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Antiquities of South America
"We are but where we were,
Still wandering in a City of the Dead!" Rogers.
AT the Spanish discovery, South America, like the Northern continent, was, in a
great portion, peopled by half-savage tribes, resembling the Indians of our own
country. Some powerful and partially civilized kingdoms, however, yet survived,
and of these, the empire of the Peruvian Incas was the first. Under the sway of
these powerful sovereigns was comprehended an extensive district, lying along
the Pacific coast for many hundreds of miles. Other nations, in their vicinity,
of whose history we are ignorant, also possessed a considerable share of power
and independent government.
The antiquities of these regions, so similar to those of the Northern continent,
appear to prove a similarity of origin in their founders. Very numerous mounds
occur, some of them two hundred feet in height, and containing relics of the
dead. Urns of fine construction, and human bodies interred in a sitting posture,
have been excavated. Embalming has evidently been extensively practiced, and in
many instances the arid nature of the soil, without this precaution, has
preserved the bodies of its ancient inhabit ants. Caverns appear to have been
frequently adopted as cemeteries. In one of these, six hundred skeletons were
found, bent double, and regularly arranged in baskets. Stone tombs, of a very
massive construction, have also been disinhumed.
In these mounds and graves are found a great variety of ancient implements, of
gold, copper, and stone. Exquisite carvings in stone, and jewels evincing great
skill in the lapidary, have been discovered. The idols of gold and copper are
often of singular construction, being formed of thin plates of metal, hammered
into their respective shapes, without a single seam. Stone mirrors and vases of
marble, weapons, domestic utensils, cotton cloth of fine texture, and the
implements of ancient mining, have also been frequently brought to light.
The system of ancient agriculture and of artificial irrigation appears to have
been extremely ingenious, and well adapted to the nature of the soil and
climate, reminding us strongly of the Chinese industry in effecting similar
objects. The steepest mountains were laid out in terraces, and aqueducts of the
most solid and durable construction conveyed water for domestic uses, and the
fertilization of land. In some instances, the pipes of these aqueducts were of
gold a circumstance, which excited the cupidity of the Spaniards, and
contributed to their destruction.
The public roads and causeways laid out by this ancient people may justly
compete with the most celebrated works of the same kind in the old world. Their
Cyclopean architecture, and the ingenuity with which the greatest natural
difficulties have been overcome, excite the admiration of travelers and
inquirers. " We were surprised," says Humboldt, " to find at this place (Assuay),
and at heights which greatly surpass the top of the Peak of Teneriffe, the
magnificent remains of a road constructed by the Incas of Peru. This Causeway,
lined with freestone, may be compared to the finest Roman roads I have seen, in
Italy, France, or Spain. It is perfectly straight, and keeps the same direction
for six or eight thousand meters. We ob served the continuation of this road
near Caxamarca, one hundred and twenty leagues to the south of Assuay, and it is
believed, in the country, that it led as far as the city of Cuzco." When
complete, it extended from Cuzco to Quito, a distance of five hundred leagues.
"One of these great roads passed through the plains near the sea, and the other
over the mountains in the interior. Augustin de Carate says that for the
construction of the road over the mountains, they were compelled to cut away
rocks, and to fill up chasms, often from ninety to one hundred and twenty feet
deep, and that when it was first made, it was so plain and level, that a
carriage might easily pass over it; and of the other, which pursued a less
difficult route, that it was forty feet wide, and as it was carried through
valleys, in order to avoid the trouble of rising and descending, it was
constructed upon a high embankment of earth."3
The ruins of many edifices, all of massive construction, and all bearing the
marks of similarity of origin, are scattered throughout a great expanse of
country. In the ancient city of Tiahuanaco, built before the days of the Incas,
the architecture appears to have been of the most massive character, reminding
us of the Cyclopean structures at Baalbec and Mycenae. Immense porches and
doorways, each formed of a single stone, and supported on masses of similar
magnitude, struck the early travelers with astonishment. In Cuzco, the city of
the Incas, are many remains of a singular character. The walls are built of
stones, of great dimensions, and, though of many angles, fitted so accurately
that the interstices can scarcely be seen. On a round mountain near Caxamarca,
are the extensive ruins of a city, built in terraces, and constructed of such
enormous stones, that a single slab often forms the entire side of an apartment.
Above these circular terraces, seven in number, appear the remains of a great
for tress or palace. Many cities of a similar construction have been discovered.
In some instances, pointed or bell-shaped roofs, composed of stones laid in
cement, have been remarked. Some of the ruins are constructed of unburnt brick,
exceedingly hardened by the sun.
Many sculptures, evincing great skill and delicacy, still exist. These are the
more remarkable when it is considered that the chief instruments of the ancient
inhabitants were, probably, for the most part, composed only of hardened copper.
Of this material, their weapons, often of exquisite manufacture, were composed.
Far to the northward, beyond the dominion of the Incas, inscriptions and figures
may be found sculptured on the rocks. " On the banks of the Orinoco, and in
various parts of Guiana, there are rude figures traced upon granite and other
hard stones, some of them, like those in the United States, cut at an immense
height upon the face of perpendicular rocks. They represent the sun and moon,
tigers, crocodiles, and snakes, and occasionally they appear to be
hieroglyphical figures, and regular characters."
The surprising number of these ruins and relics, and the great space over which
they extend, indicate the existence, for many ages, of a people possessing all
the power which regular government, settled institutions, and national character
can give. " In examining," says Mr. Bradford, "the line of civilization, as
indicated at present by these ancient remains, which is found to commence on the
plains of Varinas, and to extend thence to the ruins of the stone edifices,
which were observed about the middle of the last century, on the road over the
Andes, in the province of Cujo, in Chili, or to the road described by the Jesuit
Imonsff, or to the ancient aqueducts upon the banks of the river Maypocho, in
south latitude thirty-three degrees, sixteen minutes, we are surprised to
discover a continuous, unbroken chain of these relics of aboriginal
civilization. Reverting to the epoch of their construction, we are presented
with the astonishing spectacle of a great race cultivating the earth, and
possessing many of the arts diffused at an early period through an immense
territory, three thousand miles in extent. Even up to the time of the discovery,
most of this vast region was occupied by populous tribes, who were dependent
upon agriculture for subsistence, were clothed, and in the enjoyment of regular
systems of religion, and their own peculiar forms of government. From conquest,
and various causes, some sovereignties had increased more rapidly than others;
but still, whether we are guided by the testimony of the Spanish invaders, or by
the internal evidence yet existent in the ancient ruins, it is impossible not to
trace, alike in their manners, customs, and physical appearance, and in the
general similitude observable in the character of their monuments, that they
were all members of the same family of the human race, and probably of identical
origin."
Indian Races of
North and South America
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Indian Races of North and South America, By Charles De Wolf Brownell, 1865
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