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Guaraní people

Guarani is a group of culturally-related indigenous peoples of South America. They are distinguished from the related Tupi by their use of the Guarani language. The traditional range of the Guarani people is in what is now Paraguay between the Paraná River and lower Paraguay River, the Misiones Province of Argentina, southern Brazil once as far east as Rio de Janeiro, and parts of Uruguay and Bolivia.[2]

Guarani
A Guarani boy with an arrow or hu'y [gn], from Paraguay
Total population
5 million[1] (estimated)
Regions with significant populations
South America (Paraguay, Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Uruguay)
Languages
Guarani, Spanish, Portuguese
Religion
Catholicism, Protestantism, Animism
Related ethnic groups
Chaná, Aché, Chané, Kaingang, Mbayá, Tupi, Mbyá Guaraní

Although their demographic dominance of the region has been reduced by European colonisation and the commensurate rise of mestizos, there are contemporary Guarani populations in Paraguay and parts of Argentina and Bolivia. Most notably, the Guarani language, still widely spoken across traditional Guarani homelands, is one of the two official languages in Paraguay, the other one being Spanish.[3] The Paraguayan population learns Guarani both informally from social interaction and formally in public schools. In modern Spanish, Guarani also refers to any Paraguayan national in the same way that the French are sometimes called Gauls.

Name

The history and meaning of the name Guarani are subject to dispute. Before they encountered Europeans, the Guarani referred to themselves simply as Abá, meaning "men" or "people".[4] The term Guarani was originally applied by early Jesuit missionaries to refer to natives who had accepted conversion to the Christian religion; Cayua or Caingua (ka'aguygua) was used to refer to those who had refused it. Cayua is roughly translated as "the ones from the jungle". While the term Cayua is sometimes still used to refer to settlements of indigenous peoples who have not well integrated into the dominant society, the modern usage of the name Guarani is generally extended to include all people of native origin regardless of societal status. Barbara Ganson writes that the name Guarani was given by the Spanish as it means "warrior" in the Tupi-Guarani dialect spoken there.[5] Guarinĩ is attested in 12th-century Old Tupi, by Jesuit sources, as "war, warrior, to wage war, warlord".[6]

History, myth and legend

 
Guarani ceramics.
 
Guarani incised ceramics bowls, Museum Farroupilha, in Triunfo.

Early Guarani villages often consisted of communal houses for 10 to 15 families. Communities were united by common interest and language, and tended to form tribal groups by dialect. It is estimated that the Guarani numbered some 400,000 people when they were first encountered by Europeans. At that time, they were sedentary and agricultural, subsisting largely on manioc, maize, wild game, and honey.

Equally little is known about early Guarani society and beliefs. They practiced a form of animistic pantheism, much of which has survived in the form of folklore and numerous myths. According to the Jesuit missionary Martin Dobrizhoffer, they practiced cannibalism at one point, perhaps as a funerary ritual, but later disposed of the dead in large jars placed inverted on the ground. Guarani mythology is still widespread in rural Paraguay.

Much Guarani myth and legend were compiled by the Universidad Nacional de Misiones in northern Argentina and published as Myths and Legends: A Journey around the Guarani Lands, Anthology in 1870 (translated into the English language in 1906). Guarani myth and legend can roughly be divided into the following broad categories:

  • Cosmogonic and eschatological myths; the creation and destruction of all things as dictated by Ñamandu "the true father, the first one". After him comes a pantheon of gods, chief among them Yporú who is more frequently known as Tupã. Jasy is another "good" deity who rules the night while Aña is a malign deity who dwells at the bottom of the Iguazu River.[7]
  • Animistic mythology, that is animals, plants and minerals being animated and capable of becoming anthropomorphic beings or in reverse the transmuted souls of people, either born or unborn, who have become animals, plants and minerals. The course of such anthropomorphism appears dictated by the pantheon of god-like deities because of their virtues or vices. Such animistic legends include that of the Lobizón, a werewolf-type being, and the Mainumby or hummingbird who transports good spirits that are resident in flowers back to Tupá "so he can cherish them". Isondú or glowworms are the reincarnated spirits of certain people, as are the Panambi (butterflies). Ka'a Jarýi was a woman who became the sacred herb Yerba; Irupé was a woman who was turned into the giant lily because she fell in love with the moon.[8]
  • Pombero are goblin or elf-like spirits who dwell in the forest and must be appeased. They have never been human. Principal among these is Jasy Jatere who has never been human and like all Pombero is from a different realm. His characteristics are vague and uncertain, and his powers are badly defined as is the place where he resides. He is described in one legend as a "handsome, thickly bearded, blond dwarf" who is naked and lives in tree trunks. Other versions say he loves honey, his feet are backward, and he is an "ugly, lame, old man". Most legends agree that he snatches children and "licks them", wrapping them in climbing plants or drowning them in rivers. To appease him gifts, such as honey, are left in places in the forest associated with him. Another Pombero is Kuarahy Jára who whistles like birds and is their protector. He can be your friend but is known for abducting young boys who are alone and trying to catch birds. If necessary he can take the form of a person, a tree or a hyacinth. Finally, Kurupi is a phallic mythological figure who will copulate with young women. He has scaly skin like a lizard, hypnotic eyes, and an enormous penis.[8]

The Iguazu Falls, considered sacred by the Guarani, hold special significance and are the inspiration for numerous myths and legends. They reveal the sound of ancient battles at certain times, they are also the place where I-Yara—a malign Pomboro spirit—abducted Angá—a fair maiden—and hid her. The swallows that inhabit the falls to this day vainly search for her.[9]

European contact

 
A Guarani family captured by slave hunters. By Jean Baptiste Debret

In 1537, Gonzalo de Mendoza traversed through Paraguay to about the present Brazilian frontier. On his return, he made acquaintance with the Guarani and founded the city of Asunción, later the capital of Paraguay. The first governor of the Spanish territory of Guayrá initiated a policy of intermarriage between European men and indigenous women; the descendants of these matches characterize the Paraguayan nation today. The Laws of the Indies forbade slavery in Hispanic America.

