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008 230420b1981 us q|||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aBO-LpMNE
041 _aeng
092 _sE
_aAMER-ANT/vol.46(1)/ Jan. 1981
100 1 _aConrad, Geoffrey W.
245 _aCultural materialism, split inheritance, and the expansion of ancient peruvian empires.
_cGeoffrey W. Conrad
260 _aEstados Unidos-US :
_bSociety for American Archaeology,
_c1981.
300 _apáginas 3-26:
_bilustraciones blanco y negro
310 _aTrimestral
362 _avol.46; n.1 (Jan. 1981)
490 _aAmerican Antiquity. Journal of the Society for American Archaeology ;
_vno.1
520 _aArchaeological and ethnohistoric data on the Chimu and Inca empires, two prehistoric. Peruvian states that shared a number of organizational features, are used to test the theory of cultural materialism. Materialism explanations of inca expansionism are evaluated; they are shown to be unconvincing in the inca case and inapplicable to the Chimu. An anternative model is proposed that emphasizes the role of a particular legal principle, split inheritance. The presence of split inheritance in the two empires is documented. It is argued that in both cases split inheritance originated through manipulation of traditional elements of Andean idelogy, was the driving force behind imperial expansion, and generated administrative and economic stresses eventually leading to imperial collapse. This model avoids the flaws of the materialist explanations it is intended to replace and the theory of cultural mateiralism is rejected.
653 _aANTROPOLOGIA
653 _aSOCIOLOGIA
653 _aMATERIALISMO CULTURAL
653 _aINCAS
653 _aCULTURA CHIMU
773 0 _0300499
_976414
_aSociety for American Archaeology
_dEstados Unidos-US : Society for American Archaeology, 1981.
_oHEMREV005119
_tAmerican Antiquity. Journal of the Society for American Archaeology;
_w(BO-LP-MUSEF)MUSEF-HEM-PPE-091117
810 _aSoociety for American Archaeology.
850 _aBO-LpMNE
901 _aCarla Nina Lopez
942 _2ddc
_aBIB
_bBIB
_cPPE
_dCON
_fDON
_g2018-10-16
_j011
999 _c300502
_d300502