San Agustín Archaeological Park

The San Agustín Archaeological Park (Spanish: Parque Arqueológico de San Agustín) is a large archaeological area located near the town of San Agustín in Huila Department in Colombia. The park contains the largest collection of religious monuments and megalithic sculptures in Latin America and is considered the world's largest necropolis. Belonging to San Agustin culture, it was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995.[1][2] The dates of the statues are uncertain, but they are believed to have been carved between 5–400 AD.[3] The origin of the carvers remains a mystery, as the site is largely unexcavated.

San Agustín Archaeological Park
UNESCO World Heritage Site
A tomb platform with supporting statues
LocationSan Agustín, Huila Department, Colombia
Includes
  1. San Agustin
  2. Alto de los Idolos
  3. Alto de las Piedra
CriteriaCultural: (iii)
Reference744
Inscription1995 (19th Session)
Coordinates1°55′N 76°14′W / 1.917°N 76.233°W / 1.917; -76.233
San Agustín Archaeological Park is located in Colombia
San Agustín Archaeological Park
Location of San Agustín Archaeological Park in Colombia

History

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The statues were first described by a Spanish monk, Fray Juan de Santa Gertrudis (1724–1799), who visited the countries of Colombia (then part of the New Kingdom of Granada), Ecuador and Peru in 1756–57 as a missionary. He passed through San Agustín in mid-1756, and wrote about the statues in his four-volume work Maravillas de la naturaleza (English: Wonders of Nature).[4][5]

Geography

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The archaeological park is located in the upper basin of the Magdalena River and its primary tributaries, in the municipality of the town of San Agustin in Huila in the eastern foothills of the Colombian Massif, from which emerge the three Andean mountain ranges traversing the country from south to north in the Andean Region. San Agustín is 520 km from Bogotá. The remains of the ancient cultural groups are scattered over an area of over 50 square kilometers, on plateaus located on either side of the canyon formed by the top of the Magdalena River. The park itself corresponds to a small area with a high concentration of graves and contains more than 500 statues of unknown origin.

 
Statues in Mesita B of the park

San Agustín Archaeological Park includes:

  • The source Lavapatas.
  • The plank.
  • The Alto de Lavapatas.
  • The Chaquira.
  • The Alto de las Piedras.
  • The High Idols.

In addition to the main archaeological park in San Agustín, there are two further independent sites, the Heights of the Idols (Alto de los Ídolos) and the Heights of the Stones (Alto de las Piedras), which are located in the municipality of Isnos, a few kilometers from San Agustín. The Heights of the Idols is 4 km from the town of Isnos and contains the tallest statue of all the parks, at 7 meters. The Heights of the Stones park is 7 km from Isnos includes the famous "Double I" ("Doble Yo") statue.

Statues

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The statues present both anthropomorphic and zoomorphic features (from crocodiles, bats and jaguars), having short legs. There were found approximately 300 statues. They were painted in bright colors, mainly yellow, red, black and white, but today only a few of them are still colored.

The statues vary in height, the tallest being 23 feet (7.0 m) tall. They are suspected to be funeral statuary.[6] In other regions of the archaeological site where large burial mounds are located, you will see more intimidating figures such as snakes, frogs, and birds strategically place to stand guard for increased protecting during the afterlife. Statues of deities or carving on the ground, of both solar gods, males, and lunar gods, females. These figures and statues provide researchers with some limited insight into the civilization's perception of life and death.

Repatriation

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In 1913 German ethnologist Konrad Theodor Preuss led an archaeological excavation in the area at the behest of the Ethnological Museum of Berlin. He took 21 smaller sculptures from the site and brought them to Berlin in 1919 where they were incorporated into the collections of the Ethnological Museum.[7] In 2022 the Colombian government formally announced that they would seek the return of the statues from the Humboldt Forum (the successor of the Ethnological Museum of Berlin).[8]

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References

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  1. ^ "San Agustín Archaeological Park". UNESCO World Heritage Center. Retrieved 27 January 2015.
  2. ^ Güesguán, Óscar (September 13, 2013). "'Patrimonio de la humanidad en Colombia'". El Espectador.
  3. ^ Forero Bonell, Francisco (January 23, 2008). "Así se ve el parque arqueológico de San Agustín desde el cielo". El Tiempo (in Spanish).
  4. ^ Correal Urrego, Gonzalo (2013). "Las Primeras Referencias a la Cultura Arqueológica de San Agustín en el Siglo XVIII". Boletín de Historia y Antigüedades (in Spanish). 100 (857). Academia Colombiana de Historia.
  5. ^ Rathbone, John Paul (1991). Ecuador, the Galapagos and Colombia. Cadogan Guides. Cadogan Books. pp. 268–269. ISBN 978-0-87106-248-2.
  6. ^ Cavendish, Richard; Burton, Rosemary (1991). "Valley of the Statues". Wonders of the World. AA Publishing. pp. 203–203. ISBN 0-7495-3188-6.
  7. ^ Montero Fayad, Veronica (2016). "Statues of San Agustín (Huila, Colombia) in the Ethnological Museum of Berlin: itinerary of classifications and exhibitions". Colombian Journal of Anthropology. 52 (2): 175–198. doi:10.22380/2539472X43.
  8. ^ Losson, Pierre (2023-02-13). "At Last, Colombia Demands the Return of Its San Agustin Statues". Hyperallergic. Retrieved 2023-06-01.