- Killke culture
The
Killke culture occupied the region aroundCusco from 900 to 1200 A.D., prior to the arrival of theInca s in the1200 s. [ [http://edition.cnn.com/2008/TECH/03/15/peru.temple.ap/index.html Pre-Inca temple uncovered in Peru - CNN.com ] ]Killke culture flourished in highland
Peru in the Late Intermediate Period around what is nowCuzco . The massive fortressSacsayhuamán , was later used by theIncas , was originally built by people of this culture in the twelfth century. In 2007, excavations uncovered a temple on the edge of the fortress, indicating religious as well as military use of the facility. [ [http://www.comcast.net/news/index.jsp?cat=GENERAL&fn=/2008/03/14/911994.html&cookieattempt=1 NEWS - Comcast.net ] ]Archaeologists discovered, on
March 13 ,2008 , the ruins of an another ancient temple, roadway and irrigation systems atSacsayhuamán , overlooking theInca capital ofCuzco . Part of the temple was destroyed by dynamite blasts in the early 20th century, when the site was used as a stone quarry. The new excavations began in June 2007 and will continue for another five years to 2012. [CNN, [http://edition.cnn.com/2008/TECH/03/15/peru.temple.ap/index.html Pre-Inca temple uncovered in Peru] .March 15 ,2008 .]Killke ceramics were first identified by
John H. Rowe , though identified by him as early Inca. The vessels are often globular with vertical strap-handles, with simple linear geometric decorations of black or black on red over a white or buff slip [Rowe, John Howland, "An Introduction to the Archaeology of Cusco,"Papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University" 27 (2); Rowe, John Howland "Inca Culture,"B.A.E." 21:200 ] .ee also
*
Huari culture
*History of the Incas References
Bibliography
* Dwyer, E. B. 1971. "The Early Inca Occupation of the Valley of Cuzco, Peru." Unpublished PhD thesis, University of California, Berkeley.
* Ixer, R. A. "The Petrography of Certain Pre-Spanish Pottery from Peru," http://www.goodprovenance.com/incapots.htm. Accessed 15 March, 2008.
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