Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 40 of
40
with 100 items per page.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin abstract "The Marañón River basin between Peru and Ecuador, at a low point in the Andes which made it an attractive location for trade between the Inca Empire and the Amazon basin, once harbored numerous languages which have been poorly attested or not attested at all. Those of the middle reaches of the river, above the Amazon basin, were replaced in historical times by Aguaruna, a Jivaroan language from the Amazon which is still spoken there. The languages further upriver are difficult to identify, due to lack of data. The region was multilingual at the time of the Conquest, and the people largely switched to Spanish rather than to Quechua, though Quechua also expanded during Colonial times.On the Ecuadorian side of the river, in the province of Loja, were Palta, Malacato, Rabona, Bolona, and Xiroa. Historical sources suggest these were closely related, and there is some evidence that Palta (see) was a Jivaroan language. Indeed, the name Xiroa may be a variant of Jivaro. Rabona is attested by a few words, some of which seem to be Jivaroan, but others of which appear to be Candoshí; since these are plant names, they say little about the classification of the language, and Adelaar (2004:397) leaves it unclassified. Bolona is essentially unattested.North of the basin were Puruhá (scarcely attested), Cañar (known primarily from characteristic place names), Panzaleo (sometimes classified as Paezan), Caranqui (until the 18th century, seemingly Barbacoan), and Pasto (Barbacoan). Apart possibly from Panzaleo, these languages have elements in common, such as a final syllable -pud and onsets mwe-, pwe-, bwe-. Those suggest that they may have been related, and possibly were all Barbacoan. Adelaar (2004:397) finds this more likely than a proposal that Puruhá and Cañar were Chimuan languages (see).On the Peruvian side of the river, and further up in the Andes where it enters Peru, there were also numerous languages. Apart from Mochica and Cholón, the languages of northern Peru are largely unrecorded; the attested Marañón languages are Patagón (Patagón de Perico), Bagua (Patagón de Bagua), Chacha (Chachapoya), Copallén, Tabancale, Chirino, and Sácata (Chillao).".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin thumbnail Andean_Languages.png?width=300.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin wikiPageID "31935195".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin wikiPageRevisionID "600844171".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin extinct "?".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin fam Candoshi-Shapra_language.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin fam Cariban_languages.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin fam "?".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin family "unclassified".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin familycolor "American".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin glotto "pata1255".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin glotto "taba1269".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin iso "none".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin name "Chirino".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin name "Patagón".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin name "Tabancale".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin nativename "Aconipa".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin nativename "Patagón de Perico".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin region "Marañón River basin".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin states Peru.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin subject Category:Extinct_languages_of_South_America.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin subject Category:Indigenous_languages_of_the_Americas.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin subject Category:Languages_of_Ecuador.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin subject Category:Languages_of_Peru.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin subject Category:Lists_of_extinct_languages.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin subject Category:Unclassified_languages_of_South_America.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin type Language.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin type Language.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin type InformationEntity.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin comment "The Marañón River basin between Peru and Ecuador, at a low point in the Andes which made it an attractive location for trade between the Inca Empire and the Amazon basin, once harbored numerous languages which have been poorly attested or not attested at all. Those of the middle reaches of the river, above the Amazon basin, were replaced in historical times by Aguaruna, a Jivaroan language from the Amazon which is still spoken there.".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin label "Extinct languages of the Marañón River basin".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin label "Lenguas preincaicas de la cuenca del Marañón".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin label "Línguas pré-incas da bacia do Marañón".
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin sameAs Extinct_languages_of_the_Mara%C3%B1%C3%B3n_River_basin.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin sameAs Lenguas_preincaicas_de_la_cuenca_del_Marañón.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin sameAs Línguas_pré-incas_da_bacia_do_Marañón.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin sameAs Q5390321.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin sameAs Q5390321.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin wasDerivedFrom Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin?oldid=600844171.
- Extinct_languages_of_the_Marañón_River_basin depiction Andean_Languages.png.