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Guachichil

The Guachichil, Cuauchichil, or Quauhchichitl, are an Indigenous people of Mexico. Pre-contact, they occupied the most extensive territory of all the indigenous Chichimeca Nations tribes in pre-Columbian Central Mexico.

Guachichil
Quauhchichitl — Cuauchichil
Map of Chichimeca Nations
Guachichile territory in purple.
Total population
Unknown
Regions with significant populations
Central Mexico
(e.g. Zacatecas, Guanajuato, San Luis Potosí)
Languages
Guachichil, Spanish
Religion
Roman Catholic
Related ethnic groups
Other Chichimecas

The Guachichiles roamed through a large region of Zacatecas; as well as portions of San Luis Potosí, Guanajuato, and northeastern Jalisco; south to the northern corners of Michoacán; and north to Saltillo in Coahuila.

The Guachichil Nation continues to exist in the city of San Luis Potosi, San Luis Potosi, Mexico, and is recognized by the city and state. They have tribal members in Mexico and the United States.[1][2][3]

History

Considered both warlike and brave, the Guachichiles played a major role in provoking the other Chichimeca tribes to resist the Spanish settlement. The historian Philip Wayne Powell wrote:[4][5]

" Their strategic position in relation to Spanish mines and highways, made them especially effective in raiding and in escape from Spanish reprisal."

These warriors were known to fight fiercely even if mortally wounded and were a key component in the Spanish defeat during the Chichimeca Wars. The children learned to use the bow at walking age and the hunters were such good shots that if they missed the eye and hit the eyebrow they would be extremely disappointed. The Chichimeca bow and arrow was expertly crafted allowing for penetration of Spanish armor.

Two Spanish accounts of the Chichimeca's archery skill: "On one occasion I saw them throw an orange into the air, and they shot into it so many arrows that, having held it in the air for much time, it finally fell in minute pieces” (Powell 48). “One of don Alonso de Castilla’s soldiers had an arrow pass through the head of his horse, including a crownpiece of double buckskin and metal, and into his chest, so he fell with the horse dead on the ground ‘this was seen by many who are still living’ (Powell 48).

The Chichimeca were nomadic making them very mobile and experts of the rough vegetation filled (mostly cactus) land in which they always looked for hiding spots. “His long use of the food native to the Gran Chichimeca gave him far greater mobility than the sedentary invader, who was tied to domesticated livestock, agriculture, and imported supplies. The nomad could and did cut off these supplies, destroy the livestock, and thus paralyze the economic and military vitality of the invaders; this was seldom possible in reverse” (Powell 44). They attacked in small groups ranging from five up to two-hundred braves. They highly valued animal furs and highly treasured European scalps. The most valued of those being red hair due to their cultural importance of the color red. The Chichimeca were easily willing to trade seized gold and silver for red haired women as noted by an extremely small percentage of the population in that territory today having brownish-reddish hair, more noticeably when mixed with whites of non-red haired origin. Red haired women and children were a large incentive used to obtain peace within the region.

War Tactics

The Guachichil would outsmart/deceive their adversaries instead of relying on brute force. “He sent spies into Spanish-Indian towns for appraisal of the enemy’s plans and strength; he developed a far-flung system of lookouts and scouts (atalays); and, in major attacks, settlements were softened by preliminary and apparently systematic killing and stealing of horses and other livestock, this being an attempt, sometimes successful, to change his intended victim from horseman to foot soldier” (Powell 46). When they attacked they used a very good tactic that terrified the animals and scared the Spanish. The Guachichil would disguise themselves as grotesque animals using animal heads and red paint then yelled like crazed beasts making the Spanish lose control of the livestock. The fifty mile (80-km) mountain range, from currently La Montesa to Milagros, Zacatecas, was known as "El Camino Del Infierno" or "The Path of Hell" by the Spanish. The caravans were required to pass through that fifty mile mountain range because a detour would be very lengthy. Within "The Path of Hell" the most ferocious attacks took place. Ancient Guachichil murals of the region paint the indigenous accounts of these events.

