Pictures from Google Image Search

Popoluca

Encyclopedia of World Cultures | 1996 | Copyright 1996 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Popoluca

ETHNONYMS: none

The 1990 Mexican census tallied 29,203 Popoluca speakers living in southern Veracruz. They are culturally and linguistically similar to the Mixe and Zoque Indians of nearby Chiapas and Oaxaca. There are four separate social groups, which have distinctive cultures and languages. The largest of these groups, the Sierra or Highland Popoluca, is dispersed in twenty-five towns and hamlets. The other four groups live in the towns of Oluta, Sayula, and Texistepec.

The various Popoluca groups inhabit two greatly different environments. The Sierra Popoluca live at elevations of 100 to 800 meters; precipitation there is abundant, and there are oak and pine forests at higher elevations, savanna at lower elevations. In contrast, the villages of Oluta, Sayula, and Texistepec are located very close to sea level and are very dry, as well as dusty in the spring; the terrain is covered by savanna.

Despite their earlier conquests by the Nahua and by the Spanish, the Popoluca had little contact with non-Popoluca until the twentieth century, when the social agitation caused by the Mexican Revolution brought them into contact with other groups.

The Popoluca subsist through the cultivation of maize, beans, and squashes, although they also raise tomatoes, pineapples, chayotes, camotes (yams), manioc, and other fruits and vegetables. They grow coffee to sell for cash. Swidden agriculture (in the milpa pattern) is practiced, and two crops are planted annually. Fields are usually planted with digging sticks, although a few people use plows. Small numbers of poultry and pigs are kept. Some men hunt with featherless arrows, taking deer, boars, rabbits, and some birds. Fish are caught with the aid of nets and poisons.

Houses are simple structures. Four posts at the corners hold up the roof, which is woven of zacate grass and lasts as long as twenty-five years. The walls are made of vertical sticks, which do not exclude wind and rain. Lofts are constructed for the storage of maize and domestic goods. People sit on a unique type of bench made from a log, or on hammocks, and sleep on beds made of cane splints.

The Spanish had very limited success in urging the Popoluca to live in dense villages, and no success whatsoever in influencing them to line up streets in a grid pattern, although terrain limitations were at least partly responsible for the latter failure.

Men wear clothing of a type sold in most parts of Mexicomuslin pants and shirts. Women wear precontact-style wrap skirts and no garments above the waist.

Women tend to domestic chores and raising children, take care of the domestic animals, and weave. Men do the agricultural work, construct houses, and hunt and fish. Unmarried women also work in the fields. The Popoluca have no markets, but instead buy and sell to itinerant traders from outside their society. Some towns have resident Zapotec traders, and there are a few Popoluca stores that sell alcoholic beverages and, occasionally, household goods. There is usually very little wealth left when the expenses of living have been met, and this little is spent on fiestas.

Social and economic organization is based upon the nuclear familyor, sometimes, upon polygynous families. Kinship reckoning is bilateral.

Town political organization is by municipio, but because this scheme is of foreign origin, the people themselves find little meaning in it. The municipal president is elected. A few villages have barrios, although, like the municipios, they hold no significance for the people.

The supernatural world is largely pre-Columbian and very similar to the conceptions of the Aztec, Zapotec, and Maya. Figures similar to those present in the Popol Vuh, a sacred Mayan text that has been preserved from versions recorded just after the Conquest, are common, including the hurricane god, who can either help or can destroy agricultural fields. The Popoluca also have maize gods and chanekos, small spirits who live in caves and take care of game animals. There are in addition dangerous spirits, who live in specific places and who can kill people. The nagual, or witch, may be either a supernatural being or a human, and can transform himself or herself into an animal. The Popoluca take great care in making offerings to supernatural beings so that their maize will grow well or their hunting and fishing expeditions will be successful. Illness is believed to be caused by the supernatural intrusion of objects into the body and by loss of soul, the latter indicated by a weak pulse.

Women deliver their children while either kneeling or sitting at the end of a bench. Children are given Spanish names. Education and socialization consist primarily of teaching adult tasks. A prospective groom enlists an aide to ask the family of a prospective bride for her hand in marriage. Once the prospective groom's offer has been accepted, he must perform bride-service; later the marriage is finalized by a feast. Marriages tend, however, toward easy dissolution. The dead are buried with grave goods believed necessary for the long journey to their final destinations, as well as a coin to pay for admittance to the afterworld.


Bibliography

Baez-Jorge, Felix (1973). Los zoque-popolucas, estructura social. Mexico City: Instituto Nacional Indigenista; Secretaria de Educación Publica.

Foster, George M. (1982). A Primitive Mexican Economy. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.

Foster, George M. (1969). "The Mixe, Zoque, Popoluca." In Handbook of Middle American Indians, edited by Robert Wauchope. Vol. 7, Ethnology, Part One, edited by Evon Z. Vogt, 448-477. Austin: University of Texas Press.

Munch Galindo, Guido (1983). Etnología del istmo veracruzano. Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas.

