St Andrews (UK), Aug 14 (The Conversation) — The ancient Inca empire had a unique method of record-keeping: knotted cords known as khipus. These cords documented various aspects of Incan life, such as economics, religion, demographics, and history. Until recently, researchers believed that only elite officials, who lived lavishly, had the knowledge to create these khipus. The absence of direct evidence about these khipu experts led researchers to depend on descriptions from Spanish colonial chroniclers.
In the Inca tradition, there was no distinction between "author" and "scribe"; the two roles were unified. The term for an Inca khipu maker, "khipu kamayuq," originates from the verb "kamay," which means to create or energize matter. These experts, called "kamayuq," were thought to imbue their vitality into the khipus they crafted.
However, my research team has uncovered evidence suggesting that commoners also crafted khipus in the Inca empire. This discovery implies that khipu literacy extended beyond previously thought boundaries. Our breakthrough realization was that khipu experts would "sign" their khipus with locks of their hair. In Inca cosmology, hair contained a person's essence, retaining identity even when separated from the individual. A child's first haircut was a significant rite, with the hair offered to the gods or kept as sacred. An Inca emperor's hair, preserved during his lifetime, was fashioned into a simulacrum after his death and revered as the emperor himself.
When human hair appeared on khipus, it served as the "signature" of the khipu maker. Our team witnessed this in Jucul, a Peruvian highland village, where villagers have over 90 ancestral khipus, some several centuries old. On these khipus, hair on the primary cord signifies who crafted each section. Past findings indicate highland Peruvian herders also tied hair to khipus to denote responsibility for the encoded information. Other items, such as insignia strips tied to the cord, can represent the khipu's creator, infusing it with their authority.
In khipus containing data from multiple people, information was marked using pendant bands of uniform color or included hair from various individuals. Analyzing a specific Inca-era khipu, designated KH0631, we discovered its primary cord was entirely made from one person's hair. Since khipus hadn't previously been checked for human hair, the frequency of this practice remains unknown.
The KH0631 hair, representing over eight years of growth, was folded and twisted into the khipu. We conducted isotopic analysis on a hair sample to determine the creator's life and diet. A diet rich in meat and maize often signified high status, while tubers and greens indicated a commoner. Results showed the KH0631 creator followed the latter diet, suggesting their status as a commoner living in the highlands with minimal seafood intake.
While the exact location within the Andes remains undetermined, the oxygen and hydrogen isotopes indicate a residence at high altitudes in southern Peru or northern Chile. This isotopic analysis of khipu fibers, illuminating the maker's identity, allows us to re-evaluate previous assumptions about khipu creation. Our evidence suggests that not only elites but commoners too crafted khipus, revealing a broader scope of khipu literacy than once believed.
(The Conversation) NPK NPK
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