The chieftain of the tribe was also the military leader. The Spaniards observed that they attacked in gangs of few members who differed from the other Chichimecas by painting their heads and hair red.

They attacked their enemies warlike with obsidian swords, spears, darts, and arrows.

They first selected the place of attack, preferably a desert but mountainous plain, a rock, a ravine, a swamp, or they simply waited until it was midnight. At midnight they would stealthily position themselves in the attack zone and suddenly let out loud and terrible howls and screams that perplexed their enemies at the same time that they began the attack by running directly towards the target, at the same time that they produced a shower of arrows.

The political organization of the Guachichiles was very rudimentary when the Spanish arrived. It was patriarchal and consisted of the most powerful warrior who managed to overthrow the chief who ruled at that time would be the chief. If he failed to overthrow the chief, he separated from the tribe with some families and settled elsewhere. Although tribes could also unite and thus become more powerful through inter-tribal marriages. At the arrival of the Spanish there were hundreds of tribes throughout the territory, but four were the most powerful.

Origin of name

The Guachichiles were known to paint their bodies, hair, and faces in red dye. For this reason they were called "guachichile" by the Mexica; from the nahuatl kua-itl (head) and chichil-tic (red), meaning "heads painted red".

Colony and Conquest

The region currently occupied by the city of San Luis Potosí was, until before the arrival of the Spaniards, a Guachichil-Chichimeca post.

Since 1550, Guachichil, Guamares and other Chichimecas assaults began to be registered, so Viceroy Don Luis II de Velasco commissioned Herrera to punish the robbers. Thus began the bloodiest and most extensive of all Spanish companies in America.

Pedro de Anda founded the Real del Cerro de San Pedro and Minas del Potosí on March 4, 1592. Given the lack of water in the place, it was necessary to locate a nearby territory that did have it to support human stay. The place was located east of the Anahuac table.

In order for the Spanish to settle widely, the local Guachichiles and the Tlaxcalans were displaced. The hostility of the Tlaxcalans, backed by the Spanish, against the Guachichiles would not take long to manifest.

The community of San Luis Potosí originated with the well-differentiated gathering of Guachichiles, Tlaxcaltecas, Tarascos, Zacatecos Chichimecas, Chichimecas-Pames de Santa María del Río, Otomí and Spaniards from Extremadura or of uncertain origin.

Under the protection of mining wealth, the city of San Luis Potosí was born in November 1592 and its foundation occurred when the fierce Cuachichil Indian named Moquamalto surrendered to Fray Diego de la Magdalena, and Captain Miguel Caldera, in the place we now know as the square of the founders. Great people from many cities and royal mines came to the lure of gold, which gave rise to a unique culture and joined the presence of the Guachichiles, Spaniards, Otomi, Tarascos, Mulattoes, Blacks and Tlaxcalans, thus creating a unique miscegenation in Mexico.

Tribes and Territories

The Guachichiles occupied the entire Potosino Altiplano, part of Guanajuato, Jalisco, Zacatecas and Tamaulipas. This area extended from the south, along the Lerma or Grande river, in Michoacán and Guanajuato, to the Comanja mountain ranges and, on the border with the Rioverde area, the boundary rose to the north. Gonzalo de las Casas observed: "They occupy a lot of land and that is how the most people of all the Chichimecas are and who have done the most damage. There are many partialities and not all are well known." The Guachichiles were not a solid kingdom or political state in the 16th century, but rather a set of tribes and chiefdoms, the Spaniards observed three groups: those of Mazapil (where the Mazapiles predominated) to the north, in the mountains that border the town from Parras, from Las Salinas, to the center of San Luis Potosí and finally from Tunal Grande (where the Xales predominated), where the largest food supply place for the Guachichiles was located; These three groups were not political or cultural units, they were the inhabitants of the three geographical areas where the Guachichiles were centralized. Regardless of the three groups of guachichiles, there were a large number of tribal groups, many of them only mentioned once by the Spaniards: Bózalos or negritos, Macolias, Samúes, Maticoyas, Alaquines, Capiojes, Machipaniquanes, Leemagues, Mascorros, Caisanes, Coyotes, Guanchenis, Uaxabanes, Guenacapiles, Alpañales, Pisones, Cauicuiles, Alacazauis, Guazancores and los Chanales.

