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Ethnic groups and indigenous cultures in South America

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the Spanish destroy Vilcabamba and kill T pac Amaru ... T pac Amaru II. Peruvian rebel Jos Gabriel Condorcanqui ... T pac Amaru Revolutionary Movement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethnic groups and indigenous cultures in South America


1
Ethnic groups and indigenous cultures in South
America
  • 28.1.2004

2
Readings
  • Fagg, (1977 1963) Ancient South America. (in
    Latin America A General History)
  • Wagley and Harris (1974 1955) A Typology of
    Latin American Subcultures. (in Heath)

3
Literature on native peoples in SA
  • Karsten, R. 1926. The Civilization of South
    American Indians With Special Reference to Magic
    and Religion
  • Radin, P. 1942. Indians of South America.
  • Steward, J. 1946. Handbook of South American
    Indians (6 Vols)
  • Steward, J., and L. Faron 1959. Native Peoples of
    South America. New York McGraw-Hill.

4
Topics of discussion
  • Theories of origin
  • Ethnohistory of South American culture areas
  • Northern South America and the Caribbean  
  • The Tropical Forest  
  • Southernmost South America  
  • Central and Southern Andes
  • Inca Empire
  • Contemporary ethnic groups and languages

5
Early speculations on origin
  • Discovery of America first speculations
  • a theological rather than a scientific problem
  • had to go with the Biblical world-picture
  • Various speculations
  • Biblia Poliglota (1569-73)
  • Descendants from Shem, son of Noah
  • Tribes of Israel, dispersed by the Assyrians?
  • From lost continents'
  • Mu in the Pacific
  • Atlantis in the Atlantic

6
Nativist speculations
  • Locating the Biblical Creation / the Garden of
    Eden in the New World.
  • Antonio de León Pinelo (17th c.)
  • El Paraiso en el Nuevo Mundo
  • Genesis took in the province of Mojos (Eastern
    Bolivia)
  • Emeterio Villamil de Rada (19th c.)
  • La Lengua de Adan
  • Aymara - the original language of mankind
  • human race originated in Sorata (Bolivian Andes)
  • Florentine Amegiño (1880)
  • Argentinian palaeontologist
  • palaeontological evidence of ancient man in South
    America
  • not necessarily the original progenitors of all
    mankind

7
Migration from elsewhere?
  • trans-Pacific migrations from China, Indonesia
    and elsewhere?
  • Inca legends recorded by Spanish chroniclers
  • Today's consensus
  • transoceanic contacts cannot be denied
  • but exerted no important impact on South American
    culture

8
Migration to elsewhere?
  • Thor Heyerdahl (1914-2002)
  • Theories about migration patterns of ancient
    peoples
  • Native South Americans Pacific islands
  • Kon-Tiki (1947)
  • Peru Tuamotu Archipelago of Polynesia
  • the Galápagos Islands (1954)
  • Easter Island and the East Pacific (1955-56)
  • Egyptians South America
  • founded the Aztec and Inca cultures 4000 years
    ago
  • Ra I (1969) Ra II (1970)

9
Ethnohistory of SA culture areas
  • Northern South America and the Caribbean  
  • The Tropical Forest  
  • Southernmost South America  
  • Central and Southern Andes

10
Northern South America and the Caribbean  
  • Earliest habitation
  • Continental regions
  • 9,000 BC? / 18,000 BC ?
  • Caribbean islands
  • 3000 BC
  • 3000 BC
  • cultivation of maize in Ecuador
  • manioc (a tropical tuber) in Venezuela
  • pottery making flourished
  • 500 BC
  • distinctive sculpture and metalwork
  • Small, independent states
  • Chibcha kingdoms of Colombia
  • Culturally resembled the Inca state
  • Miskito, Cuna, Arawak and Carib (simpler)

11
Tropical Forest  
  • Inhabited after 3000 BC
  • Population
  • relatively sparse
  • clustered along riverbanks
  • fishing rather than hunting
  • no large towns

12
Southernmost South America  
  • Earliest habitation
  • 7,000 BC
  • Varied subsistence activities
  • North - agriculture
  • Center - hunting (pampas)
  • South - fishing

13
Central and Southern Andes I
  • 11,000 BC
  • Earliest human occupation
  • excavation in Monte Verde (southern Chile)
  • 2000 BC central Peru
  • first stone buildings
  • 900-300 BC
  • Chavín (Central Peru)
  • religious center
  • similar to Olmec religious symbolism
  • 300 BC 600 AD
  • Moche (northern coast of Peru)
  • Nazca (southern coast of Peru)
  • Irrigation, temples, ceramics

14
Inca Empire
  • Inca
  • "prince" or "king" in Quechua
  • supreme ruler of that empire
  • all subject peoples of the Inca Empire
  • Inca Empire
  • ca1463 1533
  • 9 million people
  • the most complex political organization in SA