The first two Jesuits, Father Barcena and Father Angulo, came to what is now the State of Paraná, Southern Brazil, in 1585, by land from the west. Others soon followed, and a Jesuit college was established at Asunción. In 1608, as a result of the Jesuit protest against the enslavement of the indigenous population, King Philip III of Spain gave authority to the Jesuits to convert and colonize the tribes of Guayrá. In the early period, the name Paraguay was loosely used to designate the entire river basin, including parts of what are now Uruguay, Argentina, Bolivia, and Brazil.

Exploring expeditions were accompanied by Franciscan friars. Early in the history of Asunción, Father Luis de Bolaños translated the catechism into the Guarani language and preached to Guarani people who resided in the area around the settlement. In 1588–89 St. Francis Solanus crossed the Chaco wilderness from Peru and stopped at Asunción, but gave no attention to the Guarani. His departure left the Jesuits alone with their missionary work, and to defend the natives against slave dealers.[10] The Jesuit provincial Torres arrived in 1607, and "immediately placed himself at the head of those who had opposed the cruelties at all times exercised over the natives".[11]

Cultural preservation

Today, the Guarani language is the official language of Paraguay, Bolivia, Argentina, and Mato Grosso do Sul in Brazil.[citation needed] As of 2012, an estimated 90% of the people in Paraguay spoke Guarani.

Slavery

The center depot of the slave trade was the town of São Paulo. Originally a rendezvous place for Portuguese and Dutch pirates, it later became a refuge for criminals, who mixed with Native American and African women and actively participated in the capturing and selling of Guaranis as slaves.

To oppose these armed and organized robbers, the tribes had only their bows and arrows. Many Guaranis were slain or enslaved by the slave hunters active in Brazil during those years.

The Paraguayan Reductions

 
Contemporary Guarani shaman

In 1607, Spanish King Philip III sent a letter to the governor of Rio de Plata Hernandarias de Saavedra to instruct him to send the newly arrived Jesuits to begin their missionary work.[12] With Spanish royal protection, the first Guayrá mission, Loreto, was established on the Paranapanema by Father Joseph Cataldino and Father Simon Macerata in 1610. The Jesuit priest Father Ruiz de Montoya discussed the difficulties of spreading the missions and his interactions with the Guarani in his book The Spiritual Conquest. Ruiz de Montoya wrote that one of the Guarani caciques Miguel Artiguaye initially refused to join the missions until threatened by another Indigenous group. Artiguaye then returned to the mission and begged for protection.[13] As the mission provided the only real possible protection against enslavement, the Guarani flocked there in such numbers that twelve more missions were created in rapid succession, containing all 40,000 Guaranis. The Jesuits were seen as intermediaries between the Spanish authorities and the Guarani caciques.[14] The Jesuit missions needed new converts and required workers to assist in the maintenance of the missions. The Guarani helped grow the crops to sustain the missions' populations and also produce goods to sell and trade to fund the missions.[15] Stimulated by this success, Father González and two companions journeyed to the east bank of the Uruguay River (now the country of Uruguay) and established two or three small missions in 1627. The local tribes killed the priests and the neophytes and burned the missions.

Slave raiders saw the Guarani missions as "merely an opportunity of capturing more Indians than usual at a haul".[16] In 1629, an army of Paulistas surrounded the San Antonio mission, set fire to the church and other buildings, killed those who resisted or were too young or too old to travel, and carried the rest into slavery. San Miguel and Jesus Maria quickly met the same fate. Eventually, reinforcements gathered by Father Cataldino drove off the slavers. Within two years, all but two of the establishments were destroyed, and 60,000 Christian converts were carried off for sale to São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. The attacks usually took place on Sunday, when the whole mission population was gathered for Mass. The priests were usually spared, but several were killed.

Only a few thousand natives were left of nearly 100,000 just before the Paulista invasion. Father Antonio Ruiz de Montoya purchased 10,000 cattle, and was able to convert the natives from farmers to stock raisers. Soon under Fathers Rançoncier and Romero the Uruguay missions were re-established. In 1632 the Mamelucos discovered a new line of attack from the south. In 1638, despite some successful resistance, all twelve of the missions beyond the Uruguay River were abandoned and their people consolidated with the community of the Missions Territory. In the last raid Father Alfaro was killed.

In the same year Father Montoya, after having successfully opposed the attempts of the governor and the bishop of Asunción to reduce the natives' liberties and the mission administration, sailed for Europe. On this trip he was successful in obtaining letters from Pope Urban VIII forbidding the enslavement of the missionaries under the severest church penalties, and from King Philip IV of Spain, permitting Guaranis to carry firearms for defense and to be trained in their use by veteran soldiers who had become Jesuits.

When the next Paulista army, 800 strong, attacked the missions in 1641 they were met by a body of Christian Guarani armed with guns on the Acaray River. In two battles, the Paulista army suffered a defeat that warded off invasions for ten years. In 1651, the war between Spain and Portugal encouraged another Paulista attack to gain territory for Portugal. Before Spanish troops could arrive to help defend the missions, the fathers themselves led a Guarani army against the enemy. In 1732, at the time of their greatest prosperity, the Guarani missions were guarded by a well-drilled and well-equipped army of 7,000 Guaranis. On more than one occasion this mission army, accompanied by their priests, defended the Spanish colony.

In 1732, there were 30 Guarani missions with 141,252 converted Guaranis.[citation needed] Two years later a smallpox epidemic killed approximately 30,000 of them. In 1765, a second outbreak killed approximately 12,000 more, and then spread westward through the tribes of the Chaco.