Language

Cuachichil
RegionZacatecas
Extinct(date missing)
unclassified (Corachol?)
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
0w6
GlottologNone

The Guachichil language is now extinct and very little is known about it. It may have been an Uto-Aztecan language closely related to the Huichol language.[6]

The Guachichil language is a poorly documented language known only for the structural and morphological information deducible from proper names and place names, this language was divided into 3 dialects or varieties, the Bozalo (or vocalo), the Negrito and another called simply Guachichil, and was closely related to the language of the erased tribes called Quinigua (Martínez, 2019), it has been classified without providing more details within the Uto-Aztec languages, others are inclined to relate it to the hypothetical Coahuiltecan family, which would include Guachichil, the quinigua, maratino, naolan, karankawa and coahuilteco, having an even more distant relationship with comecrudo and cotoname, based on the structure of proper names. Examples of Guachichile proper names are: Aiguaname, Analale, Apamatacaliname, Atapi, Ayoaname, Clonemua, Cuaguilo, Guamala, Juquianame, Malioname, Micolaqui, Mohelo, Nochicaguitaname, Omoahxi, Quiguama, Saitoa, Taesani, Tepuchi, etc. (Martínez, 2019). Examples of place names are: zapalinamé (a mountain range), guanamé (a hacienda), hipoa (a town), mapimí, matehuala (a city).

[7] They are characterized by frequently starting with the morpheme ma-, and ending with the form -amé, -qui, -ane, -lo, -na or -al, it contains a series of frequent diphthongs which are ai as in aiguaname, ua as in clonemua, au as in cuutaquelaux, in nauque or in quepinao, or as in omoahxi, or in saitoa. Several words can be related to languages such as quinigua, like the name xilaguani, it can be divided into xila "snake" and guani "like", interpreting "like a snake", guani "like", in turn it can be associated with the maratino "niwa / chigger" of equal meaning. The frequent ending -amé can be associated with the Coahuilteco "am é" used to create participles and adjectives, -le in comecrudo and -né in quinigua.

See also

References

  1. ^ "San Luis Potosi City Development Plan (Mentions the Community on Page 6)". Implan San Luis Potosi.
  2. ^ "Electoral Tribunal of the Judicial Power of the Federation (Mentions the Community 4:30-5:00". Electoral Tribunal of the Judicial Power of the Federation.
  3. ^ "2021-09-24 Installation of the Commission on Indigenous Affairs (Mentions the Community 8:07 & 37:00)". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-14.
  4. ^ Houstonculture.org: Guanajuato
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-01-04. Retrieved 2010-01-16.
  6. ^ Miller, Wick. (1983). Uto-Aztecan languages. In W. C. Sturtevant (Ed.), Handbook of North American Indians (Vol. 10, pp. 113–124). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution.
  7. ^ Diguet, Léon (2013-04-24), "6. El idioma huichol. Contribución al estudio de las lenguas mexicanas (1911)", Por tierras occidentales: entre sierras y barrancas, Historia de Nayarit, Mexico: Centro de estudios mexicanos y centroamericanos, pp. 161–193, ISBN 978-2-8218-2796-7, retrieved 2021-11-03

Hernandez, Manuel G. “Cartas de Indias: Publicalas Por Primera Vez” Ministerio De Formento 1877. 326-340. Madrid. Print.

