| Human Sacrifices
at the Huaca de la Luna
Scenes
of human sacrifice are often portrayed in Moche
murals and on ceramics. Archaeological evidence
for human sacrifice among the Moche includes men,
women, and children who accompanied lords or dignitaries
to the afterlife. In 1995, Steve Bourget, a member
of the Archaeological Project Huaca de la Luna,
uncovered 42 skeletons of adolescent and young
men who had been sacrificed in Plaza 3, located
between Platforms I and II, where a small rock
formation resembles Cerro Blanco looming behind.
Is this a simplified version of the sacrifice
on the mountain scene often shown in Moche narrative
art? All the evidence seems to indicate that this
is so. These mass sacrifice rituals did not occur
regularly. The thick layers of sediment in which
excavators found the bones of the sacrificed victims
indicate that these rites took place during heavy
rains brought on by an El Niño event. These
rains caused extensive flooding, which destroyed
irrigation canals and field systems and affected
the economy and central power structure of Moche
society.
As we have pointed out, the multicolored murals
in the interior patios and the images represented
there probably portray the Decapitator, the Moche
deity to whom victims were sacrificed in propitiatory
rites to ensure the fertility of crops as well
as the continuity of the structure of Moche society.
We propose that these sacrifice rituals may have
taken place at the Huaca de la Luna and especially
in the patio whose friezes display the image of
the Decapitator.
In
sum, the Huaca de la Luna served as the principal
Moche temple where the rites and central ceremonies
that guaranteed the renewal of Moche ideological
power, on the one hand, and the renewal of power
of the gods' alteregos who governed Moche society,
on the other. In this same view, the preparatory
ceremonies of funerary offerings and rites formed
part of the temple's central activities. In addition,
it was also the setting for propitiatory cults
dedicated to agricultural fertility, as much as
the coming of water in the rivers as the fertility
of the agricultural fields.
The
lack of a scientific explanation for death formed
the basis for the creation of a complex ideological
system where life and death formed a basic unit.
Yet it was death that spawned the principal ceremonies
and rites in Moche times: the construction of
temples, burials and sacrifices, etc. For the
Moche, death had become a part of life and although
they could not understand it, this was no obstacle
to making it a part of their rituals. In this
way, death and the dead led separate lives: they
danced, feasted and reproduced themselves in the
same way as their living counterparts. This is
why the Moche believed that the dead should be
offered all that was necessary for their voyage
to the afterlife. They believed that the dead
had to be respected and remembered, for their
ancestors were the intermediaries that assured
the continuity of the system as a whole. Hence,
the dead were venerated and remembered in well
established ceremonies that marked the Moche religious
calendar.
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