Archaeologists exploring Peru’s pre-Colombian past recently unearthed a glimpse of a less prominent chapter in the Andean country’s history - the remains of 16 Chinese labourers who toiled in the country over 100 years ago.
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Remains of Chinese labourer wearing blue-green jacket excavated at the pyramid of Bellavista [Credit: Reuters/Mariana Bazo] |
Peru was one of the biggest destinations for Chinese labour in Latin America in the 19th century, a market that thrived after slavery was abolished in the country in 1854.
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Archaeologists work at a tomb of one of sixteen Chinese migrants, discovered buried at the turn of the 20th century in the pre-colombian pyramid of Bellavista [Credit: Reuters/Mariana Bazo] |
In a possible sign of how the Chinese gradually emerged from dire poverty in Peru, the first 11 bodies were shrouded in cloth and placed in the ground, while the last five wore blue-green jackets and were buried in wooden coffins, Gomez said.
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Opium pipe buried with Chinese labourer [Credit: Martin Mejia, AP] |
Chinese labourers were generally not allowed to be buried at Lima’s Catholic cemeteries, forcing them to improvise burial sites, according to Peru’s Culture Ministry.
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Chinese labourer with fractured skill and braid [Credit: Martin Mejia, AP] |
Gomez said the huacas had a sacred association that might have made them attractive places for burial by Chinese labourers.
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Detail of skull of Chinese labourer with fractured skull [Credit: Reuters/Mariana Bazo] |
Italian immigrants later kept vineyards at the base of the site, Gomez added. "The best way to understand our history is as a continuum of different cultures," said Gomez.
Source: Reuters [August 25, 2017]