Powell, Philip Wayne. “Soldiers, Indians & silver; the northward advance of New Spain, 1550-1600.” Berkeley: University of California Press, 1952. Print

Santa Maria, Guillermo de. “Guerra de los Chichimecas : Mexico 1575 – Zirosto 1580” Paleography by Carrillo Cazares, Alberto. 2nd Ed. University of Guadalajara, Michoacan College, University of Norte, University Los Lagos, 220. San Luis College 2003. Print.

guachichil, cuauchichil, quauhchichitl, indigenous, people, mexico, contact, they, occupied, most, extensive, territory, indigenous, chichimeca, nations, tribes, columbian, central, mexico, quauhchichitl, cuauchichilmap, chichimeca, nationse, territory, purple. The Guachichil Cuauchichil or Quauhchichitl are an Indigenous people of Mexico Pre contact they occupied the most extensive territory of all the indigenous Chichimeca Nations tribes in pre Columbian Central Mexico Guachichil Quauhchichitl CuauchichilMap of Chichimeca NationsGuachichile territory in purple Total populationUnknownRegions with significant populationsCentral Mexico e g Zacatecas Guanajuato San Luis Potosi LanguagesGuachichil SpanishReligionRoman CatholicRelated ethnic groupsOther ChichimecasThe Guachichiles roamed through a large region of Zacatecas as well as portions of San Luis Potosi Guanajuato and northeastern Jalisco south to the northern corners of Michoacan and north to Saltillo in Coahuila The Guachichil Nation continues to exist in the city of San Luis Potosi San Luis Potosi Mexico and is recognized by the city and state They have tribal members in Mexico and the United States 1 2 3 Contents 1 History 2 Language 3 See also 4 ReferencesHistory EditConsidered both warlike and brave the Guachichiles played a major role in provoking the other Chichimeca tribes to resist the Spanish settlement The historian Philip Wayne Powell wrote 4 5 Their strategic position in relation to Spanish mines and highways made them especially effective in raiding and in escape from Spanish reprisal dd dd These warriors were known to fight fiercely even if mortally wounded and were a key component in the Spanish defeat during the Chichimeca Wars The children learned to use the bow at walking age and the hunters were such good shots that if they missed the eye and hit the eyebrow they would be extremely disappointed The Chichimeca bow and arrow was expertly crafted allowing for penetration of Spanish armor Two Spanish accounts of the Chichimeca s archery skill On one occasion I saw them throw an orange into the air and they shot into it so many arrows that having held it in the air for much time it finally fell in minute pieces Powell 48 One of don Alonso de Castilla s soldiers had an arrow pass through the head of his horse including a crownpiece of double buckskin and metal and into his chest so he fell with the horse dead on the ground this was seen by many who are still living Powell 48 The Chichimeca were nomadic making them very mobile and experts of the rough vegetation filled mostly cactus land in which they always looked for hiding spots His long use of the food native to the Gran Chichimeca gave him far greater mobility than the sedentary invader who was tied to domesticated livestock agriculture and imported supplies The nomad could and did cut off these supplies destroy the livestock and thus paralyze the economic and military vitality of the invaders this was seldom possible in reverse Powell 44 They attacked in small groups ranging from five up to two hundred braves They highly valued animal furs and highly treasured European scalps The most valued of those being red hair due to their cultural importance of the color red The Chichimeca were easily willing to trade seized gold and silver for red haired women as noted by an extremely small percentage of the population in that territory today having brownish reddish hair more noticeably when mixed with whites of non red haired origin Red haired women and children were a large incentive used to obtain peace within the region War TacticsThe Guachichil would outsmart deceive their adversaries instead of relying on brute force He sent spies into Spanish Indian towns for appraisal of the enemy s plans and strength he developed a far flung system of lookouts and scouts atalays and in major attacks settlements were softened by preliminary and apparently systematic killing and stealing of horses and other livestock this being an attempt sometimes successful to change his intended victim from horseman to foot soldier Powell 46 When they attacked they used a very good