Kiriri people

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Kiriri
File:Cariri atuais.jpg
Map of traditional Kiriri territory
Total population
1,612 (2006)[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Brazil ( Ceará)
Languages
Portuguese, formerly Kariri
Religion
Toré religion

Kiriri people are indigenous people of Eastern Brazil. Their name is also spelled Cariri or Kariri and is a Tupi word meaning "silent" or "tactiturn."[1]

History

The French Capuchin missionary Martin of Nantes (1638–1714) was the apostle of the Kariri people on the São Francisco River between 1672 and 1683.

Territory

Today a large portion of their traditional homelands is still called the Cariris region. Within this region are two cities, Crato and Juazeiro do Norte.

The Chapada Diamantina has a dramatic landscape with high plains, table-top mesas, and steep cliffs or towers known as 'tepuy.' Before the arrival of the Portuguese in the 19th century, the only local inhabitants of the region were indigenous Indians from the Maracas and Cariris tribes. In 1985, the Chapada Diamantina National Park was created with its headquarters in Palmeiras.

Kiriri people live in the Kiriri Indigenous Land, an Indigenous Territory. Through their successful political organization, they were able to expel 1,200 non-native squatters from their lands since 1990.[1]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Kiriri: Introduction." Povos Indígenas no Brasil. (retrieved 13 Aug 2011)

External links