Some evidence forhomosexual behavior inpre-Columbian Peru has survived since theSpanish conquest of Peru in the form oferotic ceramics (Spanish:huacos eróticos). Such pottery originated from severalancient civilizations of Peru, the most famous of these being theMoche andChimu cultures.
Inpre-Columbian times, different ethnic groups existed inAncient Peru. Gender studies carried out for this period are scarce, and very little is known about pre-Columbian homosexual practices.
In theMoche culture, developed in northern Peru between300 BC. C. and the700s AD. C., homosexuality would have been perceived normally, as attested by its ceramics.[1] It is important to note that 40% of the ceramics (locally called "huacos") represent homosexual relationships.[2] Later, with the Upon the arrival of theSpanish conquistadors, many of these "huacos" were destroyed for being considered immoral, a practice that continued until the 20th century, this time by researchers and archaeologists, in an attempt to censorship and maintain an idealized vision of ancient Peruvian.[citation needed]
According to the chroniclerPedro Cieza de León inCrónica del Perú, unlike the rest of the Inca Empire, the practice of homosexuality was tolerated in the north (Chinchaysuyo) and even considered an act of worship, with a male brothel existing that attended to the needs of the troop. These sexual servants were known aspampayruna.
Each temple or main shrine has a man, two or more depending on the idol, who are dressed as women, and with these, almost by way of sanctity and religion, the lords and principals have their carnal council.
— Crónica del Perú.
Likewise, the Incas had special consideration forlesbians whom they calledholjoshta. The IncaCapac Yupanqui used to have a very special affection for these women.[3]
However, in the center and south of the empire the Incas severely punished homosexuality.[4] The chroniclerMartín de Murúa commented in hisGeneral History of Peru that the IncaLloque Yupanqui punished "with great severity public sins - stealing, killing – and sodomy, for which he restrained, plucked his ears, pulled his nose and hanged him, and he cut the necks of the nobles and principals or tore their shirts.”[5]
TheInca Garcilaso de la Vega relates in hisRoyal Commentaries of the Incas that homosexuality in the Inca Empire was prohibited and that "sodomites" were persecuted andburned alive.[6]
They had found that there were some sodomites, not in all the valleys, but in each one, not in all the common neighbors, but in some individuals who secretly used that evil vice... The Inca was happy with the story of the conquest. ... And in particular he ordered that with great diligence an investigation be made of the sodomites and in a public square they would burn alive those who were found not only guilty but initiated, no matter how little... they would also burn their houses and tear them down to the ground and burn them. the trees of their estates, uprooting them... and they proclaimed by an unforgettable law that from then on they should guard against falling into such a crime, under penalty that for the sin of one, their entire town would be devastated and all its inhabitants in general burned.
For his part,Cieza de León commented in hisChronicle of Peru that the Incas punished those who practiced homosexuality: "they hated those who used it, considering them as vile timid people and that if it was known to anyone that such a sin had committed, they punished him with such a penalty that it would be pointed out and known among everyone."[5]
In the case of theAymaras, who reside southwest of the Peruvian mountains, there are different opinions. According to the superstitions of certain sub-ethnic groups, they are also said to be an omen of bad luck. Although some communities have a certain degree of acceptance, respect and understanding of these people for their sexual orientation. In others, homosexuals were frequently considered special, magical beings, endowed with supernatural powers, recognized for their powers to beshamans.[7]
Once the Spanish arrived, in the 16th century, they were astonished at the sexual practices of the natives.ViceroyFrancisco de Toledo and the priests were aghast to discover that homosexuality was accepted and that the indigenous population also did not prohibitpremarital sex or hold femalechastity to be of any particular importance.[8][unreliable source?]
Historian Maximo Terrazos describes how the Spanish reconciled this native sexuality with theCatholic faith:[8]
Toledo ordered natives evangelized and those "caught cohabiting outside church-sanctionedwedlock would receive 100 lashes with a whip 'to persuade these Indians to remove themselves from this custom so detrimental and pernicious'. Toledo also issued several decrees aimed at creating near totalsegregation of the sexes in public. Violations were punishable by 100 lashes and two years' service in pestilential state hospitals. Under theInquisition, brought to Peru in 1569, homosexuals could be burned at the stake."
— Maximo Terrazos, historian
However, homosexuality in Peru was decriminalised in 1837.[9]
Over a span of 800 years, pre-Columbian centralAndean cultures, especially the Moche, created at least tens of thousands of ceramics (Spanish:huacos). A few such ceramics show skeletons undeniably engaged in homosexuality; four depictgay male anal intercourse, one depicts lesbian penetration with the clitoris.[10] Many others show partners where at least one member is of indeterminate sex, like the oral sex ceramic shown above, where the genitalia of the person on their knees is not visible. Such works, due perhaps toheterosexist bias, have often been interpreted as depicting a heterosexual couple.[10]
Many of the ceramics, along with most indigenous icons, were smashed. In the 1570s, Toledo and his clerical advisers organized to eliminatesodomy,masturbation and a common social practice which roughly translated from the nativeQuechua means "trial marriage". As Terrazos describes, "You couldn't talk about them because they were considered [pornographic]." They were prohibited due to "taboo imposed by the Christian religion that men have sex only forprocreation and that women do not experience sexual pleasure."[8]
In spite of this organized effort to destroy these artifacts, many have survived to the present day. For decades, the erotic ceramics were locked away from the public, accessible only to an elite group of Peruvian social scientists. Occasionally and reluctantly they were made available to select foreign researchers from the United States and Europe. TheLarco Museum inLima,Peru is well known for its gallery of pre-Columbian erotic pottery.