Killke culture

E55698

The Killke culture was a pre-Inca civilization in the Cusco and Sacred Valley region of Peru, known for its distinctive pottery and as a precursor to Inca architectural and cultural developments.


Statements (47)
Predicate Object
instanceOf archaeological culture
pre-Inca culture
archaeologicalSite Cusco Basin sites
Sacsayhuamán area (pre-Inca levels)
associatedWith early occupation of Sacsayhuamán hilltop
capital Cusco area
chronologicalRelation immediately precedes Inca expansion in Cusco
chronologyStatus defined primarily by ceramic typology
country Peru
culturalContinuityWith Inca culture
culturalSphere Central Andes
economy agriculture
pastoralism
regional trade
endTime c. 1200 CE
floruit c. 1000–1200 CE
hasArchaeologicalEvidence architectural remains
ceramic assemblages
settlement patterns in Cusco Basin
influenced Inca architecture
Inca ceramic styles
Inca urban planning
knownFor black-on-red ceramics
distinctive pottery
incised pottery designs
occupation of Cusco region before Incas
precursor to Inca architecture
stone masonry traditions
languageFamily Quechuan languages (hypothesized)
locatedIn Andes
Cusco region
Peru
Sacred Valley
materialCulture coarse-tempered ceramics
decorated serving vessels
utilitarian pottery
partOf Andean civilizations
pre-Columbian cultures of South America
predecessorOf Inca Empire
Inca culture
region south-central highlands of Peru
regionType highland culture
religion Andean polytheism
startTime c. 900 CE
successorCulture Inca Empire
timePeriod Late Intermediate Period
used terrace agriculture (early forms)

Referenced by (1)
Subject (surface form when different) Predicate
Sacred Valley
preIncaCultures

Please wait…