QUICK FACTS

Name: Tumaco-Tolita Seated Elder

What it is: A ceramic figurine

Where it is from: Near the Colombia-Ecuador border

When it was made: Between 200 B.C. and A.D. 300

Around two millennia ago, Tumaco-Tolita potters living in what is now Colombia and Ecuador began crafting hyperrealistic sculptures of their revered elders. This figurine of an older man, on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, may have been a religious specialist, shaman or other leader in his community.

caciques.

The statue of the cacique was likely displayed or carried in important ritual ceremonies, Florencio Delgado Espinoza, an archaeologist at San Francisco University in Quito, Ecuador, explained in an audio interview posted on the Met’s website, but the figurine’s exact function is unknown.

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“People love these caciques, but also they really were scared of them because they have the power — so it’s love and fear,” he said.

The Tumaco-Tolita were also well known for their metalworking. They lived in an area rich in natural gold and crafted impressive figurines out of the precious metal. But the group disappeared from their coastal homeland by A.D. 500, likely dispersing to other parts of South America.

For more stunning archaeological discoveries, check out our Astonishing Artifacts archives.