Uruguay missions saved

In 1750 the Treaty of Madrid between Spain and Portugal transferred to Portugal the territory of the seven missions on the Uruguay River, and the Guaranis were ordered to leave; they refused, being familiar with the Portuguese as slave hunters. Seven years of guerrilla warfare killed thousands of them (see Guarani War). The Jesuits secured a royal decree restoring the disputed mission territory to Spanish jurisdiction. Two missions in 1747 and a third in 1760 were established in the sub-tribe of the Itatínes, or Tobatines, in central Paraguay, far north of the older mission group. In one of these, San Joaquín de los Tobatines [es] (founded 1747), Martin Dobrizhoffer ministered for eight years.

Jesuits expelled

In 1767, the Jesuits were expelled from Spanish dominions by royal edict. Fearing the outcome of this decision, viceroy Antonio María Bucareli y Ursúa entrusted the execution of the mandate in 1768 to two officers with a force of 500 troops. Despite their mission army of 14,000, the Jesuits submitted without resistance. Guarani caciques from Mission San Luis wrote a letter to the Governor of Buenos Aires on February 28, 1768, to ask for the Jesuits to stay. They wrote, "The fathers of the Company of Jesus know how to get along with us, and we with them, we are happy serving God and the King."[17] The Guarani request was denied, but the letter highlights the value of the relationship the Jesuits and Guarani had established in the region.

Decline of the reductions

 
Ruins of the church at São Miguel das Missões, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.

The missions were turned over to priests of other orders, chiefly Franciscans, but under a code of regulations drawn up by the viceroy and modeled largely on the Jesuit system. Under chaotic political regulation, the missions rapidly declined. Most Guaranis returned to the countryside. According to the official census of 1801, fewer than 45,000 Guaranis remained; cattle, sheep, and horses had disappeared; the fields and orchards were overgrown or cut down, and the churches were in ruins. The long period of revolutionary struggle that followed completed the destruction. In 1814, the mission Indians numbered 8,000, and in 1848 the few who remained were declared citizens.

Aftermath

A 2018 study in The Quarterly Journal of Economics found that "in areas of former Jesuit presence—within the Guarani area—educational attainment was higher and remains so (by 10–15%) 250 years later. These educational differences have also translated into incomes that are 10% higher today. The identification of the positive effect of the Guarani Jesuit missions emerges after comparing them with abandoned Jesuit missions and neighboring Franciscan Guarani missions. The enduring effects observed are consistent with transmission mechanisms of structural transformation, occupational specialization, and technology adoption in agriculture."[18]

Eastern Bolivian Guarani

The Guarani people in Bolivia, called Chiriguanos, lived in the foothills of the Andes and had a different history than most other Guarani people. Noted for their warlike character, the Chiriguanos were hostile in turn to the Inca Empire, the Spanish, and the independent state of Bolivia from the late 15th to the late 19th century. The Jesuit missions had little success among the Chiriguanos, although Franciscans in the 19th century attracted numerous converts. The Chririguanos were not finally pacified until the defeat in 1892 of forces led by their messianic leader Apiaguaiki Tumpa in the Battle of Kuruyuki.[19]

Today

Paraguay

The Guarani people and culture persist. Nearly all the forest tribes on the borders of Paraguay are Guarani.[citation needed] Many are descendants of mission exiles. In Paraguay, Guarani lineage predominates in the population and the Guarani language is spoken in most departments to this day.

Bolivia

 
Guarani medicine man holding cross and maraca

The Eastern Bolivian Guarani, being one of many indigenous peoples in Bolivia, live in the Gran Chaco, near the Pilcomayo River, in southeastern Bolivia close to the Paraguayan and Argentine borders, including portions of Santa Cruz, Chuquisaca, Tarija Departments. This region reaches nearly as far north as Santa Cruz de la Sierra and includes portions of the Guapay, Parapetí, and Ɨtɨka Guasu (or Pilcomayo) River valleys.[20] The Bolivian Guarani are represented by the Assembly of the Guarani People.[21] Some Guarani placenames in Bolivia: Yacuiba, Paraimiri, Itaimbeguasu, Tatarenda, Saipurú, Capirenda, Itay, Ibamiragera, Carandaytí, Ipaguasú, Abapó, Timboy, Caraparí, Urubichá, Kuruguakua, Guanay, Yaguarú and Rogagua.

There are three principal subgroups of Guarani in Bolivia,[22][23] marked by dialectical and historical differences:

  • Around fifty thousand Ava Guarani principally in the Andean foothills. Ava means man in Guarani, and thus Ava Guarani has become the name for numerous Guarani ethnic groups in Paraguay and Brazil.[24]
  • Simba (Quechua: braid) Guarani who live near the Pilcomayo River and have been identified by men maintaining a tradition of braided hair, although most young men no longer uphold this practice.[25] They are sometimes called Guarani katui (Guarani: Guarani par excellence)
  • The Izoceño Guarani or Tapɨi of Izozog who live in the region of Ɨsoso or Izozo on the Parapetí River

Language

A Guarani speaker.