tactic that terrified the animals and scared the Spanish The Guachichil would disguise themselves as grotesque animals using animal heads and red paint then yelled like crazed beasts making the Spanish lose control of the livestock The fifty mile 80 km mountain range from currently La Montesa to Milagros Zacatecas was known as El Camino Del Infierno or The Path of Hell by the Spanish The caravans were required to pass through that fifty mile mountain range because a detour would be very lengthy Within The Path of Hell the most ferocious attacks took place Ancient Guachichil murals of the region paint the indigenous accounts of these events The chieftain of the tribe was also the military leader The Spaniards observed that they attacked in gangs of few members who differed from the other Chichimecas by painting their heads and hair red They attacked their enemies warlike with obsidian swords spears darts and arrows They first selected the place of attack preferably a desert but mountainous plain a rock a ravine a swamp or they simply waited until it was midnight At midnight they would stealthily position themselves in the attack zone and suddenly let out loud and terrible howls and screams that perplexed their enemies at the same time that they began the attack by running directly towards the target at the same time that they produced a shower of arrows The political organization of the Guachichiles was very rudimentary when the Spanish arrived It was patriarchal and consisted of the most powerful warrior who managed to overthrow the chief who ruled at that time would be the chief If he failed to overthrow the chief he separated from the tribe with some families and settled elsewhere Although tribes could also unite and thus become more powerful through inter tribal marriages At the arrival of the Spanish there were hundreds of tribes throughout the territory but four were the most powerful Origin of nameThe Guachichiles were known to paint their bodies hair and faces in red dye For this reason they were called guachichile by the Mexica from the nahuatl kua itl head and chichil tic red meaning heads painted red Colony and ConquestThe region currently occupied by the city of San Luis Potosi was until before the arrival of the Spaniards a Guachichil Chichimeca post Since 1550 Guachichil Guamares and other Chichimecas assaults began to be registered so Viceroy Don Luis II de Velasco commissioned Herrera to punish the robbers Thus began the bloodiest and most extensive of all Spanish companies in America Pedro de Anda founded the Real del Cerro de San Pedro and Minas del Potosi on March 4 1592 Given the lack of water in the place it was necessary to locate a nearby territory that did have it to support human stay The place was located east of the Anahuac table In order for the Spanish to settle widely the local Guachichiles and the Tlaxcalans were displaced The hostility of the Tlaxcalans backed by the Spanish against the Guachichiles would not take long to manifest The community of San Luis Potosi originated with the well differentiated gathering of Guachichiles Tlaxcaltecas Tarascos Zacatecos Chichimecas Chichimecas Pames de Santa Maria del Rio Otomi and Spaniards from Extremadura or of uncertain origin Under the protection of mining wealth the city of San Luis Potosi was born in November 1592 and its foundation occurred when the fierce Cuachichil Indian named Moquamalto surrendered to Fray Diego de la Magdalena and Captain Miguel Caldera in the place we now know as the square of the founders Great people from many cities and royal mines came to the lure of gold which gave rise to a unique culture and joined the presence of the Guachichiles Spaniards Otomi Tarascos Mulattoes Blacks and Tlaxcalans thus creating a unique miscegenation in Mexico Tribes and TerritoriesThe Guachichiles occupied the entire Potosino Altiplano part of Guanajuato Jalisco Zacatecas and Tamaulipas This area extended from the south along the Lerma or Grande river in Michoacan and Guanajuato to the Comanja mountain ranges and on the border with the Rioverde area the boundary rose to the north Gonzalo de las Casas observed They occupy a lot of land and that is how the most people of all the Chichimecas are and who have done the most damage There are many partialities and not all are well known The Guachichiles were not a solid kingdom or political state in the 16th century but rather a set of tribes and chiefdoms the Spaniards observed three groups those of Mazapil where the Mazapiles predominated to the north in