翻訳と辞書 |
Tinigua Tinigua are the indigenous people who inhabited the river basin Yari, Caguan and today Caquetá Department of Colombia. In their language, Tinigua refers to the ancestors: tini probably meant “word of the ancients.”〔Nubia Tobar 1994〕〔Corts, Estanislao de. 1926: "Nueva excursión por el desconocido Caguán"; ''Informe de las misiones católicas de Colombia relativas a los años 1925, 1926''. Imprenta La Luz, Bogotá.〕 ==History== The Tinigua population drastically declined in the 19th century. First, the exploitation of the rubber, then as allies of the Witotos they faced the Muinane and Carijona, and had to abandon much of their territory and settle to the north. Finally they were attacked by settlers after 1949, which caused their extinction, so that in 1994 only survived two elderly brothers, in the Sierra de la Macarena, Meta.〔Tobar Ortiz, Nubia. 1994: "En el umbral de una muerte inevitable: los Tinigua de la Sierra de la Macarena"; ''La recuperación de las lenguas nativas como búsqueda de identidad étnica''; Simposio, VII Congreso de Antropología. CCELA - Universidad de los Andes. ISSN 0121-1579〕 The first references to this group were provided by the priest Martivell Fair (1925) and Capuchins missionary Gaspar de Pinell (1929). Language samples were collected by the Capuchins Estanislao Les Corts (1931), Fructuoso Manresa and Igualada and Marcelino Francisco de Castellvi, and the latter published in 1940 the first study of the language Tinigua.〔Corts, Estanislao de. 1926: "Nueva excursión por el desconocido Caguán"; Informe de las misiones católicas de Colombia relativas a los años 1925, 1926. Imprenta La Luz, Bogotá〕
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Tinigua」の詳細全文を読む
スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース |
Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.
|
|