The bioarchaeology of Wari collapse in Cuzco, Peru: A study of health and trauma from the Middle Horizon-Late Intermediate Period transition at Cotocotuyoc

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The bioarchaeology of Wari collapse in Cuzco, Peru: A study of health and trauma from the Middle Horizon-Late Intermediate Period transition at Cotocotuyoc
Abstract
Drawing on research conducted in Cuzco, Peru, The Wari Civilization and Their Descendants: Imperial Transformation in Pre-Inca Cuzco, Peru analyzes the political and social transformations that led to the downfall of the Wari civilization in the Andean Middle Horizon period (AD 500–1000) and resulted in the rise of the Inca state. The contributors to this collection present evidence of the Wari civilization’s robust, imperialistic occupation of Cuzco, and argue that this presence laid the groundwork for later regional polities that can be traced to the Late Horizon Inca period (AD 1476–1532). This collection fills a gap in scholarly literature on Cuzco prehistory, the provincial southern highlands of the Wari civilization, and early imperialism in the Andes.
Book Title
The Wari Civilization and Their Descendants: Imperial Transformation in Pre-Inca Cuzco
Date
January 15, 2020
Publisher
Lexington Books
Citation Key
andrushkoBioarchaeologyWariCollapse2020
Language
English
Library Catalog
Amazon
Citation
Andrushko, V. (2020). The bioarchaeology of Wari collapse in Cuzco, Peru: A study of health and trauma from the Middle Horizon-Late Intermediate Period transition at Cotocotuyoc. In M. Glowacki & G. F. McEwan (Eds.), The Wari Civilization and Their Descendants: Imperial Transformation in Pre-Inca Cuzco. Lexington Books.