Want to build a Directory
you can be proud of?
Latest news

Bob Dylan's Specifically-Made 'Brazil Series' on Display in Denmark's National Gallery

COPENHAGEN (AP).- Denmark's National Gallery is displaying...

Sep 3, 2010

Bonhams to Sell Album of Paintings of Australia's Famed Wine Growing Region

 

LONDON.- An album of paintings...

Sep 3, 2010

Sprüth Magers Presents First Solo Exhibition by Barbara Kruger in Berlin

BERLIN.- Sprüth Magers presents the first solo exhibition by American artist Barbara Kruger in Berlin. The...

Sep 3, 2010

Larry Gagosian to Open New Gallery in Paris in October

PARIS.- On October 20, 2010 Gagosian will inaugurate a new gallery in Paris.

Gagosian Gallery of...

Sep 3, 2010

New Head of Exhibitions and Displays for Tate Liverpool

LIVERPOOL.- Tate Liverpool announced the appointment of Gavin Delahunty to the position of Head of Exhibitions and...

Sep 3, 2010

Six-Month Restoration Ends of Vincent Van Gogh's "Bedroom"

AMSTERDAM (AP).- Vincent van Gogh must have been horrified when he returned from the hospital to his studio in Arles early in 1889 to find one of his favorite paintings...

Sep 3, 2010

Bridget Riley and Wolfgang Tillmans Among Highlights of Frieze Talks

 

LONDON.- Ramin Bahrani, Susan...

Sep 3, 2010

Istituto Veneto di Scienze Shows Stanley Kubrick, the Photographer

 

VENICE.- Love of the...

Sep 3, 2010

Landmark New Sculpture by Acclaimed Artist Peter Randall-Page for Dulwich

LONDON.- On 14 September the Dulwich Picture Gallery will unveil a new, permanent sculpture in its grounds. Walking the Dog by acclaimed artist Peter Randall-Page is being...

Sep 3, 2010

Canadian Pavilion in Venice: Hylozoic Ground by Philip Beesley

 

VENICE.- For the 12th...

Sep 3, 2010

Search by articles
Search by articles

Archaeologists Find Hall for Human Sacrifice in Northern Coast of Peru

 

LIMA (REUTERS).- An ancient ceremonial ground used by a Pre-Columbian civilization for human sacrifices has been uncovered on Peru's northern coast, archaeologists said on Thursday.

The discovery appears to reinforce prevailing theories about a ceremony known as "the presentation" that was carried out by the Moche people, an agricultural civilization that flourished between 100 B.C. and 800 A.D.

Carlos Wester La Torre, director of the Bruning Museum in Peru and a leader of the dig, said the ceremonial site likely hosted ritual killings of prisoners of war.

Photographs taken at the site show more than half a dozen skeletons on the floor of the hall.

"There was a great ceremonial hall or passage integrated into the rest of the architecture that establishes the presence of certain figures of the Moche elite and also the practice of complex rituals such as human sacrifice," Wester told Reuters.

His team uncovered a 60-meter-long (197-foot-long) corridor opening up to face three equidistant porticos and five thrones on the archaeological site's main pyramid.

The remnants of a mural found within the corridor depict three high priests whose ornamentation confirms the involvement of the culture's political leadership in the ceremony, he said.

Peru is believed to be one of the places in the world where agriculture first developed and has hundreds of ancient archaeological sites, including the Inca ruins of Machu Picchu.

(Reporting by Emily Schmall; Editing by Terry Wade and Sandra Maler)


 

posted on Jul 24, 2010

Bottom Banners
Accounts area
Username:
Password:
Forgot password? Register