15
Spanish conquest of the Incas
  • 1493-1525
  • internal conflicts between center and provinces
  • 1527 1532
  • political struggles
  • Emperor Huayna Capac dies
  • Huáscar vs Atahualpa (1532)
  • 1532
  • Francisco Pizarro with 180 Spanish soldiers
  • taken for the creator god Viracocha
  • 1533
  • Atahualpa executed
  • Inca puppet-state
  • Manco Capac II
  • 1536
  • Manco Capac's revolt against the Spanish rule.
  • The Inca kingdom at Vilcabamba northwest of Cusco
  • 1572
  • the Spanish destroy Vilcabamba and kill Túpac
    Amaru

16
Túpac Amaru as a symbol of indigenous resistance
  • Túpac Amaru
  • the last emperor of the Incas (1571-1572)
  • Túpac Amaru II
  • Peruvian rebel José Gabriel Condorcanqui
  • two-year rebellion in the 1780s against Spanish
    colonial rule.
  • Tupamaros
  • Uruguayan revolutionary group of 1960s and 1970s
  • Successful bank robberies and kidnappings 1968-72
  • Since 1985 a political party
  • Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement
  • Moviemiento Revolucionario Túpac Amaru (MRTA)
  • Peruvian guerrilla group since 1980s
  • Inspiration from Cuba and Castro
  • linked with the Sandinistas and armed
    revolutionary groups in Colombia
  • Not as influential as Sendero Luminoso
  • Took control of the Japanese Embassy in Lima
    (1997)

17
Contemporary ethnic groups
  • Ethnic and racial diversity
  • Native American, European, African heritage
  • mestizos, mulattos, zambos
  • Geographical variations
  • Native Americans - highlands of the central
    Andean republics
  • Spanish descent - Argentina and Uruguay
  • Potugueses descent Brazil
  • Black and mulatto - Brazil, the Guyanas and
    coastal Colombia and Ecuador
  • Italians (late 19th century and 1930s)
  • Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay.
  • Germans
  • south central Chile, Paraguay
  • Syrians and Lebanese
  • Paraguay
  • Indians, Indonesias, and Chinese (late 19th c.)
  • British Guiana and Dutch Guiana
  • Japanese
  • southeastern Brazil ( Paraguay, Bolivia)

18
Native languages in South America  
  • 1500 separate languages
  • Over 100 distinct families/stocks
  • Eight major language groups
  • Chibchan
  • Cariban
  • Quechua
  • Aymara
  • Araucanian
  • Arawakan
  • Tupí-Guaraní
  • Guarani official language in Paraguay
  • Quechua official language in Peru (1975)

19
Quechuan languages
  • Quichua (Ecuador)
  • Biggest number of speakers
  • 8-10 million
  • Peru 4-5 million
  • Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Argentina
  • Language of Incas
  • But used as a lingua franca already before the
    Incas
  • Quechua words in English coca, condor, pampa,
    puma, quinine, guano etc
  • 17th / 18th centuries
  • Roman alphabet Catholic Church
  • Rise of fiction in Quechuan
  • Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala
  • chronicle of Quechua folkways and history
  • Contemporary revitalization in Ecuador, Bolivia
  • Increase of Quechua solidarity across national
    boundaries

20
Aymaran languages
  • Third largest group
  • Aymara
  • dominant language of the group
  • 1.5 million speakers in Bolivia, Chile, and
    Argentina.
  • Lake Titicaca area
  • Tiahuanacu
  • AD 300-900

21
Tupí-Guaraní
  • Tupi branch
  • 30 languages
  • spoken in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia,
    Paraguay, Peru, and Venezuela
  • Tupi lingua franca in indigenous Brazil
  • Guaraní branch
  • 9 languages
  • Paraguay, Argentina, Bolivia, and Brazil
  • Guaraní
  • the most used language throughout the Amazon
    region
  • 4-5 million speakers in Paraguay (3/4 of
    population bilingual)
  • various words in Spanish/English (eg. jaguar)
  • Communal villages reducciones
  • organized by Jesuit missionaries

22
Chibchan languages
  • From northern South America to Central America.
  • Costa Rica, Panama, Honduras, Colombia
  • Muisca (or Chibcha)
  • the language of Chibcha civilization
  • Now extinct

23
Cariban languages
  • Brazil, Colombia, French Guiana, Guyana, Surinam,
    Venezuela
  • Caribbean islands
  • Noted for ferocity
  • Caniba or Canima
  • Arawak term for the Carib tribes
  • cannibal
  • Barbecue, canoe, maize, caiman

24
Araucanian languages
  • Central and southern Chile and western Argentina
  • Mapuche, Huilliche, and Picunche
  • Considered the fiercest of the Native South
    Americans
  • Constant revolts against Spanish rule
  • Totally submitted in 1881
  • Chile, poncho

25
Other
  • about 50 live languages
  • Brazil
  • Pano-Tacanan languages
  • Bolivia, Brazil, and Peru Ge languages of
    Brazil
  • Jivaroan languages
  • Ecuador and Peru
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