-
tribe was a
cacique who,
along with the nitaínos,
governed each of the
yucayeques, or
villages of the island. It has been
suggested that the
first tribe...
- area of San Juan used to be the
boundary between the
tribal regions (
yucayeques) of
Guaynabo and Haimanio, led by the
chiefs (caciques) Mabo and Yuisa...
-
small cotton apron,
called a nagua. The Taíno
lived in
settlements called yucayeques,
which varied in size
depending on the location.
Those in
Puerto Rico...
-
governed by
chiefs known as caciques, who were the
maximum authority in a
Yucayeque (village). The
chiefs were
advised by priest-healers
known as a Bohique...
- name
Arecibo comes from the Taíno
chief Xamaica Arasibo,
cacique of the
yucayeque (Taíno settlement) of
Abacoa where the
Spanish town of
Arecibo was settled...
- Caguax, who at the time of the
Spanish arrival in 1493 was
cacique of the
yucayeque and
region of Turabo. The name
Caguax itself might be
related to the Taino...
- proyectosalonhogar.com/link%20p.r/www.linktopr.com/caciques.html
Caciques y
Yucayeques de
Puerto Rico ]
Archived November 7, 2012, at the
Wayback Machine on...
-
Salcedo to
determine whether the
Spanish were gods. He was the
cacique of "
Yucayeque del Yagüeka or Yagüeca",
which today lies in the
region between Añasco...
-
territory of the
ruling Caciques,
destroying their villages (known as
yucayeques) and
taking as many
slaves as
possible in the process. The
ensuing Spanish...
-
region of Canóvanas was
granted to
Miguel Díaz, who
turned the Taíno
yucayeque into a ranch. It is said that Canóbana,
along with Loaiza, were supporters...