Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 334
Trim: 7⅜ x 10¼
978-0-7591-2362-5 • Hardback • June 2015 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-7591-2363-2 • eBook • June 2015 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
Gary Urton is Dumbarton Oaks Professor of Pre-Columbian Studies at Harvard University. His publications include At the Crossroads of the Earth and the Sky, The History of a Myth, The Social Life of Numbers,Inca Myths and Signs of the Inka Khipu. Adriana von Hagen is cofounder of the Museo Leymebamba in Chachapoyas, Peru, and writes on the archaeology of Peru. Her publications include The Incas and The Cities of the Ancient Andes (both with Craig Morris).
Among recent works in Inca studies, there is nothing quite comparable to this reference work designed for the curious to follow cross-references and seek out both the classic and current sources mentioned in bibliographies accompanying each of its 130-plus brief topical and biographical entries. Editors Urton and von Hagen contribute about half of the entries, while the remainder are by 33 specialists in disciplines spanning archaeology, anthropology, ethnohistory, art, architecture, materials science, linguistics, history, bioanthropology, ethnomusicology, and museology. . . .The Rowman and Littlefield encyclopedia is well structured for its purpose...with a table of contents of entries arranged A-Z, another divided into historic personages and thematic topics, and a list of contributors with affiliations. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All libraries. All levels.
— Choice Reviews
While the Inca Empire was the largest in the pre-Columbian New World, until recent decades it had drawn less scholarly attention than the Maya and Aztecs. Editors Urton (pre-Columbian Studies, Harvard Univ.) and Peruvian archaeologist von Hagen have gathered 35 Inca specialists to describe key elements of an empire that extended from Colombia to Chile and encompassed coastal plains, mountains, and tropical forests. The Incas did not invent a writing system but used quipus (knotted string devices) for record keeping. There are fascinating entries on fortifications, and their extraordinary road and bridge network, which was some 25,000 miles long, linked Cuzco to the rest of the empire and featured roadside lodgings called tambos every ten to 15 miles. Specialists and students alike will reap the benefits of this helpful reference.
— Library Journal
Urton and von Hagen present an encyclopedia that has a broad introduction outlining the main themes of their volume before presenting material in an accessible format that can be considered current, accurate and comprehensive. Encyclopedia of the Incas at once presents its reader with a fascinating array of information but leaves them with many questions. For scholars, this will be ideal, leading to new branches of knowledge and research. For amateurs, it provides a further investigation into a fascinating culture with an emphasis not only on the people but also on their invaders. Fascinating, unique and important, this is a well-presented and important work.
— Reference Reviews
Thirty-five specialists from varied disciplines and with distinct points of view contributed to this Encyclopedia of the Incas, the first of its kind. The challenge of the editors, Gary Urton and Adriana von Hagen, was to assemble an organic array of authors and entries that would result in a work capable of synthesizing the vast body of knowledge on the Incas in a comprehensive, detailed and authoritative fashion. At the same time, the volume is accessible to a non-specialist, English speaking audience; which, for historical and geopolitical reasons, is not very familiar with the world created by the lords of Cuzco. Through a careful selection that does not omit a single central aspect of Inca civilization and that also includes specific features of the most diverse nature, the editors have minimized the potential randomness implicit in any selection of this type while at the same time skirting the restrictions proper to the academic genre to which the work belongs.
— José Carlos de la Puente; Revista Andina
This comprehensive book features an expert cast of authors and a rich narrative that illuminates the Inca. Sections combining ethnographic, ethnohistoric, and archaeological data are particularly well-written. It is a valuable reference in general, but also (and surprisingly for an encyclopedia) a solid resource for scholars who will benefit from its interpretive strengths and bibliographic references.
— Ryan Williams, The Field Museum
First encyclopedic reference on the Incas geared toward students and non-specialist readers.
Cross-referencing within entries knits the volume together and leads readers to related subjects of interest.
Includes both information about Inca culture/society and the major contributions made to its study by leading scholars.
Suggestions for further reading—both print and digital—as well as links to online archives round out each entry; most (though not all) are references to English-language resources.
Contributors offer expertise from a variety of disciplines including but not limited to anthropology, archaeology, geography, and history.
128 entries explore the culture and society of this South American civilization—the only major ancient New World civilization south of the Equator.
Thematic table of contents highlights major subject areas covered by the entries, while the alphabetical table of contents makes things simple to find for a general reader.
Includes entries focus on 32 of the major Spanish chroniclers of Inca civilization.
Features a comprehensive index.
Sample Topics:
Acllacuna (“Chosen Women”)
Architecture
Astronomy
Battles, Ritual
Capac Hucha (royal sacrificial victims)
Ceques
Crime and Punishment
Ethnicity
Foodstuffs, Domestic
Myths, Origin
Pachacamac
Quipus (“Knots”)
Sapa Inca
Tambos (“Roadside Lodgings”)
Vilcabamba
Weaving and Textiles
• Winner, Library Journal Best Reference of 2015