Artigo Revisado por pares

Torata Alta: An Inka Administrative Center and Spanish Colonial Reduccion in Moquegua, Peru

2012; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 23; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.7183/1045-6635.23.1.3

ISSN

2325-5080

Autores

Prudence M. Rice,

Tópico(s)

Politics and Society in Latin America

Resumo

Abstract The hilltop site of Torata Alta displays a gridded site plan characteristic of Inka and Spanish colonial settlement planning, and it is now evident that the site’s brief history represents both occupations. Torata Alta began as a colony established by the Inka in the agriculturally rich Torata Valley and was settled by their Altiplano allies, the Lupaqa, in the Lake Titicaca Basin. Sometime during the early 1570s, as part of Spanish colonial administrative reforms, the community became a reducción resettlement of native Andeans drawn from small nearby hamlets. A church and ancillary buildings were constructed in the site center, and investigated structures include a beer-brewing facility and residences for textile-producing elites. In 1600, the eruption of Huaynaputina volcano and its accompanying earthquake swarm destroyed the church and covered the site with a layer of ash. Torata Alta’s residents continued living there but suffered another earthquake in 1604. The community appears to have been largely abandoned by the end of the first quarter of the seventeenth century, the residents moving down to the valley settlement that became modern Torata.

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