User:Jduranboger/Carlos Ponce Sanginés

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Carlos Ponce Sanginés (La Paz, Bolivia; May 6, 1925 - La Paz, Bolivia; March 18, 2005) was a prominent Bolivian archaeologist and restorer who dedicated a significant part of his life to the study of Tiwanaku. [1]

Life and Achievements[edit]

The Ponce Monolith in the Tiwanaku monumental complex, named in honor of its discoverer, the archaeologist Carlos Ponce Sanginés.

Ponce Sanginés was born in the city of La Paz in May 1925 and graduated from the Archaeology program at the Universidad Mayor San Andrés in that city before specializing at the University of Córdoba, Argentina. [2]

In 1958, he founded the "Center for Archaeological Research at Tiwanaku" in Bolivia, becoming one of the first Bolivians to study the archaeological site.

Throughout his life, he published more than fifty books and was awarded the Condor of the Andes Prize shortly before his death in 2005. He also received the National Culture Prize (1977), the Pergamino al Mérito Prize from the Tiawanaku Municipality (1989), the Puma de Oro Prize (1986), the Order of Gold Medal (1978), the Medal of Beloved Son of Samaipata (1974), and the Pedro Domingo Murillo Medal (1971).[3]

In 1964, Ponce Sanginés served as the Minister of Peasant Affairs. In that same year, he, along with his wife, Julia Elena Fortún, discovered one of the best-preserved stelae of that culture in Tiwanaku, which was later known as the "Ponce Monolith" in his honor.[1]

He restored the Kalasasaya temple and initiated excavations at the Akapana Pyramid site.[1]

In 1975, he founded the National Institute of Archaeology of Bolivia.[1]

He secured the declaration of the Iskanwaya ruins as a national monument in Bolivia.

Throughout his life, he published more than fifty books and was awarded the Condor of the Andes Prize shortly before his death in 2005. He also received the National Culture Prize (1977), the Pergamino al Mérito Prize from the Tiawanaku Municipality (1989), the Puma de Oro Prize (1986), the Order of Gold Medal (1978), the Medal of Beloved Son of Samaipata (1974), and the Pedro Domingo Murillo Medal (1971).

Publications[edit]

Ponce Sanginés authored over fifty works[2], including the following notable publications:

  1. "Tiwanaku Pottery" (1948).
  2. "Bolivian Archaeology" (1957).
  3. "Mollo Pottery and the Sculpture of a Chiripa Stone" (1963).
  4. "Concise Description of the Semi-Subterranean Temple of Tiwanaku" (1964).
  5. "Tunupa and Ekako" (1969).
  6. "Cataloging Bolivia's Archaeological Heritage" (1974).
  7. "Tiwanaku: Space, Time, and Culture" (1976).
  8. "Tiwanaku: 200 Years of Archaeological Research" (1999).

External Links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Bolivia.com (March 19, 2005). "Carlos Ponce Sanginés ha muerto". bolivia.com. Retrieved December 13, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) Cite error: The named reference "Bolivia.com" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b bolivian.com (March 28, 2005). "Murió el arqueólogo boliviano Carlos Ponce Sanginés". Letralia 122. Retrieved October 16, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) Cite error: The named reference "Letralia" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ bolivian.com. "Museo Nacional de Arqueología". Retrieved October 16, 2011.

Category:20th-century Bolivian historians Category:Bolivian archaeologists