The thousand-year-old telephone, a marvel of ancient invention, surprises almost all who hear about it.
Reportedly found in in the ruins of Chan Chan, Peru, the delicate
communication artifact is thought to have been made 1,200 to 1,400 years ago
and is known as the earliest example of telephone technology in the Western
Hemisphere.
This seemingly out-of-place-artifact is evidence of the impressive
innovation of the coastal Chimu people in the Río Moche Valley of northern
Peru.
Ramiro Matos, curator of the National Museum of the American Indian
(NMAI) told Smithsonian, “This is unique. Only one was ever discovered. It
comes from the consciousness of an indigenous society with no written
language.”
The early “telephone” appears to be a rudimentary speech transmission
device, much like the “lover’s telephone” that has been known for hundreds of
years but which became popular in the 19th century.
It was usually comprised of tin cans connected with string, used to
speak back and forth; and mostly seen as a novelty.
This ancient Chimu device, described as an instrument, however, is
composed of two gourd tops bound with a length of cord.
The gourds, each 3.5 inches (8.9 centimeters) long are coated in resin
and act as transmitters and receivers of sound. Around each of the gourd bases
is stretched-hide membrane. The 75-foot (22.8 meter) line connecting the two ends
is made of cotton-twine.
The simplicity of the device disguises its
implications.
This one-of-a-kind artifact, reportedly predates the earliest research
into telephones from 1833 (which began with non-electric string devices) by
more than a thousand years.
The gourd-and-string device is too fragile to physically test, but
researchers can piece together how the instrument might have worked.
The enigmatic ancient communication device.
Credit: Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian.
What they must continue to speculate on, however, is how the Chimu used
this ancient phone: what was its purpose?
As the Chimu were known to be a top-down society, it stands to reason
that only the elite or priest class would have been in possession of such a
valuable instrument, posits Matos.
The precious telephone, with the seemingly magical ability to channel
voices across space to be heard directly in the ear of the receiver was, “a
tool designed for an executive level of communication” said Matos.
There might have been many applications, such as communication between
novices or assistants and their higher-ranking elites through chambers or
anterooms. No face-to-face contact would have been needed, preserving status
and ensuring security.
Like many other ancient marvels, it might also have been a device to
astound the faithful.
Disembodied voices emitting from a hand-held object might have shocked
and convinced people of the importance and station of the upper class or
priests.
Or, there are some who consider the gourd and twine object as merely a
child’s toy. If such novelties are not our modern sacred objects, why must they
have been believed to be religious items or priestly tools to humans of the
past?
The artifact was in the possession of Baron Walram V. Von Schoeler, a
Prussian aristocrat, who is less flatteringly described as a “shadowy Indiana
Jones-type adventurer.”
He participated in many excavations in Peru in the 1930s, and may have
dug up the artifact himself from the ruins of Chan Chan.
He distributed his collection among various museums, and the artifact
eventually ended up at the storage facility of the National Museum of the
American Indian in Maryland, USA, where it is treated delicately, preserved in
a temperature controlled environment as one of the museums greatest treasures.
Matos, anthropologist and archaeologist specializing in the study of
the central Andes explained, “The Chimu were a skillful, inventive people,” who
possessed an impressive engineering society.
This can be shown by their hydraulic canal-irrigation systems and their
highly detailed, elaborate metalwork and artifacts.
The Chimu were the people of the Kingdom of Chimor, and their beautiful
capital city was Chan Chan (translated as Sun Sun), a sprawling mud brickcomplex — the largest such adobe in the world — and it was the largest city in
Pre-Columbian South America.
Chan Chan was almost 20 square kilometers (7.7 square miles), and with
100,000 residents during its height around 1200 AD.
The entire city was made from shaped and sun-dried mud, and was
elaborately decorated with sculptures, reliefs and wall carvings on almost
every surface.
Chimu culture arose about 900 AD, but was eventually conquered by the
Inca around 1470 AD.
The Chimu telephone, and many other amazing ancient technologies,
remind us that ancient cultures were capable of marvelous inventions, ideas,
and creations long before our ‘sophisticated’ modern societies dreamed them up
(sometimes for a second time).
By Liz Leafloor / Featured image: Chan Chan, Peru (Wikimedia Commons).
Inset: The enigmatic ancient communication device. Credit: Smithsonian National
Museum of the American Indian / References:
Gascoigne, Bamber. “History of Communication: Better than shouting”
HistoryWorld. From 2001, ongoing. [Online] Available here.
Baldwin, Neil. 2013. “There’s a 1,200-year-old Phone in the Smithsonian
Collections”. Smithsonian. [Online] Available here.
Dhwty, 2014. “Chan Chan – The Largest Mud-Brick City in the World”.
Ancient Origins [Online] Available here.
Smithsonian Institution. 2014. “Meeting of the Board of Regents” PDF
[Online] Available here.
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