Today, the Standard Paraguayan Guarani is flourishing in Paraguay and is taught in 12 countries;[26][27][28]

The growing Paraguayan immigration to Argentina has led to a cultural enhancement of the Guarani peoples in Argentina. It can also be seen in Spain, due to the intense Paraguayan immigration to Spain[29][30]

The language was also used by other tribes in regions like the Paraguayan Chaco and Northern Argentina.[31]

Notable Guarani people

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Guarani". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 8 March 2019.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-09-25.
  3. ^ . Embassy of Paraguay in the United States of America. Archived from the original on 2009-01-19.
  4. ^ "Catholic Encyclopedia".
  5. ^ Ganson, Barbara (2003). "The Guarani Under Spanish Rule in the Rio de la Plata". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Eduardo de Almeida Navarro. Dicionário de tupi antigo. ISBN 978-85-260-1933-1. Global Editora, 2013.
  7. ^ Salvo, Rosita Escalada; Zamboni, Olga. Myths and Legends: A journey around the Guarani lands. Anthology (translated by students from the Instituto Superior Lenguas Vivas, 1906), Editorial Universitaria, Universidad Nacional de Misiones, 1870, revised and corrected by Gloria Acosta, 2007. ISBN 978-987-9121-99-3 pp.9-29
  8. ^ a b Salvo and Zammboni, pp.29-63
  9. ^ Salvo and Zamboni, pp. 63-67
  10. ^ "The larger portion of the population regarded it as a right, a privilege by virtue of conquest, that they should enslave the Indians" (Page, 470).
  11. ^ Page, 470
  12. ^ Sarreal, Julia J.S. (2014). The Guarani and Their Missions: A Socioeconomic History. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  13. ^ Montoya, Antonio Ruiz de (1993). The Spiritual Conquest: Accomplished by the Religious of the Society of Jesus in the Provinces of Paraguay, Uruguay, and Tape. St. Louis, MO: Institute of Jesuit Sources. p. 52.
  14. ^ Ganson, Barbara (2003). The Guarani Under Spanish Rule in the Rio de la Plata. Stanford, CA: Stanford university Press. p. 35.
  15. ^ Cushner, Nicholas P. (1983). Jesuit Ranches and the Agrarian Development of Colonial Argentina 1650-1767. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. p. 156.
  16. ^ Graham 57
  17. ^ Ganson, Barbara (2003). The Guarani Under Spanish Rule in the Rio de la Plata. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. p. 198.
  18. ^ Caicedo, Felipe Valencia (2019). "The Mission: Human Capital Transmission, Economic Persistence, and Culture in South America". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 134: 507–556. doi:10.1093/qje/qjy024. hdl:10.1093/qje/qjy024.
  19. ^ Langer, Erick D. (2009), Expecting Pears from an Elm Tree, Durham: Duke University Press, pp. 11-18, 186-195
  20. ^ Gustafson, Bret Darin (2009). New languages of the state : indigenous resurgence and the politics of knowledge in Bolivia. Durham: Duke University Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-8223-4529-9.
  21. ^ "YASAREKOMO - Una experiencia de comunicación indígena en Bolivia".
  22. ^ Gustafson, Bret Darin (2009). New languages of the state : indigenous resurgence and the politics of knowledge in Bolivia. Durham: Duke University Press. p. xix. ISBN 978-0-8223-4529-9.
  23. ^ Combes, Isabelle; Kathleen Lowrey (2006-10-01). "Slaves without Masters? Arawakan Dynasties among the Chiriguano (Bolivian Chaco, Sixteenth to Twentieth Centuries)". Ethnohistory. 53 (4): 689–714 [691]. doi:10.1215/00141801-2006-019.
  24. ^ Combes, Isabelle; Kathleen Lowrey (2006-10-01). "Slaves without Masters? Arawakan Dynasties among the Chiriguano (Bolivian Chaco, Sixteenth to Twentieth Centuries)". Ethnohistory. 53 (4): 689–714 [708]. doi:10.1215/00141801-2006-019.
  25. ^ Gustafson, Bret Darin (2009). New languages of the state : indigenous resurgence and the politics of knowledge in Bolivia. Durham: Duke University Press. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-8223-4529-9.
  26. ^ "El guarani o avañe'ẽ, una lengua vigente en 12 países". cienciasdelsur.com (in Spanish). Ciencias del Sur. 2021-08-25. Retrieved 2021-12-20.
  27. ^ "PARAGUAY'S GUARANÍ LANGUAGE IS FLOURISHING". glocal.soas.ac.uk/. SOAS University of London. 2021-08-25. Retrieved 2021-12-20.
  28. ^ "Taiwán Embajador ou PÑS-pe". spl.gov.py (in Guarani). Secretaria de Politicas Linguisticas de Paraguay. 2021-08-25. Retrieved 2021-12-20.
  29. ^ "Defenderán cultura guaraní en España - Nacionales - ABC Color".
  30. ^ Carneri, Santi (24 January 2020). "Paraguay seduce a Europa con su cultura guaraní, misiones jesuitas e impresionantes escenarios naturales". El País.
  31. ^ "When Everyone is Guarani: the indigenous Guaranization in writings from the 16th century in the Provinces of the River Plate" (PDF). 30 April 2018.
  32. ^ Colmán Gutiérrez, Andrés (December 5, 2020). "En busca de la India Juliana". Última Hora (in Spanish). Asunción. Retrieved December 12, 2021.

References

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Guarani Indians". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Further reading

  • Austin, Shawn Michae. (2015) "Guarani kinship and the encomienda community in colonial Paraguay, sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries", Colonial Latin American Review, 24:4, 545–571, DOI: 10.1080/10609164.2016.1150039

