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Chango people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chango people, Chinchorro cultures
Chango
Total population
~4,725 people declared
Regions with significant populations
Coast ofAtacama Desert
Languages
Spanish,Mapudungun,Aymara
Religion
Roman Catholicism,Mapuche religion
Related ethnic groups
Mapuche?

TheChangos,also known asCamanchacosorCamanchangos,[1]are anIndigenous peopleor group of peoples who inhabited a long stretch of thePacificcoast from southernPerutonorth-central Chile,including the coast of theAtacama desert. Although much of the customs and culture of the Chango people have disappeared and in many cases they have been considered extinct, in Chile they are legally recognized as an original indigenous people since 2020, and about 4,725 people self-declare that they belong to this ethnic group.[2]

History

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Definition and context of the Changos

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The culture originated in the 8,000-year-oldChinchorro tradition.[3]Due to a combination of conquest andintegrationinto other cultures and ethnicities, the Chango culture is now considered extinct.[4]However, in Chile they are legally recognized as an original indigenous people since 2020, and about 4,725 people self-declare that they belong to this ethnic group.[1]

Distribution of the pre-Hispanic people of Chile. Click to enlarge.

The Changos were not a distincttribeorethnic group;rather, the term is used to refer to many disparate communities of indigenous people living along the northern Chilean and southern Peruvian coast in thePre-Columbian era.The term "chango" was first documented in the 17th century bySpanishconquistadors who perceived little in the way of cultural difference between the local native communities. Therefore, "chango" describes a loose grouping of maritime peoples who shared a similar way of life rather than a common history or ethnicity.[5]Chango culture developed adjacent to neighbouring cultures such as theAtacameños.[6] Chango culture is part of theChinchorro tradition.The Chinchorro werehunter-fisher-gathererswith a particular reliance on the sea, who lived along theAtacamacoast from at least the 8th century BC. They are of special interest to modern anthropologists due to their practice of mummifying the dead.[7]

Changos aroundPaposoappear by 1870 to have spoken a dialect ofMapudungun,the language of theMapuche peopleof south-central Chile.[8]In the coast of Antofagasta Region there are toponyms near the coast claimed to be Mapuche includingTaltal[9]andQuebrada Mamilla.[10]

Some older works starting withBenjamín Vicuña Mackenna(1869) claim the Changos people extended once as far south asValparaíso(33° S), but clear evidence for this is lacking.[11]

Chango economy

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Changoraftsin the Chilean port ofHuascoin the 1850s

Chango communities were organised into eithernomadicorsedentarygroups based on nuclear family units. Each group was independent of the others, providing food and other resources for itself.[12] The Changos were experts at exploiting the resources of the sea. Each group specialised in a particular type of fish, includingtuna,conger eels,mullet,dart fish,mackerelandoctopus.Rafts used for fishing developed from primitive reed constructions to craft made from three wooden planks, and later toseal skinsfastened to wooden frames. Fish were caught using nets, hooks andharpoons.[13] The capture of seals was of crucial importance to the Chango way of life, with every part of the animal having its uses. The meat, fat and bones were used for food and tools, the skins were used to make rafts and the intestines to make fishing equipment.[14] As well as seal skins, the Changos usedvicuña wool,feathers, bird skins, shells and the bones and teeth of sea creatures as materials to make practical and decorative items such as clothing, blankets, tools, cutlery and jewellery. They also made and painted ceramic utensils. Despite their geographical isolation, the Changos traded with inland tribes, exchanging shellfish, dried fish, animal hide, guano, fat and shells for wool, fruit, maize and coca. Chango cave paintings include images of men hunting and fishing and sea creatures such as seals, turtles and whales.[15]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Wheeler, Sara (1994).Travels in a Thin Country: A Journey Through Chile.ISBN0375753656.
  2. ^"Congreso chileno aprueba ley que reconoce al pueblo chango como etnia indígena".ElPais.cr(in Spanish). September 8, 2020.RetrievedJanuary 5,2020.
  3. ^Pueblos Originarios de Chile - ChangosArchived2015-07-21 at theWayback Machineeducarchile.cl 2012, retrieved on June 22, 2015
  4. ^Los Changos de las costas de ChileMemoria Chilena, BND Biblioteca Nacional Digital, Ricardo E. Latcham Santiago, Chile 1910, retrieved on June 22, 2015
  5. ^Changos - Ser indigenaserindigena.org Portal de las Culturas Originarias de Chile retrieved on June 22, 2015
  6. ^Pueblos Originarios de Chile - ChangosMemoria Chilena, BND Biblioteca Nacional Digital, retrieved on June 22, 2015
  7. ^Chinchorro CultureArchived2005-10-23 at theWayback Machineabout By K. Kris Hirst, archaeology expert, retrieved on June 23, 2015
  8. ^D'Ans, André-Marcel (1976)."Chilueno o arauco, idioma de los changos del norte de Chile, dialecto mapuche septentrional"(PDF).Estudios Atacameños(in Spanish) (4): 113–118. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on March 4, 2014.RetrievedFebruary 22,2014.
  9. ^Diccionario Geográfico de la República de Chile (1899) página 790
  10. ^Payàs Puigarnau, Getrudis; Villena Araya, Belén (2021-12-15)."Indagaciones en torno al significado del oro en la cultura mapuche. Una exploración de fuentes y algo más"[Inquiries on the Meaning of Gold in Mapuche Culture. A review of sources and something more].Estudios Atacameños(in Spanish).67.doi:10.22199/issn.0718-1043-2021-0028.S2CID244279716.
  11. ^Vera Villarroel, Jaime (6 December 2018)."Los changos, su supuesta presencia en la bahía de Valparaíso".Boletín Histórico(in Spanish).VII(XXII): 79–103.
  12. ^for the Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino – ‘Pueblos originarios’ retrieved on June 23, 2015[permanent dead link]
  13. ^[Manual de Historia de Chile desde la prehistoria hasta el 2000, Francisco Frías Valenzuela, 1986] Santiago Chile: Zig-Zag, 2000. retrieved on June 23, 2015
  14. ^Documental de Chile, Anselmo J. Garcia Curado, 2013, retrieved on June 23, 2015
  15. ^Pueblos Originarios de Chile - ChangosArchived2015-07-21 at theWayback Machineeducarchile.cl 2012, retrieved on June 22, 2015
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