Guane people
Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Santander, Boyacá, Colombia | |
Languages | |
Chibcha, Colombian Spanish | |
Religion | |
Traditional religion, Roman Catholicism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Lache, U'wa, Muisca, Muzo, Yarigui |
The Guane are a South American people that live mainly in the cities of Santander, Bucaramanga and Barichara. A population estimate made by DANE(Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadística) in 2005, they are around 812 people in Santander that identify as Guane, with 409 being men and 403 being women.[1]
Etymology
[edit]The etymology of the word Guane is not known with certainty. The most prominent reasoning states that it came from the Muisca people, the Guane’s neighbors, who referred to them as ‘Guatas’ which means ‘tall’ in the Musyccubun language It evolved to become ‘Guates’ and then eventually Guanes. Guane people from this time period were reported to be as tall as 1.76m, taller than most other native groups at the time.[2]
Pre-colonial Guane People
[edit]Before European-contact the Guane People lived in the are of Santander and north of Boyacá, both departments of present-day central-Colombia. They were farmers cultivating cotton, pineapple and other crops, and skilled artisans working in cotton textiles. The Guane lived north of the Chicamocha River, around the Chicamocha Canyon in an area stretching from Vélez in the south to the capital of Santander; Bucaramanga in the north.[3] Other sources state their territory did not extend so far north.[4] Guane, a corregimiento of Barichara, Santander, is said to have been the capital of the Guane people.
Culture and art
[edit]Guane culture during this time period had many aspects to it. They celebrated on many different occasions such as the start of puberty, the teething of a baby, and the start of the new lunar year. [5] They had multiple leader for each village, however, all of the Guane were led by a man named Guanetá by the time the Spanish .[6]
The Guane made their own weapons, including arrows and spears. They interchanged plants for the stewpot with the Chitarero on the east and the Muisca to the south of their territories. The mantle making of the Guanes was well known in pre-Columbian Colombia. Mantles made from cotton have been dated back to the 11th century AD.[7] The Guane cultivated tobacco and made products of fique.[3]
Like the Muisca, U'wa and Lache, the Guane spoke a Chibchan language.[4]
Colonization
[edit]They adored Bochica, the messenger god in the Muisca religion.[8] The Guane traded with their neighbouring indigenous groups; Lache to the east, U'wa to the northeast, Muzo to the south and Muisca to the southeast.[citation needed]
Rock art produced by the Guane have been found around the Chicamocha Canyon and on the Mesa de los Santos, Santander.[8]
The Guane people chewed coca combined with calcitic grains, using poporos.[8]
Current Guane Culture
[edit]Today the Guane People continue to exist. Unfortunately, there are no known speakers of Guane´s original language, however, their culture has evolved and is still practiced. For example, museums around Santander preserve the culture and claim it as Santandereana Heritage, a woman named Doña Ana Felicia Alquichire continues to make ceramics in the traditional Guane style, and many Santandereanos sing songs about their Guane heritage everyday. [9]
Municipalities belonging to Guane territory
[edit]The Guane inhabited the area of central and south Santander, around the Chicamocha Canyon and a small part of Boyacá.
Name | Department | Altitude (m) urban centre |
Map |
---|---|---|---|
Guane | Santander | 1336 | |
Aratoca | Santander | 1800 | |
Cabrera | Santander | 980 | |
Coromoro | Santander | 1518 | |
Curití | Santander | 1409 | |
Encino | Santander | 1850 | |
Guapotá | Santander | 1534 | |
Güepsa (shared with Muisca and Yarigui) |
Santander | 1540 | |
Jordán | Santander | 425 | |
Mogotes | Santander | 1700 | |
Ocamonte | Santander | 1398 | |
Oiba | Santander | 1420 | |
Palmar | Santander | 1200 | |
Páramo | Santander | 1200 | |
Pinchote | Santander | 1131 | |
San Gil | Santander | 1117 | |
San Joaquín | Santander | 1950 | |
Los Santos | Santander | 1310 | |
Suaita | Santander | 1700 | |
Valle de San José | Santander | 1250 | |
Villanueva | Santander | 1450 | |
San José de Pare | Boyacá | 1545 | |
Santana | Boyacá | 1550 |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Planes en Bucaramanga y Santander". www.weekendsantander.com. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
- ^ Navas Corona, Alejadnro (2012). ¿Porqué se llamaron Guanes? | El Libro Total (in Spanish). Fundación El Libro Total.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ a b (in Spanish) Guane people and their territories
- ^ a b (in Spanish) Reconstruction of the Guane people - El Espectador
- ^ "Planes en Bucaramanga y Santander". www.weekendsantander.com. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
- ^ "Planes en Bucaramanga y Santander". www.weekendsantander.com. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
- ^ (in Spanish) Guane people and their mantle making Archived 2016-06-11 at the Wayback Machine, colarte.com. Accessed 27 November 2022.
- ^ a b c (in Spanish) Description of the Guane people and their culture Archived 2016-07-01 at the Wayback Machine, misteriosconxana.blogspot.com.co. Accessed 27 November 2022.
- ^ Citation Needed
External links
[edit]- (in Spanish) Video about the Guane people and their culture