- The
Guanahatabey (also
spelled Guanajatabey) were an
Indigenous people of
western Cuba at the time of
European contact.
Archaeological and
historical studies...
-
Guanahatabey (Guanajatabey) was the
language of the
Guanahatabey people, a hunter-gatherer
society that
lived in
western Cuba
until the 16th century. Very...
- led 20th-century
scholars to
apply the name "Ciboney" to the non-Taíno
Guanahatabey of
western Cuba and
various archaic cultures around the Caribbean, but...
-
Lesser Antilles, the
Ciguayo and
Macorix of
parts of Hispaniola, and the
Guanahatabey of
western Cuba. The
Kalinago have
maintained an
identity as an Indigenous...
- The
Guanahatabey were
extinct by the time of the
Spanish arrival in 1492;
little firsthand do****entation
remains of how the
archaic Guanahatabey society...
- is now Cuba was
inhabited as
early as the 4th
millennium BC, with the
Guanahatabey and Taíno
peoples inhabiting the area at the time of
Spanish colonization...
- the West Indies.
Ciboney Taíno,
classic Taíno, and Iñeri were Arawakan,
Karina and Yao were Cariban. Macorix,
Ciguayo and
Guanahatabey are unclassified....
- Chavín
Paracas Nazca Moche Lima
Tiwanaku Wari
Caribbean Ortoiroid people Guanahatabey Saladoid Kalinago Kalina Arawak Indigenous peoples Seafaring West Africa...
- Rico, 1000 BC–200 AD
Ciboney people,
Greater Antilles, c. 1000—301 BC
Guanahatabey, Cuba, 1000 BC
Saladoid culture, 500 BC—545 AD
Ostionoid culture, 600—1500...
- Chavín
Paracas Nazca Moche Lima
Tiwanaku Wari
Caribbean Ortoiroid people Guanahatabey Saladoid Kalinago Kalina Arawak Indigenous peoples Seafaring West Africa...