Accession No

1999.172 F


Description

A miniature pick axe with a green head and wooden shaft. Part of a set of miniature tools for truck repair and construction work. Used as offerings by the cult of el Señor de Huanca (W'anka).


Place

Americas; South America; Peru


Period


Source

Sillar, William "Bill" John MacDonald [collector]; Crowther-Beynon Grant [monetary donor]


Department

Anth


Reference Numbers

1999.172 F


Cultural Affliation


Material

Metal; Wood


Local Term


Measurements

46mm x 68mm


Events

Context (Field collection)
Collected by Bill Sillar on 24 August 1995.
Event Date 24/8/1995
Author: Annie Tomkins


Context (Production / use)
The cult of el Señor de Huanca (W'anka), is linked with the Inca wak'a (sacred place) and present day Apu, Mount Pachatusan. Christ first appeared in a miraculous apparition in 1674 when a vision of Christ's scourging was seen, and in 1718 Christ appeared as a doctor to cure a Spanish mine owner inflected by an epidemic. The Mercedarian order, which has controlled the shrine since its inception, has propagated its cult among the urban and better off peasantry, and the majority of the ten thousand or more people who visit the shrine annually now use the recently constructed road. Today many commercial goods are produced, like miniature houses, money, animals, trucks and pottery, and sold for use in offerings. [note by Bill Sillar, 1999].
Event Date 1999
Author: Annie Tomkins


Context (Related Documents)
See the documentation for this collection (ie. 1999.144-193) in the Museum Archives.
Event Date 1999
Author: Lucie Carreau


Context (Production / use)
The use of miniatures in rituals is strongly tied to the idea of an annual cycle within which devotees will prosper, but which obliges continuity in the devotion over several years, if not a lifetime. This is partly due to the Andean and Catholic emphasis on the yearly cycle of festivals and devotions, and many of the occasions when miniatures are used are the start of a new period in the agricultural or social calendar such as San Juan, Todos Santos, Christmas, Alacitas, or the roofing of a new house, all of which might be seen as fertility rites at the beginning of a new period of growth. Pilgrimages are mainly undertaken from August to the end of October, towards the end of the dry season when people are preparing to plant the seed for next years crops. August is the month when ground opens up, and it is the most productive time for making offerings particularly those directed into the ground. [note by Bill Sillar].
Event Date 1/10/1999
Author: maa


Description (Physical description)
Description for 1999.172 [A-M] reads: 'Miniature tools for truck repair and construction work. (Señor de Wank'a, September 1995).
A: Rectangular piece of green cloth, possibly for securing tools.
B: Spade with blue handle and shovel.
C: File with blue handle.
D: Jack with orange body and red wheels.
E: Sledge hammer with black head and wooden handle.
F: Pick with green head and wooden handle.
G: Axe with black head and wooden handle.
H: Five miniature strips of corrugated iron secured together with central band.
I: Silver-coloured ring spanner.
J: Silver-coloured spanner.
K: Claw hammer with red head and wooden handle.
L: Blue wheel brace.
M: Screw-driver with red handle.'
Event Date 1/10/1999
Author: maa


Description (Physical description)
A miniature pick axe with a green head and wooden shaft. Part of a set of miniature tools for truck repair and construction work. Used as offerings by the cult of el Señor de Huanca (W'anka).
Event Date 12/7/2021
Author: Annie Tomkins


FM:292740

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