1 / 48

Early South American Civilization: The Chavin (1200-250 B.C.E.)

Early South American Civilization: The Chavin (1200-250 B.C.E.). Chapter 2 / Section 3 FINISHED!!!. South America. The Chavin in the Andes. The Chavin in the Andes. The Center of the Chavin and there Areas of Influence. “Cleaned-Up” Satellite Image of the Peru. Geography.

Download Presentation

Early South American Civilization: The Chavin (1200-250 B.C.E.)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Early South American Civilization: The Chavin(1200-250 B.C.E.) Chapter 2 / Section 3 FINISHED!!!

  2. South America

  3. The Chavin in the Andes

  4. The Chavin in the Andes

  5. The Center of the Chavin and there Areas of Influence

  6. “Cleaned-Up” Satellite Image of the Peru

  7. Geography • Mountain Core (Andes Mountains) • Arid costal plain • Dense interior jungles

  8. Andes Mountains of Peru

  9. Agricultural Terraces in the Foothills of Peru

  10. Coastal Plains of Peru

  11. Interior Jungles of Peru

  12. Diverse environment • The development of specialized regional production • Complex social institutions • Characteristic cultural values ↓ • Interregional exchanges • Shared labor responsibilities

  13. Earliest Urban Centers: Villages along the coastal plain or in the foothills near the coast Why there? Reasons: 1) Dependable food supply (fish & mollusks) 2) Trade in seafood for corn & textiles → Cultural exchange: ceremonial practices, religious beliefs, & art

  14. Mollusks: abalone, clams, oysters, snails

  15. Mollusks cont.: octopus, squid

  16. Caral in the Supe Valley(2600 B.C.E.) Characteristics considered hallmarks of later Andean civilizations: • Ceremonial plazas • Pyramids • Elevated platforms and mounds • Extensive irrigation works → Population of thousands → Political structure capable of organizing maritime & agricultural trade over a broad area

  17. Caral in the Supe Valley

  18. Caral in the Supe Valley

  19. The Chavin • Early South American civilization • Capital: Chavin de Huantar (cha-BEAN day WAHN-tar) • At an elevation of 13,000 ft • North of today’s city of Lima (today’s capital city of Peru)

  20. Chavin de Hunatar(a World Heritage Site)

  21. Chavin de Huantar Plaza

  22. Underground Chamber

  23. Densely populated region • Connected the Peruvian coastal plains, the Andean foothills, & the tropical lowlands of the eastern Andes → Control of trade by Chavin’s political elite → Economic advantage & influence over their rivals → Dominance as a ceremonial & commercial center

  24. So, what made Chavin trade so influential? • Introduction of maize cultivation from Mesoamerica  increased food supplies on the coastal plains and the foothills  population growth  urbanization  Chavin grew

  25. As Chavin grew  trade b/w the coast and a) the high mountain valleys (quinoa, potatoes, & llamas) b) the jungle (coca leaves & fruits)

  26. Quinoa

  27. Coca Leaves

  28. The Significance of the Llama • First domesticated in the mountainous interior of Peru • Provided meat, wool, & transportation • Could carry up to 70 lbs (human: 50 lbs) • Promoted specialization of production and increased trade • Llamas to Peru: Camels to trans-Saharan trade

  29. Consequences of trade & urbanization: • Communal work • Reciprocal labor organization ↓ Construction & maintenance of: • Roads, bridges • Temples, palaces • Irrigation, drainage • Textile production

  30. Chavin de Huantar Temple

  31. Columns of the Temple

  32. Water Ditch in Chavin de Huantar

  33. Carved Pillar & Stone Face Inside and Outside the Temple

  34. How did reciprocal labor organization work? • Groups of related families • Held land together • Claimed descent from a common ancestor • Referred to one another as brothers and sisters • Obligated to help one another

  35. Material Culture 1) Architectural style: • Large complex of multilevel platforms • Small buildings on the platforms (rituals or elite residences) • Construction materials: packed earth, rubble, cut stone, or adobe (sun-dried clay bricks & straw) • Buildings decorated w/ relief carvings (serpents, condors, jaguars, humans)

  36. 2) Metallurgy: a) High-quality, 3D silver, gold, & gold alloy ornaments b) Only used by the elite or in religious rituals c) Most common decorative motif: jaguar-man (similar to the Olmec symbol)

  37. 3) Pottery styles:

  38. Chavin Religious Beliefs • Jaguar-man • An enduring image of religious authority • A vehicle through which the gods could act in the world of humans

  39. Diffusion of Chavin culture over a wide area: The Chavin must have imposed on their neighbors: • Some form of political integration • Trade dependency ↑ Needed military power to accomplish them.

  40. The Chavin must have also had a convincing religious system and rituals that attracted other people • Chavin de Huantar also served as a pilgrimage site

  41. The Chavin Social Structure • Religious elite: priests • Political elite: king / local chiefs (differences in dress styles: high-quality textiles, gold crowns, breastplates, jewelry) • Skilled artisans

  42. Chavin Textiles

  43. Chavin Gold Jewelry

  44. What happened to the Chavin? • No evidence of conquest or rebellion • Historians do not know the exact cause • BUT, they do know: • Increased warfare in the region (at around 200 B.C.E)  • Disrupted trade & undermined the authority of the political elite

More Related