Cumanagoto people

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Cumanagoto
Regions with significant populations
 
Afro-Caribbeans

The Cumanagoto people are a group of

Barcelona) in eastern Venezuela, and their descendants live now in the north of Anzoátegui State, Venezuela.[1]

The Cumanagotos lived in northeastern Venezuela at the time of the Spanish incursion. Since the 17th century they have not existed as a tribal or governmental unit. The Cumanagoto spoke a

manioc, sweet potatoes, and other native crops, as well as coca trees. They also gathered wild foods, and hunting was important. Domesticated animals were uncommon, except for turkeys. Their villages often had wooden palisades for defense. Dress was minimal, consisting of a small genital covering and decorative ornaments of feathers, pearls, gold, shell, clay beads, coral beads, bones, teeth, or flowers. Polygyny was practiced by chiefs, whose wives lived together in a kind of harem. Religion centered on worship of the sun and moon.[2] The Cumanagotos also valued frogs, as they saw the animal to be the god of waters. Therefore, they did not kill frogs, instead choosing to keep them as pets, but whipping them in the case of an extended winter or little rainfall.[3]

The short-lived Province of New Catalonia (1633-1654), founded by Joan Orpí, was also known as the Province of the Cumanagotos. It was absorbed into New Andalusia Province in 1654.

The name of the city of

Aragua State
is said to derive from the Cumanagoto word for snail, Cahigua.

References

  1. Diccionario de la Lengua Española
    )
  2. ^ Cumanagoto in Encyclopædia Britannica
  3. ^ "Full text of "Obras escogidas de Aristides Rojas"". archive.org. Retrieved 2017-04-05.

See also