External links

  • http://www.unavenirpourlesguaranis.org 2011-03-03 at the Wayback Machine – Campaign for the Guarani, French NGOs
  • – Fund opened by the British NGO Survival International in support of the Guarani
  • Guarani, The Language of the People
  • Catholic Encyclopedia article
  • Bolivian Indians see Rocky Exodus from Serfdom by the Associated Press, January 2, 2010
  • The Guarani – Survival International Charitable Trust

guaraní, people, guarani, group, culturally, related, indigenous, peoples, south, america, they, distinguished, from, related, tupi, their, guarani, language, traditional, range, guarani, people, what, paraguay, between, paraná, river, lower, paraguay, river, . Guarani is a group of culturally related indigenous peoples of South America They are distinguished from the related Tupi by their use of the Guarani language The traditional range of the Guarani people is in what is now Paraguay between the Parana River and lower Paraguay River the Misiones Province of Argentina southern Brazil once as far east as Rio de Janeiro and parts of Uruguay and Bolivia 2 GuaraniA Guarani boy with an arrow or hu y gn from ParaguayTotal population5 million 1 estimated Regions with significant populationsSouth America Paraguay Argentina Brazil Bolivia Uruguay LanguagesGuarani Spanish PortugueseReligionCatholicism Protestantism AnimismRelated ethnic groupsChana Ache Chane Kaingang Mbaya Tupi Mbya GuaraniAlthough their demographic dominance of the region has been reduced by European colonisation and the commensurate rise of mestizos there are contemporary Guarani populations in Paraguay and parts of Argentina and Bolivia Most notably the Guarani language still widely spoken across traditional Guarani homelands is one of the two official languages in Paraguay the other one being Spanish 3 The Paraguayan population learns Guarani both informally from social interaction and formally in public schools In modern Spanish Guarani also refers to any Paraguayan national in the same way that the French are sometimes called Gauls Contents 1 Name 2 History myth and legend 2 1 European contact 2 2 Cultural preservation 2 3 Slavery 2 4 The Paraguayan Reductions 2 4 1 Uruguay missions saved 2 4 2 Jesuits expelled 2 4 3 Decline of the reductions 2 4 4 Aftermath 2 5 Eastern Bolivian Guarani 3 Today 3 1 Paraguay 3 2 Bolivia 4 Language 5 Notable Guarani people 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksName EditThe history and meaning of the name Guarani are subject to dispute Before they encountered Europeans the Guarani referred to themselves simply as Aba meaning men or people 4 The term Guarani was originally applied by early Jesuit missionaries to refer to natives who had accepted conversion to the Christian religion Cayua or Caingua ka aguygua was used to refer to those who had refused it Cayua is roughly translated as the ones from the jungle While the term Cayua is sometimes still used to refer to settlements of indigenous peoples who have not well integrated into the dominant society the modern usage of the name Guarani is generally extended to include all people of native origin regardless of societal status Barbara Ganson writes that the name Guarani was given by the Spanish as it means warrior in the Tupi Guarani dialect spoken there 5 Guarinĩ is attested in 12th century Old Tupi by Jesuit sources as war warrior to wage war warlord 6 History myth and legend Edit Guarani ceramics Guarani incised ceramics bowls Museum Farroupilha in Triunfo Early Guarani villages often consisted of communal houses for 10 to 15 families Communities were united by common interest and language and tended to form tribal groups by dialect It is estimated that the Guarani numbered some 400 000 people when they were first encountered by Europeans At that time they were sedentary and agricultural subsisting largely on manioc maize wild game and honey Equally little is known about early Guarani society and beliefs They practiced a form of animistic pantheism much of which has survived in the form of folklore and numerous myths According to the Jesuit missionary Martin Dobrizhoffer they practiced cannibalism at one point perhaps as a funerary ritual but later disposed of the dead in large jars placed inverted on the ground Guarani mythology is still widespread in rural Paraguay Much Guarani myth and legend were compiled by the Universidad Nacional de Misiones in northern Argentina and published as Myths and Legends A Journey around the Guarani Lands Anthology in 1870 translated into the English language in 1906 Guarani myth and legend can roughly be divided into the following broad categories Cosmogonic and eschatological myths the creation and destruction of all things as dictated by Namandu the true father the first one After him comes a pantheon of gods chief among them Yporu who is more frequently known as Tupa Jasy is another good deity who rules the night while Ana is a malign deity who dwells at the bottom of the Iguazu River 7 Animistic mythology that is animals plants and minerals being animated and capable of becoming anthropomorphic beings or in reverse the transmuted souls of people either born or unborn who have become animals plants and minerals The course of such anthropomorphism appears dictated by the pantheon of god like deities because of their virtues or vices Such animistic legends include that of the Lobizon a werewolf type being and the Mainumby or hummingbird who transports good spirits that are resident in flowers back to Tupa so he can cherish them Isondu or glowworms are the reincarnated spirits of certain people as are the Panambi butterflies Ka a Jaryi was a woman who became the sacred herb Yerba Irupe was a woman who was turned into the giant lily because she fell in love with the moon 8 Pombero are goblin or elf like spirits who dwell in the forest and must be appeased They have never been human Principal among these is Jasy Jatere who has never been human and like all Pombero is from a different realm His characteristics are vague and uncertain and his powers are badly defined as is the place where he resides He is described in one legend as a handsome thickly bearded blond dwarf who is naked and lives in tree trunks Other versions say he loves honey his feet are backward and he is an ugly lame old man Most legends agree that he snatches children and licks them wrapping them in climbing plants or drowning them in rivers To appease him gifts such as honey are left in places in the forest associated with him Another Pombero is Kuarahy Jara who whistles like birds and is their protector He can be your friend but is known for abducting young boys who are alone and trying to catch birds If necessary he can take the