Yet the story of the coast civilisation of the Chimu is worthy of being rehabilitated. There should be a thorough examination and study of the Mochica language; an exhaustive classification of Chimu works of art in public museums and private collections; a knowledge of all the authorities; and scientific plans of all the ruins. From the works of art alone a fairly complete idea may be obtained of the conditions of life, the manners and customs, even the legends and religious ideas of the extinct people. The result would be the rehabilitation of an ancient people whose history would be quite as interesting, and in some respects even more curious, than the histories of the Aztecs of Mexico, or the Chibchas of Bogota.
century.—Feijoo, Relacion de la ciudad de Truxillo (Madrid, 1763), pp. 25 and 85. Balboa, p. 73 (n).