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The Cuyuteco people, also known as Cuyuteca, was a tribe of the Nahua culture, that lived primarily in the Pre-Columbian Mixtlán region of Xalisco, in the present day state of Jalisco in western central Mexico and along the Colima coastline. [1] The Nahua are one of the main cultural groups of Mesoamerica.
Despite the Guadalajara area historically being an ethnically Caxcan region, the Nahua peoples form the majority of Guadalajara's indigenous population. [74] There are several thousand indigenous language speakers in Guadalajara although the majority of the indigenous population is integrated within the general population and can speak Spanish ...
The Spanish in Guadalajara and other locations began to take indigenous peoples as slaves in 1543. [21] These Spanish in the area were looking to enrich themselves as fast as possible, following the success of the same of those who arrived first to the Mexico City area.
Pages in category "Indigenous peoples in Jalisco" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. ... Guadalajara; S. Statue of Francisco Tenamaztle; X.
The Tecuexe language is now extinct and very little is known about it. It was likely a Uto-Aztecan language.. The study of the toponyms of the Rio Verde region in Los Altos de Jalisco infers the presence of abundant words ending in íc/tíc, which is consistent with a similar phenomenon in the Valles de Tequila region, where very similar locative suffixes are usually related to the presence of ...
1896 photograph of an indigenous Mexican boy. In the second article of the Mexican Constitution, Mexico defines itself as a pluricultural nation in recognition of the diverse ethnic groups that constitute it and where the indigenous peoples [12] are the original foundation. [13]
The Huichol (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈwit͡ʃo̞l]) or Wixárika (Huichol pronunciation: [wiˈraɾika]) [1] are an Indigenous people of Mexico living in the Sierra Madre Occidental range in the states of Nayarit, Jalisco, Zacatecas, and Durango, with considerable communities in the United States, in the states of California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas.
In September 2018, Coca people hoped to recover [6] their seized lands in es:Mezcala (Jalisco), the target of large-scale real estate projects for U.S. immigrants, resulting in many Indigenous lands being illegally seized, after 19 years struggling against a Guillermo Moreno Ibarra.