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Cultures of Ancient Peru

Rooms 2, 3, 4

Ancient Peruvians honored their gods with offerings and ceremonies and paid homage to their dead. The works of art that we see in museums were not usually objects intended for daily use. Although some of their apparently utilitarian forms may suggest such usages, their real function was to serve as spiritual rather than earthly objects.

As westernized people of the 21st century we no longer organize our societies in relation to life after death. It might be said that we pay homage to life itself, to our existence in the here and now. This way of thinking can make it difficult for us to understand ancient cultures like those which existed in Peru. These societies practiced the cult of the dead, and this enabled their people to make contact with other worlds: the underworld, inhabited by the dead, and the world above, which was where the gods dwelled.

In order to gain favor with the gods, people were obliged to perform ceremonies, leave offerings and make sacrifices. The population was also obliged to build tombs and perform elaborate funerary rites so that after their death their leaders would be transformed into ancestors. It was believed that the ancestors of the community had the power to ensure that society and the universe as a whole would continue to exist. In the chiefdoms, states and empires of ancient Peru, the death of leaders (chieftains, lords, priests, priestesses or emperors) was a crucial event.

Ceramics have always been seen by researchers as a rich source of information regarding diverse aspects of the societies that produced them. Pre-Columbian cultures have been defined to a great degree by the stylistic and iconographic characteristics of their ceramics. Because ceramics vary over time and space they also serve to establish local and regional cultural chronologies.

Paiján
Room 2, Vitrine 3
Queneto
Room 2, Vitrine 4
Pacopampa Stone Mortars
Room 2, Vitrine 5
Cupisnique
Room 2, Vitrine 6
Virú
Room 2, Vitrine 9
Salinar
Room 2, Vitrine 13
Vicús
Room 2, Vitrine 14
Mochica Sculptural Ceramics
Room 2, Vitrine 15
Mochica Fine Line Pottery
Room 2, Vitrine 16
Owl God
Room 2, Vitrine 17
The Journeys of Ai Apaec
Room 2, Vitrine 18

Mochica Phases
Room 3, Vitrine 19
Mochica Portrait Vessels
Room 3, Vitrine 20

Pottery Technology
Room 3, Vitrine 21
Northern Huari
Room 3, Vitrine 22
Lambayeque
Room 3, Vitrine 23
Chimú
Room 3, Vitrine 24
Inca
Room 3, Vitrine 25
Chimú Inca
Room 3, Vitrine 26
Chimú Idol
Room 3, Vitrine 27
Colonial Pottery
Room 3, Vitrine 28
Lima-Nievería
Room 3, Vitrine 29
Central Huari
Room 3, Vitrine 30
Chancay
Room 3, Vitrine 31
Pachacamac
Room 3, Vitrine 32
Paracas Pottery
Room 4, Vitrine 33
Nasca Culture
Room 4, Vitrine 34
Nasca Drum
Room 4, Vitrine 35

Nasca Pottery
Room 4, Vitrine 36
Southern Huari
Room 4, Vitrine 37
Chincha
Room 4, Vitrine 38
Keros
Room 4, Vitrine 41
Inca Aryballos
Room 4, Vitrine 42
Inca
Room 4, Vitrine 43
Cajamarca
Room 4, Vitrine 44
Tiahuanaco
Room 4, Vitrine 45
Santa
Room 4, Vitrine 46