- The
Battle of
Angoteros was an
armed clash that
occurred on June 26, 1903,
between troops from Peru and
Ecuador in the area of the Napo River; originated...
- the
intersection of the Napo
River and the
Aguarico River.
After the
Angoteros attack occurred the
previous year, the
Ecuadorian government reinforced...
-
Ecuador and Peru.
Included among the
Secoya are a
number of
people called Angoteros.
Although their language comprises only some
dialectal differences of...
-
nation Territory "Trabajan con" ["Working with"]
Estimated po****tion
Angoteros Campuya - San
Miguel tributaries N/A 1,000
Macaguajes and
Coreguajes San...
-
conflict had
already occurred between Ecuadorian and
Peruvian troops in
Angoteros, in the Napo
River region. At the
beginning of 1904,
Ecuador was interested...
-
spoken at the
sources of the Güepi River, Loreto. (Unattested.)
Pioje /
Angotero /
Ancutere -
spoken on the Napo River,
Tarapoto River, and
Aguarico River...
- The
Secoya (also
known as
Angotero, Encabellado, Huajoya, Piojé, Siekopai) are an
indigenous peoples living in the
Ecuadorian and
Peruvian Amazon. They...
- Peru (1879),
Bolivia (1879),
Chile (1883) and
Ecuador (1885).
Combat of
Angoteros [es] (1903) Ecuador Peru
Defeat Advance of an
Ecuadorian detachment...
- pretensions, but
ending Brazilian expansionism into
Madre de Dios and Ucayali.
Angoteros Incident (1903) Peru Ecuador
Peruvian victory Advance of an Ecuadorian...
-
justoi (Wunderlich, 1992) (type) —
Canary Is.
Otavaloa Huber, 2000
Otavaloa angotero Huber, 2000 (type) — Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
Otavaloa lisei Huber, 2000...