- in 1549
there were said to be 200,000 in the area. They were
called "
Chitareros" by the Spanish,
because of the
general custom that the men had to carry...
-
known as
Santander was
inhabited by
Amerindian ethnic groups: Muisca,
Chitareros, Laches, Yariguí, Opón,
Carare and Guanes.
Their political and social...
- the mountains. As they made
their way home, they were
attacked by the
Chitareros on May 27, 1533.
Ehinger and
Captain Esteban Martín fled into a low-lying...
- the mountains. As they made
their way home, they were
attacked by the
Chitareros on May 27, 1533.
Ehinger and
Captain Estéban Martín fled into a low-lying...
- (Chibcha). They
included the following: the Muisca, Guane, Lache, Cofán, and
Chitareros. The
Tairona civilization thrived in the
Sierra Nevada de
Santa Marta...
-
inhabited the
northeastern parts of Boyacá
Their western neighbours were the Guane,
southern the Muisca,
northwest the
Chitarero, and
north and east the U'wa...
-
Guanaca Guanaca Indigenous 14 Yarí Yarí Yarí
Indigenous 14
Chitarero Chitarero Chitarero Indigenous 10
Indigenous Mexican Nahuatl Uto-Aztecan Indigenous...
- 16
Guanaca Guanaca Guanaca 12 14 Yarí Yarí Yarí No data 14
Chitarero Chitarero Chitarero 161 10
Indigenous Mexican Nahuatl Uto-Aztecan 12 5
Juhup Hup...
-
spoken on the Tocaría
River and in the
village of Morcote. (Unattested.)
Chitarero –
extinct language once
spoken around the
modern city of Pamplona, department...
-
Baniwa Barasana Bora Barí
Calima Camsá
Cauca Carabayo Carijona Chimila Chitarero Cocamilla Cofán
Cubeo Emberá Embera-Wounaan
Guahibo Guambiano Guane Guna...