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Originally posted by Hanslune
reply to post by miner49r
Incan, Ollantaytambo, Peru
Here a PDF which might help you on your questionsedit on 28/5/13 by Hanslune because: Added link
Originally posted by Hanslune
reply to post by miner49r
The 'tower' in the forefront is not a ruin abut actually left unfnished you can tell by the constructors leaving the moving 'handles' on the stones.
They have a technical name more sophisticated than 'handles' but I cannot think of it at this time.
Originally posted by miner49r
Originally posted by Hanslune
reply to post by miner49r
The 'tower' in the forefront is not a ruin abut actually left unfnished you can tell by the constructors leaving the moving 'handles' on the stones.
They have a technical name more sophisticated than 'handles' but I cannot think of it at this time.
I believe the "handles" are called "Bosses" I may be wrong though. I think there was a reference to them in the .PDF you posted up.
What captures my interest these Sillustani are Pre-Incan Aymara burial mounds that were later refaced or remodeled with Incan stone work. One would think if the Inca's conquered the Kolla/Aymara that the Aymara tradition would fade with time and go by the way side. Instead, the Sillustani were kept up and restored with Incan stone work.
Lieutenant C. J. Cruttenden, who wrote a memoir describing this portion of the Somali coast dated 12 May 1848, provided an account of the Berbera fair and an account of the only visible traces of man at the site: "an aqueduct of stone and chunam, some nine miles in length", which had once emptied into a presently dry reservoir adjacent to the ruins of a mosque. He explored part of its course from the reservoir past a number of tombs built of stones taken from the aqueduct to reach a spring, above which lay "the remains of a small fort or tower of chunam and stone ... on the hill-side immediately over the spring." Cruttenden noted that in "style it was different to any houses now found on the Somali coast," and concluded with noting the presence in "the neighbourhood of the fort above mentioned [an] abundance of broken glass and pottery ... from which I infer that it was a place of considerable antiquity; but, though diligent search was made, no traces of inscriptions could be discovered."
Originally posted by Flavian
reply to post by Hanslune
Is it Las Khorey in the Warsangali Sultanate? If so, built by the ethnic Somali branch of the Darod Clan in the 13th Century. The Warsangali fought the Abyssinians and attacked and uprooted Christian communities in Galgala.
As to the item at the bottom, it looks like it is used to weigh items, possibly cloths?