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The High Mummies
Written By Liesl Clark
Mummies of the World |
The High Mummies |
Preserving a Mummy |
Sarita's Land
High Sacrifice
He has delicate fingers and hugs his knees, one foot over the other, as if to
keep warm. His hair is plaited in more than 200 braids, and miniature idols
and keepsakes accompany him in his frozen tomb. Dead for 500 years, this Inca
sacrificial mummy found on Chile's El Plomo Peak has opened the door to further
inquiry into the strange and mysterious ritual life of the Inca. There may be
hundreds of Inca children, sacrificed in Inca times nearly 500 years ago,
entombed in graves of ice atop the western hemisphere's highest peaks. To
date, over 115 sacred Inca ceremonial sites have been excavated at an elevation
over 15,000 feet on some 30 Andean peaks. These high mountain sanctuaries dot
the Andes from central Chile to southern Peru. All of the sites are located in
the region of the two southernmost Inca quarters, or "suyus," but only a few of
these remote and icy summits have yielded finds of much archeological value.
The discovery by Johan Reinhard of "Juanita," an Inca ice maiden found atop
Mount Ampato in 1995, is the most recent—and some say the most revealing—addition to scientists' understanding of Inca life and culture.
Mountain Worship
The Incas worshipped the high peaks that pierce the South American skies.
These rugged summits represented a means of approaching the Sun God, Inti, the
center of their religion, and many sacrifices were made atop these cold and
unpredictable pinnacles. Mountain deities were seen as lords of the forces of
nature who presided over crops and livestock. In essence they were the
protectors of the Inca people, the keepers of life who reached up toward the
skies where the sacred condor soared.
Many theories exist about why the Incas performed ritual ceremonies, which
sometimes included human sacrifices, at elevations approaching 23,000 feet.
Most scholars agree that the purpose of the sacrifice, known as "capacocha,"
was to appease the mountain gods and to assure rain, abundant crops,
protection, and order for the Inca people. Sacrifices often coincided with
remarkable occasions: earthquakes, eclipses, droughts. On these occasions the
Incas were required to offer valuables from the highest regions they could
reach—the ice-clad summits of Andean peaks. Truly auspicious events, such
as the death of an emperor, prompted human sacrifices, perhaps to provide an
escort for the emperor on his journey to the Other World.
The fact that many high elevation sacrificial sites are located near
trans-mountain roads suggests that sacrifices were also made in conjunction
with the expansion of the Inca civilization itself. The extensive roads in the
southernmost regions were integral to the expansion of the empire southward.
Especially important were the trans-mountain, or east-west, roads, which linked
north-south running ranges and valleys over high-mountain passes. Near such
routes, the Incas chose high peaks, climbed them, built their platforms, and
made sacrifices, sometimes human, to assure safe continued passage and to bless
the roads. The mummy of a young boy on Mount Aconcagua, discovered in 1985,
could be one such sacrifice. His tomb is near one of the most important
trans-mountain paths which today is virtually the same route as the major
international highway linking Argentina and Chile.
Continue
Photos: (1) courtesy Chris Openshaw; (2) courtesy Micheal Barnes; (3) courtesy Chris
Openshaw.
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