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Cupisnique

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Ancient pottery from the Cupisnique culture on display at the Larco Museum in Lima, Peru.

The Cupisnique culture was a group of people who lived a long time ago, from about 1500 to 500 BC, along the northern coast of what we now call Peru. They built their homes using a special kind of clay called adobe, which made their buildings unique and interesting.

Stirrup-handled Cupinisque ceramic vase 1250 BC (Larco Museum collection)

Artifacts, or old objects made by the Cupisnique people, show that they shared many artistic styles and religious symbols with another culture called the Chavin culture. The Chavin culture came after the Cupisnique but lived in the same area, which helps us understand how different groups of people influenced each other long ago.

The Cupisnique and the Chavin

The relationship between the Chavin culture and the Cupisnique culture is not fully understood, and the names are sometimes used to mean the same thing. Some experts think the Cupisnique culture lasted from 1000 to 200 BC, a time some link to the Chavin culture. Others think the Cupisnique may have been an earlier form of the Mochica culture.

In 2008, a Cupisnique temple made of adobe was found in the Lambayeque valley near the archaeological site of Ventarron. This temple is close to another temple at Ventarron and is in an area known as "Collud". The temple helps show the link between the Cupisnique and the Chavin because they share similar designs. Later, the Chavin people built a temple nearby about three hundred years after the Cupisnique temple.

Cupisnique ceramic bottle depicting a feline with rounded ears, a distinctive characteristic of the ocelot (Musée du quai Branly, Paris)

The three temples are close together and form one archaeological site. They share many design elements. The leader of the team, Walter Alva, said, "Cupisnique and Chavin shared the same gods and similar building and art styles."

The Cupisnique and the Moche

Cupisnique ceramic bottle 1000–800 B.C., with caiman body and feline head. Met Museum, NYC

The Moche and the Cupisnique cultures are sometimes thought to be the same because they share similar designs on their pottery. The Moche were a lively culture that lived near the Cupisnique people. They all depended on farming and fishing and had different levels of society, including regular people, middle class, and leaders.

One big similarity between the Cupisnique and the Moche is that both had special images showing characters in unusual forms. In Cupisnique art, these characters appear in five different forms: human, monster, bird, fish, and spider. The Moche had these same five forms plus two more: crab and scorpion. Scholars think this shared style was not just by chance, but that the Moche took on beliefs from the Cupisnique.

Because we do not have much direct information about how Cupisnique society was organized or how they lived, some people refer to them as a special group. Their buildings were decorated with colorful designs showing strange creatures. The Cupisnique’s designs were important to religion and influenced later cultures like the Salinar, Vicus, Gallinazo, and the Moche.

Other Cupisnique sites

One of the most important Cupisnique sites is Caballo Muerto in the Moche Valley.

In 2008, archaeologists dug at the Cupisnique site of Limoncarro in the Guadalupe District, Pacasmayo, La Libertad Region of northern Peru's coast. They found two building phases and uncovered animal faces showing Cupisnique style.

Kuntur Wasi is another site influenced by the Cupisnique culture.

Cupisnique mirrors

Archaeologists found mirrors made between 900 and 200 BC at places where the Cupisnique people lived. These mirrors could show clear and bright reflections.

Images

Ancient Moche pottery from around 300 AD featuring a spider design, showcasing traditional art from Peru.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Cupisnique, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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