-
Minuane were one of the
native nations of Uruguay,
Argentina (specially in the
province of
Entre Rios) and
Brazil (specially in the
state of Rio Grande...
- the north. The last
group are
farmers with pottery, such as the Charrúa,
Minuane and Guaraní in the northeast, with
slash and burn
semisedentary existence;...
-
named "Brigada Charrua" (Charrua Brigade).
Indigenous peoples in
Uruguay Minuane people ****ociation of
Descendants of the Charrúa
Nation Council of the...
- Rio
Grande do Sul and in Uruguay. It has the same name of the
indigenous Minuane people in the
Portuguese language (in Spanish, the name of that people...
- what was
called the
Banda Oriental.
Other significant tribes were the
Minuane, Yaro, Güenoa, Chaná, Bohán and Guaraní, and the Arachán.
Languages once...
- Charrúa is an
extinct Charruan language historically spoken by the Charrúa
people in
southern Uruguay. Serrano,
Antonio (1946). The Charrua. U.S. Government...
-
Guarani and
Kaingang peoples (with
smaller po****tions of Charrúa and
Minuane). The
first Europeans there were Jesuits,
followed by
settlers from the...
- 255
Yahgan 189 Weenhayek/Wichí 179
Guarayo (originally from Bolivia) 155
Minuane 69
Iogys 49
Churumata 47 Jujuí 41 Michilingüe 28
Chonos (originally from...
- Guaycurú
family but
known by
their Guaraní
ethnonyms as Mbayá, Payaguá,
Minuané, Mbeguá, Timbú, Corondá, Quiloazá and Colastiné; and
others related to...
- the town of
Quinta in Rio
Grande do Sul. The
specific name
refers to the
Minuane an
indigenous people who
lived in Rio
Grande do Sul. Froese, Rainer; Pauly...