form of a person a tree or a hyacinth Finally Kurupi is a phallic mythological figure who will copulate with young women He has scaly skin like a lizard hypnotic eyes and an enormous penis 8 The Iguazu Falls considered sacred by the Guarani hold special significance and are the inspiration for numerous myths and legends They reveal the sound of ancient battles at certain times they are also the place where I Yara a malign Pomboro spirit abducted Anga a fair maiden and hid her The swallows that inhabit the falls to this day vainly search for her 9 European contact Edit A Guarani family captured by slave hunters By Jean Baptiste Debret In 1537 Gonzalo de Mendoza traversed through Paraguay to about the present Brazilian frontier On his return he made acquaintance with the Guarani and founded the city of Asuncion later the capital of Paraguay The first governor of the Spanish territory of Guayra initiated a policy of intermarriage between European men and indigenous women the descendants of these matches characterize the Paraguayan nation today The Laws of the Indies forbade slavery in Hispanic America The first two Jesuits Father Barcena and Father Angulo came to what is now the State of Parana Southern Brazil in 1585 by land from the west Others soon followed and a Jesuit college was established at Asuncion In 1608 as a result of the Jesuit protest against the enslavement of the indigenous population King Philip III of Spain gave authority to the Jesuits to convert and colonize the tribes of Guayra In the early period the name Paraguay was loosely used to designate the entire river basin including parts of what are now Uruguay Argentina Bolivia and Brazil Exploring expeditions were accompanied by Franciscan friars Early in the history of Asuncion Father Luis de Bolanos translated the catechism into the Guarani language and preached to Guarani people who resided in the area around the settlement In 1588 89 St Francis Solanus crossed the Chaco wilderness from Peru and stopped at Asuncion but gave no attention to the Guarani His departure left the Jesuits alone with their missionary work and to defend the natives against slave dealers 10 The Jesuit provincial Torres arrived in 1607 and immediately placed himself at the head of those who had opposed the cruelties at all times exercised over the natives 11 Cultural preservation Edit Today the Guarani language is the official language of Paraguay Bolivia Argentina and Mato Grosso do Sul in Brazil citation needed As of 2012 an estimated 90 of the people in Paraguay spoke Guarani Slavery Edit The center depot of the slave trade was the town of Sao Paulo Originally a rendezvous place for Portuguese and Dutch pirates it later became a refuge for criminals who mixed with Native American and African women and actively participated in the capturing and selling of Guaranis as slaves To oppose these armed and organized robbers the tribes had only their bows and arrows Many Guaranis were slain or enslaved by the slave hunters active in Brazil during those years The Paraguayan Reductions Edit Main article Jesuit Reductions Contemporary Guarani shaman In 1607 Spanish King Philip III sent a letter to the governor of Rio de Plata Hernandarias de Saavedra to instruct him to send the newly arrived Jesuits to begin their missionary work 12 With Spanish royal protection the first Guayra mission Loreto was established on the Paranapanema by Father Joseph Cataldino and Father Simon Macerata in 1610 The Jesuit priest Father Ruiz de Montoya discussed the difficulties of spreading the missions and his interactions with the Guarani in his book The Spiritual Conquest Ruiz de Montoya wrote that one of the Guarani caciques Miguel Artiguaye initially refused to join the missions until threatened by another Indigenous group Artiguaye then returned to the mission and begged for protection 13 As the mission provided the only real possible protection against enslavement the Guarani flocked there in such numbers that twelve more missions were created in rapid succession containing all 40 000 Guaranis The Jesuits were seen as intermediaries between the Spanish authorities and the Guarani caciques 14 The Jesuit missions needed new converts and required workers to assist in the maintenance of the missions The Guarani helped grow the crops to sustain the missions populations and also produce goods to sell and trade to fund the missions 15 Stimulated by this success Father Gonzalez and two companions journeyed to the east bank of the Uruguay River now the country of Uruguay and established two or three small missions in 1627 The local tribes killed the priests and the neophytes and burned the missions Slave raiders saw the Guarani missions as merely an opportunity of capturing more Indians than usual at a haul 16 In 1629 an army of Paulistas surrounded the San Antonio mission set fire to the church and other buildings killed those who resisted or were too young or too old to travel and carried the rest into slavery San Miguel and Jesus Maria quickly met the same fate Eventually reinforcements gathered by Father Cataldino drove off the slavers Within two years all but two of the establishments were destroyed and 60 000 Christian converts were carried off for sale to Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro The attacks usually took place on Sunday when the whole mission population was gathered for Mass The priests were usually spared but several were killed Only a few thousand natives were left of nearly 100 000 just before the Paulista invasion Father Antonio Ruiz de Montoya purchased 10 000 cattle and was able to convert the natives from farmers to stock raisers Soon under Fathers Ranconcier and Romero the Uruguay missions were re established In 1632 the Mamelucos discovered a new line of attack from the south In 1638 despite some successful resistance all twelve of the missions beyond the Uruguay River were abandoned and their people consolidated with the community of the Missions Territory In the last raid Father Alfaro was killed In the same year Father Montoya after having successfully opposed the attempts of the governor and the bishop of Asuncion to reduce the natives liberties and the mission administration sailed for Europe On this trip he was successful in obtaining letters from Pope Urban VIII forbidding the enslavement of the missionaries under the severest church penalties and from King Philip IV of Spain permitting Guaranis to carry firearms for defense and to be trained in their use by veteran soldiers who had become Jesuits When the next Paulista army 800 strong attacked the missions in 1641 they were met by a body of Christian Guarani armed with guns on the Acaray River In two battles the Paulista