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  2. Chamorro people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chamorro_people

    Both costumes represent the people from Guam, highlighting the Spanish colonial time, and symbolizing the resilience of its people. Chamorro Dancers, 30-7-2012. A significant dance move is traditionally shaped by a canoe. The Chamorro people practiced the canoe by, galaidé, [40] of the hand movement or using traditional wooden sticks. During ...

  3. File:Latte Stone @ Sen. Angel Santos Memorial Park, Guam, USA.jpg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Latte_Stone_@_Sen...

    The Latte Stone located at Sen. Angel Leon Guerrero Santos Memorial Park, in Guam, a territory of United States of America.Also called as Latte Stone Park, it is consider as the backbone of the Chamorro Heritage long before Magellan discovers it, in the year 1521.

  4. Culture of Guam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Guam

    The culture of Guam reflects traditional Chamorro customs in a combination of indigenous pre-Hispanic forms, as well as American and Spanish traditions. [1] Post-European-contact CHamoru Guamanian culture is a combination of American, Spanish, Filipino and other Micronesian Islander traditions.

  5. Latte stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latte_stone

    A latte stone, or simply latte (also latde, latti, or latdi), is a pillar (Chamorro language: haligi) capped by a hemispherical stone capital (tasa) with the flat side facing up. Used as building supports by the ancient Chamorro people, they are found throughout most of the Mariana Islands. In modern times, the latte stone is seen as a sign of ...

  6. NMI Museum of History and Culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NMI_Museum_of_History_and...

    Northern Marianas Islands Museum Picture of the NMI Museum of History and Culture. The NMI Museum of History and Culture, also known as the NMI Museum, is a museum in Garapan, Saipan hosting exhibitions about the Chamorro and Carolinian people and also displays artifacts, documents, textiles, and photographs from the Spanish, German, Japanese, and American periods in the Northern Mariana Islands.

  7. History of Guam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Guam

    Approximately 1,000 people died during the occupation, according to later Congressional committee testimony in 2004. Some historians estimate that war violence killed 10% of Guam's then 20,000 population. [32] It was a coercive experience for the Chamoru people, whose loyalty to the United States became a point of contention with the Japanese.

  8. File:Group of Chamorros on Guam, 1944-1947 (cropped).jpg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Group_of_Chamorros_on...

    Description: Catalog #: 09_01998 Title: Brigadier General Clarence S. ""Bill"" Irvine Special Collection Photo Guam Additional Information: Group of native men women and children in Guam during World War II, Brigadier General Clarence Irvine enjoyed a long distinguished military career, mainly involving engineering.

  9. Spanish–Chamorro Wars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish–Chamorro_Wars

    The ancient Chamorros were organized into matrilineal extended family groups, stratified into three hierarchical classes. Chamorro seamanship and the sakman, also known as the "flying proa," impressed the first Spanish sailors to the Marianas.