China Daily

Peru reveals face of pre-Incan female ruler

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LIMA — She died in her twenties about 1,700 years ago, and is believed to have ruled over a desert valley in ancient Peru where her elaboratel­y tattooed body was buried with weapons and gold objects.

But a glimpse of the former priestess, the Lady of Cao, can now be seen in a replica of her face unveiled by culture officials and archaeolog­ists on Monday.

Using 3-D imaging technology and forensics archaeolog­y, the replica was based on the Lady of Cao’s skull structure and ethnograph­ic research and took 10 months to create, Peru’s Culture Ministry said.

The goal, said Culture Minister Salvador del Solar, was to bring the world closer to one of Peru’s best archaeolog­ical finds and remind Peruvians of their rich cultural heritage.

“Its relevance is really incalculab­le,” del Solar said of the oval-shaped face with high cheekbones on display under a golden crown. “We can now show the world her face, a face that Peruvians see ourselves in.”

The discovery of the Lady of Cao’s mummified remains in 2005 shattered the belief that the ancient Moche society, which occupied the Chicama Valley during AD 100-700, was patriarcha­l. She was buried along with 100 kilograms of funerary relics and valuable objects. Several Moche female mummies have been found since in graves with objects denoting a high political and religious standing.

Archaeolog­ists believe the Lady of Cao died due to complicati­ons of childbirth but otherwise lived a healthy life.

Her arms and legs were covered with tattoos of snakes, spiders and other supernatur­al motifs. Discovered near her funerary bundle was a strangled adolescent, who might have been a sacrifice to guide her into the afterlife, according to the museum at the El Brujo archaeolog­ical where she was found.

The Lady of Cao is a reminder of the complex societies that thrived in what is now Peru long before the Inca empire dominated the Andes or Europeans arrived in the Americas.

The Moche built irrigation canals to grow crops in the desert and were known for their ceramics and goldwork that have been looted from their grave sites.

The replica of the Lady of Cao, a collaborat­ion that included archaeolog­ists, the Wiese Foundation and global imaging company FARO Technologi­es Inc, will be displayed in Peru’s culture ministry in the capital Lima through July 16. It will later be shown at the museum at El Brujo. site

 ?? GUADALUPE PARDO / REUTERS ?? A replica of the face of The Lady of Cao, the female ruler.
GUADALUPE PARDO / REUTERS A replica of the face of The Lady of Cao, the female ruler.

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