army suffered a defeat that warded off invasions for ten years In 1651 the war between Spain and Portugal encouraged another Paulista attack to gain territory for Portugal Before Spanish troops could arrive to help defend the missions the fathers themselves led a Guarani army against the enemy In 1732 at the time of their greatest prosperity the Guarani missions were guarded by a well drilled and well equipped army of 7 000 Guaranis On more than one occasion this mission army accompanied by their priests defended the Spanish colony In 1732 there were 30 Guarani missions with 141 252 converted Guaranis citation needed Two years later a smallpox epidemic killed approximately 30 000 of them In 1765 a second outbreak killed approximately 12 000 more and then spread westward through the tribes of the Chaco Uruguay missions saved Edit In 1750 the Treaty of Madrid between Spain and Portugal transferred to Portugal the territory of the seven missions on the Uruguay River and the Guaranis were ordered to leave they refused being familiar with the Portuguese as slave hunters Seven years of guerrilla warfare killed thousands of them see Guarani War The Jesuits secured a royal decree restoring the disputed mission territory to Spanish jurisdiction Two missions in 1747 and a third in 1760 were established in the sub tribe of the Itatines or Tobatines in central Paraguay far north of the older mission group In one of these San Joaquin de los Tobatines es founded 1747 Martin Dobrizhoffer ministered for eight years Jesuits expelled Edit Further information Suppression of the Society of Jesus In 1767 the Jesuits were expelled from Spanish dominions by royal edict Fearing the outcome of this decision viceroy Antonio Maria Bucareli y Ursua entrusted the execution of the mandate in 1768 to two officers with a force of 500 troops Despite their mission army of 14 000 the Jesuits submitted without resistance Guarani caciques from Mission San Luis wrote a letter to the Governor of Buenos Aires on February 28 1768 to ask for the Jesuits to stay They wrote The fathers of the Company of Jesus know how to get along with us and we with them we are happy serving God and the King 17 The Guarani request was denied but the letter highlights the value of the relationship the Jesuits and Guarani had established in the region Decline of the reductions Edit Ruins of the church at Sao Miguel das Missoes Rio Grande do Sul Brazil The missions were turned over to priests of other orders chiefly Franciscans but under a code of regulations drawn up by the viceroy and modeled largely on the Jesuit system Under chaotic political regulation the missions rapidly declined Most Guaranis returned to the countryside According to the official census of 1801 fewer than 45 000 Guaranis remained cattle sheep and horses had disappeared the fields and orchards were overgrown or cut down and the churches were in ruins The long period of revolutionary struggle that followed completed the destruction In 1814 the mission Indians numbered 8 000 and in 1848 the few who remained were declared citizens Aftermath Edit A 2018 study in The Quarterly Journal of Economics found that in areas of former Jesuit presence within the Guarani area educational attainment was higher and remains so by 10 15 250 years later These educational differences have also translated into incomes that are 10 higher today The identification of the positive effect of the Guarani Jesuit missions emerges after comparing them with abandoned Jesuit missions and neighboring Franciscan Guarani missions The enduring effects observed are consistent with transmission mechanisms of structural transformation occupational specialization and technology adoption in agriculture 18 Eastern Bolivian Guarani Edit Further information Eastern Bolivian Guarani The Guarani people in Bolivia called Chiriguanos lived in the foothills of the Andes and had a different history than most other Guarani people Noted for their warlike character the Chiriguanos were hostile in turn to the Inca Empire the Spanish and the independent state of Bolivia from the late 15th to the late 19th century The Jesuit missions had little success among the Chiriguanos although Franciscans in the 19th century attracted numerous converts The Chririguanos were not finally pacified until the defeat in 1892 of forces led by their messianic leader Apiaguaiki Tumpa in the Battle of Kuruyuki 19 Today Edit A Guarani community called Taperigua in Rodeito San Pedro Jujuy at the Calilegua National Park Argentina The Ruins of San Ignacio Mini part of the Jesuit Missions of the Guarani people near the Ruins of Jesus de Tavarangue Today a tourist spot A sign in Guarani language at the kitchen of a bakery in Posadas As it is described in Spanish the literal translation is place where bread is madeParaguay Edit The Guarani people and culture persist Nearly all the forest tribes on the borders of Paraguay are Guarani citation needed Many are descendants of mission exiles In Paraguay Guarani lineage predominates in the population and the Guarani language is spoken in most departments to this day Pai Tavytera people in Amambay Department Paraguay 2012 Through the Paraguayan diaspora the Guarani culture can be appreciated in almost every corner of the world In the picture the Paraguayan folk dance group Alma Guarani Guarani Soul is attending the International Folklore Festival Vitosha in Sofia Bulgaria Bolivia Edit Terere a typical Guarani infusion of yerba mate being taken in San Rafael de Velasco a historical territory of the Guarani in Bolivia Guarani guavira fruit bush Club Deportivo Guabira fans The name of the club is one example of the impact the Guarani left in the Bolivian culture The flag of the Autonomous Guarani Territory of Charagua Bolivia Guarani medicine man holding cross and maracaThe Eastern Bolivian Guarani being one of many indigenous peoples in Bolivia live in the Gran Chaco near the Pilcomayo River in southeastern Bolivia close to the Paraguayan and Argentine borders including portions of Santa Cruz Chuquisaca Tarija Departments This region reaches nearly as far north as Santa Cruz de la Sierra and includes portions of the Guapay Parapeti and Ɨtɨka Guasu or Pilcomayo River valleys 20 The Bolivian Guarani are represented by the Assembly of the Guarani People 21 Some Guarani placenames in Bolivia Yacuiba Paraimiri Itaimbeguasu Tatarenda Saipuru Capirenda Itay Ibamiragera Carandayti Ipaguasu Abapo Timboy Carapari Urubicha Kuruguakua Guanay Yaguaru and Rogagua There are three principal subgroups of Guarani in Bolivia 22 23 marked by dialectical and historical differences Around fifty thousand Ava Guarani principally in the Andean foothills Ava means man in Guarani and thus