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The Oaxaca Barrio in Teotihuacan: Mortuary Customs and Ethnicity in Mesoamerica's Greatest MetropolisPalomares Rodriguez, Maria Teresa 01 August 2013 (has links)
This research examines the mortuary customs of the Oaxaca Barrio, one of the foreign settlements in the ancient city of Teotihuacan. The Oaxaca Barrio is associated with the Zapotec homeland in the state of Oaxaca, southern Mexico (roughly 290 miles); but many questions remain unanswered about its origins and development. The mortuary customs of the Oaxaca Barrio show how Zapotec migrants adapted to living in Teotihuacan over a considerable period of time, maintaining aspects of their homeland identity, but also generating a new cultural repertoire by which members of the enclave redefined themselves. The presence of Zapotec people in Teotihuacan has at least three distinct moments or contexts: its origins in a time of Zapotec expansion (200 B.C), the formal settlement of the Oaxaca Barrio (A.D 100), and much later in time, when the barrio shows a hybridization process with singular characteristics (A.D 300). I address in this research two important questions: Why did Zapotec migrants keep their mortuary traditions? How did migrant identity change over time? To answer these questions I present in five chapters general characteristics of the Oaxaca Barrio, theoretical concepts, and archaeological evidence that support the analysis and discussion developed about this foreign group, and finally its mortuary customs and the relationship with its ethnicity. The Zapotec migration to Teotihuacan is important because social, political, economic and ideological aspects are involved, and this topic is not only useful to archaeological studies (in one of the most important cities in Mesoamerica), also it is helpful to anthropological research about modern migrations, and studies of identity and ethnicity in the contemporary world. In Chapter I, I present a general view of the Oaxaca Barrio in Teotihuacan, the chronology and a brief review of the situation in the Zapotec area and Teotihuacan at the moment of the Oaxaca Barrio's foundation, and a general idea of the mortuary customs in each place; also in this chapter I mention the objectives of this investigation and its limits. Chapter II mentions the main theoretical concepts related with this investigation: ethnicity and hybridization, I also approach the main ideas and hypotheses about the political and social structure in the Oaxaca Barrio. Later in Chapter III, I describe the most important archaeological evidence found in each compound excavated until now in the Oaxaca Barrio, and Chapter IV shows the archaeological record of mortuary customs identified in this foreign settlement; in this section I describe four important and basic elements in the mortuary system: type of burial, offerings and practice of funerary rites, and urns. And finally in Chapter V, I present the discussion of each element, making a comparison with funerary practices and characteristics in the Zapotec area, mainly Monte Alban, and Teotihuacan culture; also in this last chapter I mention how could be the syncretism-hybridization process of this foreign settlement, mainly identified through its funerary customs.
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Proyecto de excavaciones en Paloma, valle de Chilca, PerúBenfer, Robert Alfred 10 April 2018 (has links)
Excavations Project at Paloma, Chilca Valley, PerúThe preceramic site of Paloma (12b-VII-613), Chilca Valley, Peru, was excavated over a number of seasons, first by Frédéric-André Engel and Bernardino Ojeda and later by Robert A. Benfer, Jr., in a joint project with the original investigators. The project was a multidisciplinary investigation of the largest site of its time period, 7800 to 4700 B.P. The Hypsithermal time of global warming, 6500-5000 B.P. was optimal for the central coast due to an increase in moisture. The principle occupation of Paloma, strata 300 and 200, were during the Hypsithermal. We studied the adjustments to sedentary life from an exceptionally extensive series of studies of the consequences of this life registered in the skeletons and teeth of the 201 individuals excavated from in and around over 50 domestic structures in 1900 square meters of excavations. Principal findings from the study of the human remains along with studies of animal and plant remains have been summarized elsewhere (Benfer 1990). Here I present details of the excavation and the stratigraphy of the site. In addition, new data are presented from analyses of mortuary customs and plant use. / El sitio precerámico de Paloma (12b-VII-613) se ubica en el valle de Chilca, Perú y fue excavado durante varias temporadas, originalmente por F. Engel y B. Ojeda y luego por R. Benfer, Jr. Este último dirigió una investigación multidisciplinaria del sitio ocupado entre 7800 hasta 4700 a.p. La epoca hipsitermal del calentamiento global (6500-5000 a.p.) fue el periodo más favorable para la Costa Central debido al aumento de humedad a la que corresponde la ocupación principal de Paloma (estratos 300 y 200). El autor investigó las adaptaciones a la vida sedentaria desde una serie extensiva y excepcional de estudios para encontrar las consecuencias de esta vida, registrada en los esqueletos y dientes de los 201 individuos excavados dentro y alrededor de más de 50 estructuras domésticas en 1900 m2 excavados. Los principales hallazgos de restos humanos así como restos vegetales y animales han sido resumidos anteriormente (Benfer 1990). Aquí se presentan detalles de las excavaciones y de la estratigrafía del sitio, así como nuevos datos producto de los análisis de las costumbres de los entierros y del uso de plantas.
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