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Popoluca." Encyclopedia of World Cultures. The Gale Group, Inc. 1996. Encyclopedia.com. 8 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Popoluca." Encyclopedia of World Cultures. The Gale Group, Inc. 1996. Encyclopedia.com. (December 8, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3458001395.html

"Popoluca." Encyclopedia of World Cultures. The Gale Group, Inc. 1996. Retrieved December 08, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3458001395.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Headstrong Erebus learns hard way about behaviour
Newspaper article from: Sunday Star-Times; 12/28/1997; 594 words ; ...HEADSTRONG New Zealand-bred sprinter Erebus learned the hard way where to put his...Favourite Our Super Boy (7-2) trailed Erebus into the home straight and finished 1...turn. The Anthony Cummings-trained Erebus provided 30-year-old jockey Michael...
Erebus; In memoriam; Reflections on Erebus
Newspaper article from: The Press; 11/27/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...but perished in the tragedy ofMount Erebus. His brother-in-law Ronnie Brehaut...milkman, was taking care of Ronnie on the Erebus flight. Ian joined the flight at the...flight plunged into the white oblivionon Erebus, the tragedy assumed new dimensions...
Mineral Commoditites Acquisition of Erebus Diamond Project in Sierra Leone
News Wire article from: abnnewswire.net; 6/16/2006; ; 700+ words ; ...dated 22 May 2006 for all of the ordinary shares in Erebus Plc ("Erebus") (that it does not already own) ("the Offer...holders representing 100% of the ordinary shares of Erebus to which the Offer relates. All of the conditions...
WATCHING MOUNT EREBUS.
Newspaper article from: Santa Fe New Mexican (Santa Fe, NM); 4/29/2006; 700+ words ; ...to conduct volcanic research on Mount Erebus must watch out for a danger not present...rocks filled with molten lava. Mount Erebus -- named after the gateway to hell in...spent the past 34 austral summers on Mount Erebus trying to understand how the volcano works...
Tragic coincidence on Mt Erebus anniversary
.

Newspaper article from: New Zealand Herald (Auckland, New Zealand); 11/28/2008; 700+ words ; ...Airbus crash on the 29th Anniversary of the Erebus disaster is a tragic coincidence say the...killed when Flight 901 crashed on Mount Erebus on November 28, 1979. Yesterday, as...and his wife Raewyn helped establish an Erebus Crew Memorial near the Auckland Airport...
The inferno revisited. (observing Mount Erebus) (Cover Story)
Magazine article from: Science News; 6/6/1992; ; 700+ words ; ...first descent to the crater floor of Mt. Erebus, a smoldering volcano stuck in the frozen...hoped to reach a rare lava lake within Erebus' crater to collect samples of the gases...preparing for yet another mission to explore Erebus' lava lake, but this time with little...
Kinked cable crimps Dante's Erebus debut. (broken optical-fiber cable prevents Dante robot from exploring inner crater of Mt. Erebus, Antarctica) (Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Science News; 1/9/1993; ; 700+ words ; ...the bottom of the inner crater of Mt. Erebus, Earth's southernmost active volcano...University in Pittsburgh announced from Erebus' upper flank, where the wind-chill...doubted Dante would ever make it near Mt. Erebus this Antarctic summer (SN: 6/6/92...
Medal marks service on Ice; Erebus disaster
Newspaper article from: The Press; 3/23/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...worked tirelessly for 17 days after the Erebus tragedy, processing many of the 186 corpses...Auckland Airport, crashed into Mount Erebus in Antarctica on November 28, 1979...The New Zealand Special Service Medal (Erebus) was awarded to representatives from...
Mount Erebus; Memorial Cross; Ross Island
Newspaper article from: The Press; 11/29/2004; 399 words ; The summit of Mount Erebus is less than half an hour by helicopter...peninsula extending from the slopes of Mount Erebus to the sea at McMurdo Sound. . Memorial...those who lost their lives in the Mount Erebus disaster - especially those whose bodies...
Erebus 25 years on
Newspaper article from: Sunday Star-Times; 11/21/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...people whose lives were changed by the Erebus crash. And, overleaf, Sam Mahon recalls...jet as it smashed into the side of Mt Erebus. The crash was only the beginning of...path that took the plane over towering Mt Erebus. It was a change of which the pilots...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Erebus
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable Erebus in Greek mythology, the primeval god of...type of a place of blackness and gloom. Erebus was also the name of one of the two ships...the other was called Terror ); Mount Erebus, a volcanic peak on Ross Island, Antarctica...
Mount Erebus
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Mount Erebus volcanic peak, 12,280 ft (3,743 m) high, on Ross Island, in the Ross Sea, E Antarctica. One of the loftiest volcanoes...
Sir John Franklin
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography ...exploration was of special interest, for the Erebus and Terror had just returned from a remarkable...The British Admiralty decided to use the Erebus and Terror to determine whether the Northwest...Franklin, now 59, commissioned the Erebus. Both the Erebus and the Terror had been...
Hooker, Joseph Dalton
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography ...surgeon and naturalist on H.M.S. Erebus , which, with H.M.S. Terror , had...the botanical material collected on the Erebus voyage came from territory never before...of H. M. Discovery Ships ’ Erebus ’ and ‘ Terror...
Ross Island
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Ross Island in the Ross Sea , Antarctica , on the edge of the Ross Ice Shelf. Part of the Ross Dependency, the island is separated from Victoria Land by McMurdo Sound. Mt. Erebus , an active volcano, and Mt. Terror are on the island.

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: