status   residents   (ayllus)    who     collectively    oversaw     state   ceremonies  and
religious    celebrations    within  the     capital     city.   In  his     early   studies,    Zuidema
was concerned   primarily   with    the structural  properties  of  the ceque   system,
particularly     as  they    related     to  Andean  forms   and     principles  of  social  and
kinship organization,   as  well    as  certain presumed    marriage    patterns,   which,  he
thought,     were    crucial     for     the     reproduction    of  political   relations   among   the
panacas and ayllus  over    time.   His attention   increasingly    turned  to  questions
concerning   the     historicity     of  the    ceque   system,  the     place   of  mythology   in
rationalizing   the structures  of  the system, and the temporalities   of  the system
as  they    were    realized    in  what    he  termed  the “ceque  calendar.”
Further Reading
Salomon,     Frank.  “The    Historical  Development     of  Andean  Ethnology.”    Mountain     Research    and
Development 5,  no. 1:  79–98,  1985.
Urton,  Gary.   “R. Tom Zuidema,    Dutch   Structuralism,  and the Application of  the ‘Leiden Orientation’    to
Andean  Studies.”   In  Structure,  Knowledge,  and Representation  in  the Andes:  Studies Presented   to
Reiner  Tom Zuidema on  the Occasion    of  his 70th    Birthday.   Journal of  the Steward Anthropological
Society 24, no. 1–2:    1–36,   1996.
Zuidema,    R.  Tom.    The Ceque   System  of  Cuzco:  The Social  Organization    of  the Capital of  the Incas.
Leiden, Netherlands:    E.  J.  Brill,  1964.
———.    El  calendario  inca:   Tiempo  y   espacio en  la  organización    ritual  del Cuzco:  La  idea    del pasado.
Lima:    Fondo   Editorial   del     Congreso    del     Perú    and     Fondo   Editorial   de  la  Pontificia  Universidad
Católica    del Perú,   2010.
■GARY   URTON