quipu

Jun. 3rd, 2010 07:20 am
[identity profile] prettygoodword.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] 1word1day
quipu (KEE-poo) - n., a device consisting of a series of knotted cords used by ancient Peruvians for recording accounts and events.


All the records of the Incan Empire were recorded on quipus, including tax records, census rolls, harvest stores, and the like. How much quipus could encode other linguistic information is a subject of current debate, given there are Spanish reports of quipucamayocs using quipus reading to relate historical events from beyond personal memory -- and it should be noted that the Incans (and their several predecessors) had no other written language. The word is from Spanish, from Quechua khipu (Cusco dialect) or kipu (most other dialects) meaning "knot". As usual, Wikipedia is incomplete but a good place to start.

I like the idea of a spy using an otherwise innocent girl's poncho fringes as a quipu to send information over the frontier.

---L.
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