Cochasquí
Location | Ecuador |
---|---|
Coordinates | 00°03′24″N 78°18′37″W / 0.05667°N 78.31028°W |
Type | Settlement |
History | |
Founded | c. 950-1530 CE |
Site notes | |
Condition | In ruins |
Cochasquí is one of the most extensive and most important complexes of pre-Columbian and pre-Inca Empire ruins in northern Ecuador.[1] The site lies some 30 kilometres (19 mi) northeast of Quito in Pedro Moncayo Canton in Pichincha Province at 3,040 metres (9,970 ft) above sea level.[2]
The archaeological park of Cochasqui covers 84 hectares (210 acres) and consists of 15 truncated pyramids and 21 burial mounds, locally called tolas. The site also has several small museums: an archaeological museum, two ethnographic museums, a botanical garden, and a museum with musical instruments and other items. The Mojanda volcano with a maximum elevation of 4,263 metres (13,986 ft) looms over the site.
Description
[edit]The pyramids and other features of Cochasqui were constructed between 950 CE and the Spanish conquest in the 1530s. Their construction is attributed by archaeologists to the Quitu-Cara culture of the Cara people and/or the Caranqui people. The Cara and the Caranqui may have been the same people. Prior to the Inca conquest in the late 15th century, the Andes area of northern Ecuador seems to have been divided into many chiefdoms or statelets made up of people with similar languages and cultures. The Cayambe chiefdom may have controlled the Cochasqui area when the Incas arrived.[3]
The 15 pyramids at Cochasqui include nine with ramps and six without ramps. The largest pyramid is number nine which is 90 metres (300 ft) north to south and 80 metres (260 ft) east to west. It is 21 metres (69 ft) high. The ramp leading to the pyramid is 200 metres (660 ft) long.[4] The primary construction material used in the pyramids is a soft volcanic stone called cangahua. Vulnerable to weathering and erosion the pyramids have survived because they were overgrown with grass.[5]
Archaeologists have theorized that Cochasqui was a ceremonial and astronomical center, used for meteorological purposes to calculate solstices and aid in determining when crops should be planted. Leaders and the elite may have lived on the flat-topped pyramids and the site may have had military and political importance. The tolas were used as burial mounds as many skeletons have been discovered there.[6]
Archaeologists estimate that the pre-Columbian community of Cochasqui, including the intensely-cultivated farmland surrounding the pyramids and tolas, supported a population of 3,000 people.[7]
Importance
[edit]The Inca assault on Cochasqui probably began at the same time or just after the Inca victory, after a long struggle, at the Pambamarca Fortress Complex, 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) to the southeast. In the opinion of one scholar, Pambamarca fell to the Incas about 1505.[8]
Cochasqui has acquired a symbolic importance in the history of Ecuador. A legend describes the Inca conquest of Cochasqui, including the union of Quilago (born c. 1485), the Queen of Cochasqui and the Inca Emperor, Huayna Capac. For a two-year period, the Incas were unable to defeat the armies of Quilago. Finally overcome, Quilago was taken captive and forced to marry Huayna Capac. In some accounts, the offspring of this union was the future emperor Atahualpa.[9]
Quilago prepared a trap to murder Huayna Capac in her bedchamber, but was betrayed by her servants and executed. The defeat of Quilago enabled the Inca to extend their conquests to northernmost Ecuador, defeating the Caranqui in the battle of Yawarkucha.[10]
This legend has deep roots in Ecuador. A Spanish chronicler described a performance in Quito in 1613 portraying the struggle between the Inca invader and Cochasqui and the relationship between the Inca Emperor and the warrior queen. The legend explains the national origin of Ecuador as a union between the conquering Incas and the Ecuadorian Indians who struggled against foreign domination and repression, first against the Incas and later against the Spanish. Cochasqui is an important place for ceremonies, traditional dances, shamanistic rituals, and marriages with the emphasis on getting in touch with the ancestry of the modern-day country of Ecuador.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ Benavides, O. Hugo (2004), Making Ecuadorian Histories, Austin: University of Texas Press, p. 3. Downloaded from Project MUSE.
- ^ Google Earth
- ^ "Cochasqui guarda evidencias de la civilización preinca,", El Telegrafo, http://www.eltelegrafo.com.ec/noticias/regional-norte/1/cochasqui-guarda-evidencias-de-la-civilizacion-preinca, accessed 23 May 2017
- ^ Benavides, p. 4
- ^ Skurdenis, Julie (1987), "Ecuador's Precolumbian Heritage", Archaeology, vol, 40, No. 4, p. 65
- ^ Skurdenis, pp. 65-72
- ^ Newson, Linda A. (1995), Life and Death in Early Colonial Ecuador, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, p. 38
- ^ Anderson, Amber M. (2013). "War and Conquest: Inca strategies and struggles in Northern Ecuador". Retrieved 27 May 2017.
- ^ Silverman, Helaine; Isbell, William (2008). Handbook of South American Archaeology. Springer Science and Business Media. p. 1067.
- ^ Benavides, pp 70-71; http://www.eltelegrafo.com.ec/noticias/regional-norte/1/cochasqui-guarda-evidencias-de-la-civilizacion-preinca
- ^ Benavides, pp. 72-79