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Rumsen people : ウィキペディア英語版 | Rumsen people
The Rumsen people (also known as Rumsien, ''San Carlos Costanoan'' and ''Carmeleno'') are one of eight groups of Ohlone people, also known as Costanoan, indigenous peoples of California. ==Territory== They historically shared a common language, Rumsen, which was spoken from the Pajaro River to Point Sur, and on the lower courses of the Pajaro, as well as on the Salinas and Carmel Rivers, and the region of the present-day cities of Salinas, Monterey and Carmel. The Rumsen tribe held the lower Carmel River Valley and neighboring Monterey Peninsula at the time of Spanish colonization. Their population of approximately 400-500 people was distributed among at least five villages within their territory.〔Breschini and Haversat 1994〕 An early twentieth-century mapping of a specific village called Rumsen on the Carmel River, several miles inland from the Mission in Carmel, may or may not be accurate.〔Kroeber, 1925, Map p. 465〕 Mission registers indicate that "Tucutnut", about three miles upstream from the mouth of the Carmel River, was the largest village of the Rumsen local tribe.〔Milliken 1987〕
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