-
often collectively called the
Guaycuru peoples. For the most part, the
Guaycuruans lived in the Gran
Chaco and were
nomadic and warlike,
until finally subdued...
-
other Guaycuruans. The Payaguá
menaced Spanish travel on the
Paraguay river for 200 years. The
bands and
family groups making up the
Guaycuruans were matrilocal...
-
peoples were
nearly the same in the 16th century.) The Mbayá
spoke a
Guaycuruan language. They were "formidable"
fighters and "kept the
Europeans – settlers...
- Guaraní | | |___ Chiripá | | |___ Kaiwá [+] | | |___ Tapieté | |____
Guaycuruan family | | |___ Qom
group | | |___ Mocoví | | |___ Pilagá | | |___ Toba...
-
commonly called Chiriguanos,
while the Guaná were
subjects of the Mbayá, a
Guaycuruan speaking people. The Chané,
together with
other Arawak groups, are believed...
-
variations of that name. The
Payagua language is extinct; they
spoke a
Guaycuruan language. No
people remain who
identify as Payaguá; the
descendants of...
-
female deaths,
suggesting infanticide. The Abipones, a
small tribe of
Guaycuruan stock, of
about 5,000 by the end of the 18th
century in Paraguay, practiced...
-
thousands of
years of
human habitation. Both
agricultural and
nomadic Guaycuruan lived in the
region at the time of the
Spanish Conquest. It
became a relatively...
- Arikapú.
Manitsawa -
Previously inhabited the
Xingu river region Mbaya -
Guaycuruan speakers and
nomads of the Gran Chaco, who
migrated to Mato
Grosso do...
- Mocoví (Familia Guaycurú, Argentina)" [Verbal
alternations in Mocoví (
Guaycuruan family, Argentina)]. Lingüística (in Spanish). 31 (2): 9–26. hdl:11336/55718...