Vasijas para la fiesta y la fama: producción artesanal en un centro urbano huari

2000 
Pottery for Celebration and Fame: Ceramic Artisan Production in a Huari Urban Center Recent excavations at the Huari site of Conchopata have suggested that the southern sector of the large urban center may have served, at least during one occupation phase, as a residential-artisan area where elite and utilitarian pottery was made. This site has yielded hundreds of tools associated with pottery production, including polishers, molds, and multipurpose andesite hoes, along with several firing pit kilns and firing areas as well as the so-called Huari Middle Horizon ceramic "offerings". In this paper, we examine the spatial distribution and contexts of pottery-making tools, firing areas, and "offerings" within the architecturally defined rooms, plazas, and D-shaped structures. We conclude that the potters of Conchopata both lived and worked in this part of the settlement. They were highly specialized potters who likely belonged to the elite households and produced pottery and other ceramic objects for ceremonial and domestic purposes in workshops that were located inside, or adjacent, to large household compounds. This form of pottery production does not fit traditional organizational models, but instead appears to reflect a new type of craft production arrangement in the Huari imperial heartland.
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