AK002

Original Author: Saoirse Byrne & Ashok Khosla
Museum: Private Collection
Museum Number:
Provenance: Unknown
Region: Unknown
Total Number of Cords: 83
Number of Ascher Cord Colors: 23
Similar Khipu:  Previous (HP001)  Next (KH0067)
Catalog: AK002
Khipu Notes: Khipu Notes

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Khipu Notes

Fieldguide Notes:

Author's Notes
This khipu was part of the Maiman collection, a set of khipus gathered from deaccesioning of the Haifa museum as well as other sources. Another khipu in the collection is referenced in Bat-ami Artzi's article The Secret of the Knot: Khipu No. 936 from the Maiman Collection. The collection is also described in the book Weaving the AfterLife.

The conservation of this khipu reminds the author of the botched restoration of a 19th century Italian church fresco by an elderly grandmother. Saoirse swears that she has a similar grandmother. Somewhere along the way, a person who received this khipu decided to hot? glue? the cords to a piece of red velour. They didn't even do a particularly good job of that, with many of the cords tangled along the way. Also, along the way a number of cords appear to have had their long knot deliberately cut off. A knotectomy.


This khipu has a number of intriguing features:
  1. A large number of blue/greenish blue cords, some whose colors remain quite vibrant.
  2. Poor cordage quality - cords often have extraneous bits hanging out, uneven widths, etc.
  3. Thicker cords than most khipus - again due to the cordage quality.
  4. A number of similar repeating groups, starting with the fourth group, punctuated periodically by a four cord marker.


The khipu is described in the book Weaving the Afterlife:
AK002 Photograph

   Cat. 284
   Period: Late Horizon; (1450-1550 CE)
   Style: Inca, Inca Imperial Period
   Location: Unknown
   Dimensions: length: 60 x 40 cm.
   Inv. 926

This is a medium-sized khipu. The length of the primary cord is 125 cm. and the corded part is 45 cm. long.
There are fifteen groups of vertical knotted strings, totaling seventy-one strings.
The knots are at three levels (some cords are missing and there are only ends). The length of the cords is 40-60 cm.
This khipu has an extended primary cord (the numerical strings are concentrated at one end of that cord.
The purpose of this may be to leave this end outside the sack in which it was stored, to facilitate search and identification.
For more details on khipus and further references, see Cat. 281.


Primary Cord Section
Faded folded 4 ply cord, Broken and Re-plyed from 11-13.5 cm. Some plys folded Cordage is roughly made, plys are not clean

Group Section
Groups of 4 pendants #9, #12, #13 are likely missing black(ish) cord in middle
Cords are paired in groups 1,2,3
Group 1 has 6 cords composed of 3 paired cords
Group 2 cords are tightly clustered. 6th cord, has fibers folded back on themselves after end knot. 4th cord has 12 double plied threads. Why?
Group 3 has 8 cords grouped by pairs
Group 4 - cords look like they have been moved over time
Group 5 and 6 - cords tightly clustered
Group 7 - 5 cords - last cord is looped around pendant.
Group 8 - 5 cord tightly clustered
Group 9 - 4 cords made of two pairs
Group 10 - Tightly clustered group of 5
Group 11 - Tightly clustered group of 5
Group 12 - 4 cords of 2 pairs, or 5 cords, with one cord missing -unclear
Group 13 - 4 cords - potentially missing barberpole blue/light tan
Group 14 - Group of 5 tightly clustered. 3rd cord at midpoint of attachment reveals fibers folded back on themselves on remaining ply - indicating construction technique of original barberpole.
Group 15 - Group of 5 tightly clustered. Last cord has fibers folded back on themselves after end knot.


Fiber construction of this khipu is very irregular. Cords vary in thickness, even along one cord.
Cords occasionally have mixed fiber types (grass?) in cord. Accidental or intentional? Appears accidental.