Moxeke Valqui Güimack, Miguel; Abad Lezama, Tatiana; 64-80
  • Resultados preliminares del análisis de la cerámica del sitio Pampa de las Llamas-Moxeke Condor Rojas, Gabriel; Milla Salazar, Rosa; Lopez Ramos, Angelica; Tumbalobos Tapia, José; Valqui Güimack, Miguel; 81-95
  • Primer reporte del Proyecto de Investigación Arqueológica en la Casa Hogar de la Niña Belén, entorno del Cuarto de Rescate de Atahualpa, Cajamarca-Perú Cusicanqui, Solsiré; Meneses, Jorge; Cerna Merino, Sandra; Silva, Dennys; Bello, José; García, Percy; 96-111
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      Los caminos Wari entre Moquegua y Majes en el sur del Perú
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2023-12-30) Williams, Patrick Ryan
      From its capital in the Ayacucho highlands of Peru, the Wari Empire spread its influence over 1300 lateral kilometers from Cajamarca in the north to Cuzco and Moquegua in the south. Along its southern periphery, Wari presence has been documented most convincingly between 1000 and 3000 meters in elevation in valleys such as the Ocoña, Majes, Sihuas, Vitor, Chili, and Moquegua, where archaeological survey has been carried out in parts of this 300-kilometer stretch of the southern Peruvian sierra. In this paper, I examine the evidence for a Wari southern road and the settlements that connected the far southern part of Peru and eventually to the Ayacucho heartland to the north. I argue that the quichua ecological niche is a primary focus of Wari cultural landscapes and dictated the placement of the principal Wari road network. I further examine the organization of settlement along the proposed royal road, as well as the symbolic and demographic components of its route. Finally, I investigate the role of the Wari road in promulgating a Wari imperial political economy in the far south.