-
Calfucurá (from
Mapudungun Kallfükura, 'blue stone'; from kallfü, 'blue', and kura, 'stone') also
known as Juan
Calfucurá or Cufulcurá (b. late 1770s;...
-
Aires Province to the
mountain p****es of Neuquén Province. The
lonco Calfucurá crossed the
Andes from
Chile to the
Pampas around 1830 to aid the indigenous...
-
Aires Province to the
mountain p****es of Neuquén Province. The
lonco Calfucurá crossed the
Andes from
Chile to the
pampas around 1830,
after a call from...
- Luis Sepúlveda
Calfucura (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈlwis seˈpulβeða kalfuˈkuɾa];
October 4, 1949 –
April 16, 2020) was a
Chilean writer and journalist...
- actions,
highlighting those carried out in 1857
against the
people of
Calfucurá that
grouped Indigenous Confederation in Pampa,
threatened them permanently...
- (17th-century),
Mapuche toqui Cadeguala (16th-century),
Mapuche toqui Calfucurá (late 1770s–1873),
Mapuche military leader from
Patagonia Caupolicán (died...
- her captors,
fearing vengeance from Spaniards, sold her to the
warlord Calfucurá in
Puelmapu for a
hundred mares, but that she had died
after three years...
-
Sustainability Challenges of
Indigenous Territories in Amazonia". Coria, Jessica;
Calfucura,
Enrique (2012). "Ecotourism and the
development of
indigenous communities:...
- whom they
share the same language. In 1872, the
indigenous commander Calfucurá and his 6,000
warriors attacked the
cities of
General Alvear, Veinticinco...
- The
military power and
influence of the
Boroano ended with the m****acre
carried out by the
lonco Calfucurá in 1834
during a
trade meeting. v t e v t e...