- (/məˈpuːtʃi/ mə-POO-chee,
Mapuche and Spanish: [maˈputʃe]) also
known as
Araucanians are a
group of
indigenous inhabitants of south-central
Chile and southwestern...
- The
Araucanian languages /ˌærɔːˈkeɪniən/ are a
small language family of
indigenous languages of the
Americas spoken in
central Chile and
neighboring areas...
-
southwestern Argentina (see
Araucanian). Matsés
Pehuenche – a
branch of
Mapuches that
lived in the
Andean valleys of
southern (see
Araucanian).
Quechuas – make...
- 'the
speech of the land'; also
spelled Mapuzugun and Mapudungu) is an
Araucanian language related to ****lliche
spoken in south-central
Chile and west-central...
-
Araucanian islands may
refer to the
following islands in Chile:
Mocha Island Quiriquina Island Santa María Island,
Chile This
disambiguation page lists...
- two
bellicose master races: the
Visigoths of
Spain and the
Mapuche (
Araucanians) of Chile.
Palacios traces the
origins of the
Spanish component of the...
- poet, born in Madrid.
While in
Chile (1556–63) he
fought against the
Araucanians (Mapuche), and
there he
began the epic poem La Araucana,
considered one...
- The
Araucanian herring (Strangomera
bentincki or
Clupea bentincki) is a
species of fish in the
family Clupeidae. It is an
epipelagic fish,
silvery below...
- "North
American Araucanian Royalist Society". www.steelcrown.org.
Retrieved Apr 4, 2021. "h.2
Steel Crown –
North American Araucanian Royalist Society"...
- Institute.
Retrieved October 3, 2024. Dillehy, Tom (2016). "Reflections on
Araucanian/Mapuche Resilience, Independence, and
Ethnomorphosis in
Colonial (and...