Chorotega

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Middle American Natives

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Middle American Natives aboriginal peoples living in the area between present-day United States and South America. Although most of Mexico is geographically considered part of North America and although there have been cultural contacts between Mexican groups and the Pueblo of the SW United States, the cultural development of most of Mexico belongs, in fact, to that of Middle America. In the southern portion of the valley of Mexico and in the jungle region of Yucatán, ancient Mexico reached its highest cultural achievements. The Maya had links with the Chorotega of Nicaragua and Honduras, and these in turn had contacts with the Chibcha of Colombia, thus establishing a Central American cultural chain between the civilizations of Mexico and those of the Andean region. Highly developed civilizations flourished in Mexico after the domestication of corn and the rise of agricultural communities; the Olmec , the Maya, and the cultures of the central plateau, Teotihuacán, Toltec , Mixtec , Zapotec and Aztec , developed architecture, agriculture, the use of stone—and sometimes of metal—to a high, often remarkable, degree. The Quiché and the Cakchiquel flourished in Guatemala; besides these and the Chorotega, the southern tip of Central America did not produce as highly developed civilizations as the rest of Middle America. Today many of the Native Americans of Panama, Nicaragua, and Honduras, such as the San Blas, the Mosquito (see Mosquito Coast ), and the Lenca of Honduras, bear the imprint of Carib ancestry or influence. The Mexican Native Americans after the Spanish conquest in the 16th cent. retained their ancestral mode of life in some regions, but they were mostly a subjugated group until the 20th cent. Native American artisans did make notable contributions to the early development of the arts, notably in painting and architecture, but the Native Americans were mostly used as laborers under the encomienda and the repartimiento, and thousands eventually became the victims of peonage . It was not until after the revolution of 1910 and the indianismo movement of Emiliano Zapata that efforts were made, notably by the Mexican president Lázaro Cárdenas, with regard to the economic and social development of the Native American. Today the descendants of the above-mentioned Native American groups, as well as such peoples as the Huastec , the Tarascan , the Yaqui , and the Tarahumara , constitute a powerful cultural and economic element of Mexican life.

Bibliography: See J. A. Graham, comp., Ancient Mesoamerica (1966); D. Z. Stone, Pre-Columbian Man Finds Central America (1972); M. P. Weaver, The Aztecs, Maya, and their Predecessors (1972).

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Chorotega

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Chorotega , aboriginal people and language group of Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica. Little is known of the Chorotega, primarily beause of the absence of extensive ruins. Contemporaneous with the Maya to the northwest, they inhabited principally the Ulúa River valley and the Mosquito Coast . With other tribes to the south and the Chibcha of Colombia, they formed a cultural link between the peoples of the Andean area and those of Mexico. The Chorotega were probably democratic, with a chief chosen by elected council. Chorotega culture became extinct in the Spanish colonial period.

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AGRICULTURE-COSTA RICA: RURAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN CENTERS ON TREES
News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire; 12/22/1998; ; 700+ words ; ...carried out until March in the region of Chorotega, an area of 10,140 kms in the province...told IPS that peasant farmers in the Chorotega region now understand that it is in their...indicators of the results obtained in the Chorotega region. The value of small plots of...
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News Wire article from: EFE World News Service; 10/8/2001; 526 words ; ...in June, July and August. "The funds will be used in the Chorotega region (in northwestern Costa Rica), an area that received...Zamora said. The money will benefit 1,000 families in the Chorotega region so that they can improve their socio-economic situation...
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Newspaper article from: Xinhua English Newswire; 12/6/1997; 281 words ; ...the situation, especially in February, March and April, experts predicted. The most serious drought will occur in the Chorotega region of the Guanacaste province, while other regions of the country including the Metropolitan area will also be affected...
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Newspaper article from: NotiCen: Central American & Caribbean Affairs; 9/16/1999; 700+ words ; ...public-health officials have reinforced vigilance at border crossings. Enrique Jimenez, a Health Ministry official in Chorotega, said a rat invasion from Nicaragua was not likely because of strict controls at the border. Trucks carrying cargo from...
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Magazine article from: International Travel News; 8/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...for the statues brought from a nearby island by U.S. Ambassador Squier in the 1800s. Most of the statues are from the Chorotega culture of about A.D. 800-1200. Later we stopped at the plaza and had one of the ubiquitous fresh fruit drinks Jugos...
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Magazine article from: Van; 4/1/2000; ; 700+ words ; ...dirigir". Punta Uva est a unos siete kilmetros en direccin a Limn. All consigo dar con Martn Hernndez, que es de origen chorotega, y gua naturalista. "Tenemos una finca de 100 ha. por la que se realizan caminatas guiadas en las que vemos entre otras...
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Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 3/5/2006; 700+ words ; ...however, is the array of pre-Columbian artifacts in the back. Holdings include 9th- to 12th-century carvings by the Chorotega, former inhabitants of Isla Zapatera, a lake island just south of Granada. West of the park stands the 16th-century Iglesia...
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News Wire article from: Noticias en Español; 10/11/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...En Costa Rica viven unos 30.000 indgenas, pertenecientes a las etnias maleku, brunca, brurn, huetar, guaym, ngbe, chorotega, cabcar y bribri. Parte de estos pueblos viven en reservas indgenas ubicadas en tierras inalienables e intransferibles...
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News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire; 10/13/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...which approximately 30,000 are indigenous peoples, members of the Maleku, Brunca, Bruran, Huetar, Guaymi, Ngobe, Chorotega, Cabecar and Bribri communities. Some of these groups live on indigenous reserves, on lands that are inalienable and non...
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News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire; 10/29/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...percent of the country's indigenous people), Cabecare (25 percent), Brunca (15 percent), Ngbe Bugle (13 percent), Chorotega (4 percent), Huetares (3 percent), Maloku (3 percent) and Teribe (2 percent). Most of them live in the southern...

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