ARAUCANIANS

əroukänˈēən, South American people, occupying most of S central Chile at the time of the Spanish conquest (1540). The Araucanians were an agricultural people living in small settlements. They are classified into three major cultural subdivisions, the Huilliche, the Picunche, and the Mapuche, the last being the largest group. The known history of the Araucanians begins with the Inca invasion (c.1448–c.1482) under Tupac Yupanqui, but Inca influence was never strong. Against the Spanish under Pedro de Valdivia the Araucanians offered resistance, notably under Lautaro and Caupolicán, and their stout fight was immortalized in the epic by Alonso de Ercilla y Zúñiga. They were successful in protecting S Chile and by 1598 had destroyed almost all Spanish settlements S of the Bío-Bío River. Their struggle continued intermittently in the 17th and 18th cent. in the uprisings of 1723, 1740, and 1766. White immigration southward brought on the war of 1880–81, which ended with Araucanian submission. Earlier, especially at the beginning of the 18th cent., Araucanians fleeing white encroachment had gone across the Andes into Argentina. Capturing wild horses, they became wanderers on the plains and absorbed the Puelche. Gen. Julio A. Roca subjugated them in his campaigns (1879–83). The Araucanians, although not fully integrated into the majority culture, continue to influence Chilean life; they number over 300,000.

See L. C. Faron, Hawks of the Sun (1964) and The Mapuche Indians of Chile (1968); M. I. Hilger, Huenun Ñamku (1966); E. H. Korth, Spanish Policy in Colonial Chile (1968).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Araucanians
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books on: Araucanians  - 216 results

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...absorbed into Araucanian culture. Other Araucanians, primarily...disease on the Araucanians was great...1600s, the Araucanian population...moving into Araucanian land, by now...years, the Araucanians adopted many...
...attempted to regain Araucanian support in 1869 and...but once again the Araucanians defeated the invaders...courts, many young Araucanians have embraced a more...past treaties with the Araucanians, which would, in...give legal sanction to Araucanian independence.
...Unable to bring Araucanians to them, Jesuits went to the Araucanians. Wearing ponchos...the scattered Araucanian communities below...missions among Araucanians served primarily...annually toured the Araucanian world. 62...
farther north. While the Araucanians borrowed such crops as maize...fairly dense population, but the Araucanians had no large nucleated villages...the cultivated fields. All the Araucanians had a very similar culture and...
...who fought against the Araucanians and was so impressed...Incas and Aztecs, the Araucanians had never had rulers...up destroying the old Araucanian society, leaving several hundred thousand Araucanians -- in their own language...
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journal articles on: Araucanians  - 8 results

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...inhered in the Araucanian community, and...newspapers, the Araucanians were not a reading...32) Having won Araucanian approval, San...however, take the Araucanians with them: San...an essentially Araucanian love of liberty...dominance, actual Araucanians had not been part...
...Rather than submit, the Araucanians fought a heroic and protracted...resistance of the "war-like Araucanians." Herckmans would have...most basically with the Araucanians (Araucano; see below...Civilis (who, like the Araucanian leader, Caupolicano, had...
...interests of the Crown, and thus the Araucanians provide a counterpart to condemn the...Ercilla also knows how to subordinate the Araucanians and to transform horror into an object...Caupolican, the most courageous among the Araucanians, converts to Christianity and is given...
...of classification. He describes the Araucanians (today Mapuches) in great detail...that Molina tended to romanticize the Araucanians, and to present a somewhat simplistic view of Araucanian-white relations. Ronan analyzes one...
...Ercilla seeks the counsel of an Araucanian (Amerindian) magician to...imagined by Ercilla. The real Araucanians power lay not in their ability...innovative argument that the Araucanian threat in Chile to empire...actually tried to unite with the Araucanians of Chile, they failed miserably...
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magazine articles on: Araucanians  - 6 results

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...collective memory of the Araucanians, Orelie-Antoine...The machis, Araucanian sorceresses, had...Magic Kingdom The Araucanian Indians had settled...repulsed by the Araucanians. Although the...with respect to Araucanian heroism--and...Spain, because the Araucanians had never been...
...written in the third person so as to disguise her name, first appeared in 1863 as Three Years in Chili. She admired the Araucanians and took pleasure in sharing a story about President Manuel Montts tour of southern Chile, during a time of great political...
...and Ranqueles of Rio de la Plata were all in the saddle and ranging the pampas, encouraged and pushed from behind by those Araucanians who had cast aside much of their Andean culture to come down onto the flatlands to exploit the herds. All these peoples...
...cultural achievements. juan Ignacio Molina, a Chilean Jesuit, wrote a history of Chile that exalted the courage of the Araucanians (today called Mapuches), who never surrendered to the Spanish. And juan dc Vclasco, an Ecuadorian, wrote a history...
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encyclopedia articles on: Araucanians  - 16 results

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...The known history of the Araucanians begins with the Inca invasion...under Pedro de Valdivia the Araucanians offered resistance, notably...1880 81, which ended with Araucanian submission. Earlier, especially...beginning of the 18th cent., Araucanians fleeing white encroachment...
...groups are still distinguishable the Araucanians of central Chile (the largest and long...the Spanish in the 16th cent., the Araucanians had long been in control of the land...despite stout resistance from the Araucanians, founded Santiago (1541) and later...
...the colony was not prosperous; gold was scarce and the Araucanians warlike. To secure additional aid and confirm his claims...conquest was complete. Toward the end of 1553, however, the Araucanians under Lautaro revolted. Valdivia, sallying forth with 40...
...They were an agricultural people (recalled today by ruins N of Jujuy), but their importance was eclipsed later by the Araucanians from Chile. Europeans probably first arrived in the region in 1502 in the voyage of Amerigo Vespucci. The southern inhabitants...
MAPUCHE see Araucanians . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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