Artigo

Notícia sobre os Índios Anambé (Rio Caiari, Pará).

The Anambé Indians, a tupian speaking group, located nowadays at the Caiari River, a small tributary of the Moju River, in the State of Pará, have been first visited by Arnaud in 1948. A second visit with Galvão, twenty years later, provide ethnographic information which is briefly reported in this...

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Autor principal: Arnaud, Expedito
Outros Autores: Galvão, Eduardo
Grau: Artigo
Idioma: Portuguese
Publicado em: Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi 2010
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha: http://repositorio.museu-goeldi.br/handle/mgoeldi/203
id ir-mgoeldi-203
recordtype dspace
spelling ir-mgoeldi-2032019-07-17T17:52:42Z Notícia sobre os Índios Anambé (Rio Caiari, Pará). Arnaud, Expedito Galvão, Eduardo Índios Anambé Rio Caiari (PA) Povos indígenas Terminologia de parentesco CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::ANTROPOLOGIA::ETNOLOGIA INDIGENA The Anambé Indians, a tupian speaking group, located nowadays at the Caiari River, a small tributary of the Moju River, in the State of Pará, have been first visited by Arnaud in 1948. A second visit with Galvão, twenty years later, provide ethnographic information which is briefly reported in this paper, and a comparison with their situation twenty years ago. A description is made of their present socio-cultural context, liguistic and tribal affiliation, as well as some historical data on the Turiwára, Amanajé, Tembé and Anambé Indians, which since the middle of the last century have beem located in the south of the State of Pará. Observations are made about the situation of contact and the relations of Brazilians and Indians within an area where dominates an economy based on the exploitation of natural resources such as timber and rubber (maçaranduba). They still live as an ethnic unit, keep a tupian dialect for internal communication and traditional kin organization. Others aspects of their culture such as house type, pottery, and a number of handicrafts have been substituted for Brazilian models. There is also a certain degree of intermarriage with "whites" and a marked economic dependence on white merchants. They are mainly providers of game, skins and manioc flour. 2010-10-22T17:58:11Z 2010-10-22T17:58:11Z 1969-09 Artigo de periódico ARNAUD, Expedito; GALVÃO, Eduardo. Notícia sobre os Índios Anambé (Rio Caiari, Pará). Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Nova série, Antropologia. Belém, n.42, p.1-18, set. 1969. 05227291 http://repositorio.museu-goeldi.br/handle/mgoeldi/203 pt application/pdf Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi
institution Repositório Institucional - Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi
collection RepositorioEmilioGoeldi
language Portuguese
topic Índios Anambé
Rio Caiari (PA)
Povos indígenas
Terminologia de parentesco
CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::ANTROPOLOGIA::ETNOLOGIA INDIGENA
spellingShingle Índios Anambé
Rio Caiari (PA)
Povos indígenas
Terminologia de parentesco
CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::ANTROPOLOGIA::ETNOLOGIA INDIGENA
Arnaud, Expedito
Notícia sobre os Índios Anambé (Rio Caiari, Pará).
topic_facet Índios Anambé
Rio Caiari (PA)
Povos indígenas
Terminologia de parentesco
CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::ANTROPOLOGIA::ETNOLOGIA INDIGENA
description The Anambé Indians, a tupian speaking group, located nowadays at the Caiari River, a small tributary of the Moju River, in the State of Pará, have been first visited by Arnaud in 1948. A second visit with Galvão, twenty years later, provide ethnographic information which is briefly reported in this paper, and a comparison with their situation twenty years ago. A description is made of their present socio-cultural context, liguistic and tribal affiliation, as well as some historical data on the Turiwára, Amanajé, Tembé and Anambé Indians, which since the middle of the last century have beem located in the south of the State of Pará. Observations are made about the situation of contact and the relations of Brazilians and Indians within an area where dominates an economy based on the exploitation of natural resources such as timber and rubber (maçaranduba). They still live as an ethnic unit, keep a tupian dialect for internal communication and traditional kin organization. Others aspects of their culture such as house type, pottery, and a number of handicrafts have been substituted for Brazilian models. There is also a certain degree of intermarriage with "whites" and a marked economic dependence on white merchants. They are mainly providers of game, skins and manioc flour.
format Artigo
author Arnaud, Expedito
author2 Galvão, Eduardo
author2Str Galvão, Eduardo
title Notícia sobre os Índios Anambé (Rio Caiari, Pará).
title_short Notícia sobre os Índios Anambé (Rio Caiari, Pará).
title_full Notícia sobre os Índios Anambé (Rio Caiari, Pará).
title_fullStr Notícia sobre os Índios Anambé (Rio Caiari, Pará).
title_full_unstemmed Notícia sobre os Índios Anambé (Rio Caiari, Pará).
title_sort notícia sobre os Índios anambé (rio caiari, pará).
publisher Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi
publishDate 2010
url http://repositorio.museu-goeldi.br/handle/mgoeldi/203
_version_ 1787135831118446592
score 11.755432