Royal Tombs of Sipan Museum

Latin America’s most spectacular new museum is named “the Royal Tombs of Sipan” , after the world-famous burial chambers discovered beneath ancient adobe pyramids on Peru’s northwest coast. The three-story, six-million-dollar museum, which contains by far the greatest intact discovery of gold artifacts in the Americas, is shaped like the pre-Columbian pyramid under which Peruvian archaeologists discovered this amazing tomb in 1987 (cover stories in National Geographic Magazine in December 1987 and March 1989.

The Royal Tombs of Sipan Museum is considered as one of the biggest museum in Latin America dedicated to a single archeological discovery and one of the newest museums in the world by Art News magazine from New York. In the next lines we transcribe an article that appeared in this important magazine.

Royal Tombs of Sipan
Royal Tombs of Sipan
Royal Tombs of Sipan

ALL THE KING’S GOLD
By Robin Cembalest
Museo Tumbas Reales de Sipán
Lambayeque, Perú

After midnight on February 16, 1987, Walter Alva, director of National Bruning Museum, in the northern Peruvian town of Lambayeque, was summoned by the local police. Word has spread that gold had been found in pyramids in nearby Sipán, and looters were feverishly digging through an ancient burial chamber. Alva, his colleagues, and a few officers rushed to the site, managing to scare the looters away. The objects they rescued were from the Moche culture, which dominated Peru’s northern coast for the first 600 years A.D., but were more sophisticated and opulent than any Alva had ever seen.

Fortunately, the looting was confirmed to one chamber. Subsequent excavations yielded one stunning find after another: a copper scepter topped with a complex architectural model; hundreds of ceramic vessels depleting people and animals; an intact oak sarcophagus tied with cooper strips: and most remarkably, a gilded ear ornament, intricately crafted of gold and turquoise, showing a warrior chief holding a shield and a scepter and wearing a crescent-shaped diadem, an articulated golden nose piece, and a collar of gold owl heads.

This tiny, exquisite figure, the team learned, foreshadowed the discovery or the similarly attired remains of the Lord of Sipán, a royal warrior and a priest who died around A.D. 300. He is the only American king whose tomb has ever been unearthed.

Ultimately, the tombs of 13 individuals (many buried with a retinue) were excavated at Sipán. “This discovery revolutionized Moche studies the way the discovery of King Tut changed Egyptian studies”, Alva says, “We understood suddenly that the people we’d seen in drawings – and their ceremonies, their rituals – were real”.

Royal Tombs of Sipan
Royal Tombs of Sipan
Royal Tombs of Sipan

While highlights from the dig toured North America, Alva and his colleagues built the Museo Tumbas Reales de Sipán, a fascinating and innovative museum that opened in 2002 in Lambayeque, 485 miles north of Lima, which Alva now directs.

The museum, a dark red pyramid, rises out of the dry, flat streetscape. Visitors climb an exterior stairway and enter the building at the top. Descending through the galleries, they encounter objects in the same sequence as the archeologists did – hammered-gold sheets that cradled the lord’s head and rested on his eyes, nose, mouth and chin: bracelets strung with hundreds of turquoise, shell, and gold beads; a gold-and-silver scepter depieting a warrior and his nude prisoner; gold-and silver backflaps (sheets the Moche suspended from the back of their belts) inlaid with shell and semiprecious stones, depicting a figure with a large, ganged mouth holding a human head by the hair and a tumi, a sacrificial knife. Each object or jewel displays artistry and craftsmanship that astounds and delights at every turn.

While it was clear from the outset that the museum would adapt characteristics of both archeological and art museums, what was less obvious. Alva says, was how the museum should handle the fact that it is also a mausoleum. He ultimately decided to place the lord’s remains, as well as those of two other excavated figures – an ancestor of the lord and a high priest – in a wooden coffin as the final exhibit. The skeletons, surrounded by ceramics found in their tombs, are softly lit and visible to the public. While Sipán’s elite expected to journey to the afterlife, this is one journey they never thought they’d take.

For example, the head of the "degollador" or sacrificer, a motif also found at the site of EL BRUJO, decorates the walls of platform I in the southwest corner of the site. Another very fine example of Moche mural decorations found at La Luna was the mural referred to above, which depicts "The Rebellion of the Artifacts"