2000 to 1000 BCE
2000 BCE The Temple of the Crossed Hands, a large square building with
mud reliefs of crossed human arms in an interior chamber, is built at Kotosh in
the north central Andean highlands. Constructed on top of an earlier building,
it too will function as a base for a later structure. Objects of baked clay are
associated with the temple; fired clay bowls appear at the site about 200 years
later.
1800 BCE El Paraíso, one of a number of
significant centers on Peru's central Pacific coast, is inland from the
seashore and uses quarried stone for ceremonial buildings and platform mounds,
the latter arranged in a U shape. Located near arable land, El Paraíso
undertakes agricultural irrigation. These central coast developments are
umbrellaed by the term Manchay.
1700 BCE Construction begins on the
pyramid at the site of Cerro
Sechin in the north-central
valley of Casma. Built of conical adobes set in clay mortar, the pyramid is
placed at the base of a hill and is quadrangular in plan. Smaller buildings
flank each side.
1600 BCE Ceramic vessels at Ecuador's Valdivian centers undergo formal and decorative changes.
Machalilla ceramics replace Validivian ones, with a significant addition of the
stirrup spout bottle. The bottle, where two spouts join to become one terminal,
is much favored in northwest South America for hundreds of years.
1500 BCE The Huaca
de los Reyes, a grand building complex of plazas, sunken courts, colonnades,
towers, and adobe sculptures, is built of stone and clay mortar at the site of
Caballo Muerto in Peru's Moche Valley. It is but one of the impressive building
complexes of the period on the north and central Pacific coast of Peru.
1500 BCE Gold is hammered into thin
foil and placed in the hands and mouth of a youth upon burial at the central
highland site of Waywaka in Peru. The gold foil is the first evidence for the
working of metals in South America.
1450 BCE Garagay in the Rimac Valley
friezes of finely modeled clay decorate a temple wall. Painted yellow, blue,
red and white, the friezes depict fanged supernaturals combining elements of
spiders with anthropomorphic features.
1400 BCE The site of Cotocollao north
of Quito, where ceramic vessels show similarities to those of Machalilla and
later Chorrera ones, maintains trading contacts with the coast.
1350 BCE In Peru's Lurín Valley, an
anthropomorphic figure over two feet high, and made of a bottle gourd painted
with polychrome slip is buried in a temple mound at the site of Mina Perdida.
Perhaps the representation of a mythic ancestor, the image has a prominent
upper lip from which six large canines protrude.
1300 BCE At Cerro Sechin a stone
wall is built around the stepped pyramid and its outer buildings. The slabs are
embellished with shallowly engraved images of warriors and rulers as well as images of dismembered human
figures.
1200 BCE Rich burials placed in the
Cupisnique quebrada between the northern Peruvian valleys of Chicama and
Jequetepeque include numerous ceramic stirrup spout vessels of distinctive,
sculptural style. Cupisnique has given its name to the cultural developments of
this period on the wider north coast.
1200 BCE Chorrera ceramics of southwest
Ecuador develop out of earlier Valdivia and Machalilla traditions. The
techniques are further refined with well-finished surfaces and an include many
forms.
1200 BCE Machalilla ceramic vessels are
traded long distances from the coast. They have been found at Narrío sites in
the highlands and at Tayo Cave on eastern slopes of the Andes.
1100 BCE A large flat-topped
mound known today as the Old Temple at the site of Chavín de Huántar is built.
At a height of 9800 feet in the Andes' Callejón de Conchucos, its U-shaped
structure is similar to that of earlier coastal buildings. Its core is made of
rubble and covered with polished slabs of granite, sandstone, and limestone.
1100 BCE The architectural complex at
Cardal in Peru's Lurin Valley has several rectangular plazas, ten sunken
circular courts, and a central pyramid with a stairway more than eighteen feet
wide. Its rubble core is surfaced with white clay. A relief band of giant
interlocking teeth and upper fangs decorates the walls of the entryway to the
central atrium.
Works of Art:

The Temple of the Crossed Hands.

Adobe reliefs in the Temple of the Crossed Hands.

Reconstruction drawing of the U- Shaped Huaca la Florida, Rimac Valley, 2000 BCE.

Head at Huaca del los Reyes.

Cerro Sechin's walled temple.


Cerro Sechin Reliefs

Spouted Bottle
Ecuador, Chorrera
Ceramic

Stirrup- Spout Bottle
Peru
Ceramic
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