Ava Guarani has become the name for numerous Guarani ethnic groups in Paraguay and Brazil 24 Simba Quechua braid Guarani who live near the Pilcomayo River and have been identified by men maintaining a tradition of braided hair although most young men no longer uphold this practice 25 They are sometimes called Guarani katui Guarani Guarani par excellence The Izoceno Guarani or Tapɨi of Izozog who live in the region of Ɨsoso or Izozo on the Parapeti RiverLanguage Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source track A Guarani speaker Main article Guarani language Today the Standard Paraguayan Guarani is flourishing in Paraguay and is taught in 12 countries 26 27 28 The growing Paraguayan immigration to Argentina has led to a cultural enhancement of the Guarani peoples in Argentina It can also be seen in Spain due to the intense Paraguayan immigration to Spain 29 30 The language was also used by other tribes in regions like the Paraguayan Chaco and Northern Argentina 31 Notable Guarani people EditJuliana a 16th century woman known for killing her Spanish master and urging other indigenous women to do the same 32 Sepe Tiarayu Guarani War leader popularly venerated as a saint in Brazil and ArgentinaSee also EditGuarana plant Guarani currency Guarani Kaiowa Guarani mythology Guarani alphabet Guarani language Guarani War Indigenous peoples in Brazil Jesuit Reductions Tupi people Encomienda Mapuche Paraguayan guarani Mapuche people Academy of the Guarani Language Indigenous peoples in Argentina Jesuit missions among the Guarani Indigenous peoples in ParaguayNotes Edit Guarani Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 8 March 2019 Society Guarani Archived from the original on 2006 09 25 Paraguay Embassy of Paraguay in the United States of America Archived from the original on 2009 01 19 Catholic Encyclopedia Ganson Barbara 2003 The Guarani Under Spanish Rule in the Rio de la Plata a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Eduardo de Almeida Navarro Dicionario de tupi antigo ISBN 978 85 260 1933 1 Global Editora 2013 Salvo Rosita Escalada Zamboni Olga Myths and Legends A journey around the Guarani lands Anthology translated by students from the Instituto Superior Lenguas Vivas 1906 Editorial Universitaria Universidad Nacional de Misiones 1870 revised and corrected by Gloria Acosta 2007 ISBN 978 987 9121 99 3 pp 9 29 a b Salvo and Zammboni pp 29 63 Salvo and Zamboni pp 63 67 The larger portion of the population regarded it as a right a privilege by virtue of conquest that they should enslave the Indians Page 470 Page 470 Sarreal Julia J S 2014 The Guarani and Their Missions A Socioeconomic History Stanford CA Stanford University Press Montoya Antonio Ruiz de 1993 The Spiritual Conquest Accomplished by the Religious of the Society of Jesus in the Provinces of Paraguay Uruguay and Tape St Louis MO Institute of Jesuit Sources p 52 Ganson Barbara 2003 The Guarani Under Spanish Rule in the Rio de la Plata Stanford CA Stanford university Press p 35 Cushner Nicholas P 1983 Jesuit Ranches and the Agrarian Development of Colonial Argentina 1650 1767 Albany NY State University of New York Press p 156 Graham 57 Ganson Barbara 2003 The Guarani Under Spanish Rule in the Rio de la Plata Stanford CA Stanford University Press p 198 Caicedo Felipe Valencia 2019 The Mission Human Capital Transmission Economic Persistence and Culture in South America The Quarterly Journal of Economics 134 507 556 doi 10 1093 qje qjy024 hdl 10 1093 qje qjy024 Langer Erick D 2009 Expecting Pears from an Elm Tree Durham Duke University Press pp 11 18 186 195 Gustafson Bret Darin 2009 New languages of the state indigenous resurgence and the politics of knowledge in Bolivia Durham Duke University Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 8223 4529 9 YASAREKOMO Una experiencia de comunicacion indigena en Bolivia Gustafson Bret Darin 2009 New languages of the state indigenous resurgence and the politics of knowledge in Bolivia Durham Duke University Press p xix ISBN 978 0 8223 4529 9 Combes Isabelle Kathleen Lowrey 2006 10 01 Slaves without Masters Arawakan Dynasties among the Chiriguano Bolivian Chaco Sixteenth to Twentieth Centuries Ethnohistory 53 4 689 714 691 doi 10 1215 00141801 2006 019 Combes Isabelle Kathleen Lowrey 2006 10 01 Slaves without Masters Arawakan Dynasties among the Chiriguano Bolivian Chaco Sixteenth to Twentieth Centuries Ethnohistory 53 4 689 714 708 doi 10 1215 00141801 2006 019 Gustafson Bret Darin 2009 New languages of the state indigenous resurgence and the politics of knowledge in Bolivia Durham Duke University Press p 102 ISBN 978 0 8223 4529 9 El guarani o avane ẽ una lengua vigente en 12 paises cienciasdelsur com in Spanish Ciencias del Sur 2021 08 25 Retrieved 2021 12 20 PARAGUAY S GUARANI LANGUAGE IS FLOURISHING glocal soas ac uk SOAS University of London 2021 08 25 Retrieved 2021 12 20 Taiwan Embajador ou PNS pe spl gov py in Guarani Secretaria de Politicas Linguisticas de Paraguay 2021 08 25 Retrieved 2021 12 20 Defenderan cultura guarani en Espana Nacionales ABC Color Carneri Santi 24 January 2020 Paraguay seduce a Europa con su cultura guarani misiones jesuitas e impresionantes escenarios naturales El Pais When Everyone is Guarani the indigenous Guaranization in writings from the 16th century in the Provinces of the River Plate PDF 30 April 2018 Colman Gutierrez Andres December 5 2020 En busca de la India Juliana Ultima Hora in Spanish Asuncion Retrieved December 12 2021 References Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Guarani Indians Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Further reading EditAustin Shawn Michae 2015 Guarani kinship and the encomienda community in colonial Paraguay sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries Colonial Latin American Review 24 4 545 571 DOI 10 1080 10609164 2016 1150039External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Guarani Guarani edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia http www unavenirpourlesguaranis org Archived 2011 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Campaign for the Guarani French NGOs Guarani Survival Fund Fund opened by the British NGO Survival International in support of the Guarani Guarani The Language of the People Catholic Encyclopedia article Circuits of Culture Media Politics and Identity in the Andes Indigenous peoples and The Language Spanish Bolivian Indians see Rocky Exodus from Serfdom by the Associated Press January 2 2010 The Guarani Survival International Charitable Trust Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guarani people amp oldid 1163288953, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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