the mountains that border the town from Parras from Las Salinas to the center of San Luis Potosi and finally from Tunal Grande where the Xales predominated where the largest food supply place for the Guachichiles was located These three groups were not political or cultural units they were the inhabitants of the three geographical areas where the Guachichiles were centralized Regardless of the three groups of guachichiles there were a large number of tribal groups many of them only mentioned once by the Spaniards Bozalos or negritos Macolias Samues Maticoyas Alaquines Capiojes Machipaniquanes Leemagues Mascorros Caisanes Coyotes Guanchenis Uaxabanes Guenacapiles Alpanales Pisones Cauicuiles Alacazauis Guazancores and los Chanales Language EditCuachichilRegionZacatecasExtinct date missing Language familyunclassified Corachol Language codesISO 639 3None mis Linguist List0w6GlottologNoneThe Guachichil language is now extinct and very little is known about it It may have been an Uto Aztecan language closely related to the Huichol language 6 The Guachichil language is a poorly documented language known only for the structural and morphological information deducible from proper names and place names this language was divided into 3 dialects or varieties the Bozalo or vocalo the Negrito and another called simply Guachichil and was closely related to the language of the erased tribes called Quinigua Martinez 2019 it has been classified without providing more details within the Uto Aztec languages others are inclined to relate it to the hypothetical Coahuiltecan family which would include Guachichil the quinigua maratino naolan karankawa and coahuilteco having an even more distant relationship with comecrudo and cotoname based on the structure of proper names Examples of Guachichile proper names are Aiguaname Analale Apamatacaliname Atapi Ayoaname Clonemua Cuaguilo Guamala Juquianame Malioname Micolaqui Mohelo Nochicaguitaname Omoahxi Quiguama Saitoa Taesani Tepuchi etc Martinez 2019 Examples of place names are zapaliname a mountain range guaname a hacienda hipoa a town mapimi matehuala a city 7 They are characterized by frequently starting with the morpheme ma and ending with the form ame qui ane lo na or al it contains a series of frequent diphthongs which are ai as in aiguaname ua as in clonemua au as in cuutaquelaux in nauque or in quepinao or as in omoahxi or in saitoa Several words can be related to languages such as quinigua like the name xilaguani it can be divided into xila snake and guani like interpreting like a snake guani like in turn it can be associated with the maratino niwa chigger of equal meaning The frequent ending ame can be associated with the Coahuilteco am e used to create participles and adjectives le in comecrudo and ne in quinigua See also EditIndigenous peoples in Mexico Pre Columbian cultures of Mexico Gualiname GuachichilReferences Edit San Luis Potosi City Development Plan Mentions the Community on Page 6 Implan San Luis Potosi Electoral Tribunal of the Judicial Power of the Federation Mentions the Community 4 30 5 00 Electoral Tribunal of the Judicial Power of the Federation 2021 09 24 Installation of the Commission on Indigenous Affairs Mentions the Community 8 07 amp 37 00 YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 14 Houstonculture org Guanajuato Latinola com Guachichiles Archived from the original on 2019 01 04 Retrieved 2010 01 16 Miller Wick 1983 Uto Aztecan languages In W C Sturtevant Ed Handbook of North American Indians Vol 10 pp 113 124 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Diguet Leon 2013 04 24 6 El idioma huichol Contribucion al estudio de las lenguas mexicanas 1911 Por tierras occidentales entre sierras y barrancas Historia de Nayarit Mexico Centro de estudios mexicanos y centroamericanos pp 161 193 ISBN 978 2 8218 2796 7 retrieved 2021 11 03 Hernandez Manuel G Cartas de Indias Publicalas Por Primera Vez Ministerio De Formento 1877 326 340 Madrid Print Powell Philip Wayne Soldiers Indians amp silver the northward advance of New Spain 1550 1600 Berkeley University of California Press 1952 PrintSanta Maria Guillermo de Guerra de los Chichimecas Mexico 1575 Zirosto 1580 Paleography by Carrillo Cazares Alberto 2nd Ed University of Guadalajara Michoacan College University of Norte University Los Lagos 220 San Luis College 2003 Print Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guachichil amp oldid 1128593685, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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