Mapuche history

The Mapuche people of southern Chile and Argentina have a long history dating back as an archaeological culture to 600–500 BC. The Mapuche society had great transformations after Spanish contact in the mid–16th century. These changes included the adoption of Old World crops and animals and the onset of a rich Spanish–Mapuche trade in La Frontera and Valdivia. Despite these contacts Mapuche were never completely subjugated by the Spanish Empire. Between the 18th and 19th century Mapuche culture and people spread eastwards into the Pampas and the Patagonian plains. This vast new territory allowed Mapuche groups to control a substantial part of the salt and cattle trade in the Southern Cone.

Between 1861 and 1883 the Republic of Chile conducted a series of campaigns that ended Mapuche independence causing the death of thousands of Mapuche through combat, pillaging, starvation and smallpox epidemics. Argentina conducted similar campaigns on the eastern side of the Andes in the 1870s. In large parts of the Mapuche lands the traditional economy collapsed forcing thousands to seek themselves to the large cities and live in impoverished conditions as housemaids, hawkers or labourers.

From the late 20th century onwards Mapuche people have been increasingly active in conflicts over land rights and indigenous rights.

Pre-Columbian period

Origins

Archaeological finds have shown the existence of a Mapuche culture in Chile as early as 600 to 500 BC.[1] Genetically Mapuches differ from the adjacent indigenous peoples of Patagonia.[2] This is interpreted as suggesting either a "different origin or long lasting separation of Mapuche and Patagonian populations".[2] A 1996 study comparing genetics of indegnous groups in Argentina found no significant link between Mapuches and other groups.[3] A 2019 study on the human leukocyte antigen genetics of Mapuche from Cañete found affinities with a variety of North and South American indigenous groups. Notably the study found also affinities also with Aleuts, Eskimos, Pacific Islanders, Ainu from Japan, Negidals from Eastern Siberia and Rapa Nui from Easter Island.[4]

There is no consensus on the linguistic affiliation of the Mapuche language, Mapudungun. In the early 1970s, significant linguistic affinities between Mapuche and Mayan languages were suggested.[5] Linguist Mary Ritchie Key claimed in 1978 that Araucanian languages, including Mapuche, were genetically linked to the Pano-Tacanan languages, to the Chonan languages and the Kawéskar languages.[5] Croese (1989, 1991) has advanced the hypothesis that Mapudungun is related to the Arawakan languages.

In 1954 Grete Mostny postulated the idea of a link between Mapuches and the archaeological culture of El Molle in the Transverse Valleys of Norte Chico.[6] This idea was followed up by Patricio Bustamante in 2007. Mapuche communities in the southern Diaguita lands –that is Petorca, La Ligua, Combarbalá and Choapa – may be rooted in Pre-Hispanic times at least several centuries before the Spanish arrival.[7] Mapuche toponimy is also found throughout the area.[7] While there was an immigration of Mapuches to the southern Diaguita lands in colonial times Mapuche culture there is judged to be older than this.[7]

Based on mDNA analysis of various indigenous groups of South America it is thought that Mapuche are at least in part descendant of peoples from the Amazon Basin that migrated to Chile through two routes; one through the Central Andean highlands and another through the eastern Bolivian lowlands and the Argentine Northwest.[6]

A hypothesis put forward by Ricardo E. Latcham, and later expanded by Francisco Antonio Encina, theorizes that the Mapuche migrated to present-day Chile from the Pampas east of the Andes.[1] The hypothesis further claims that previous to the Mapuche, there was a "Chincha-Diaguita" culture, which was geographically cut in half by the Mapuche penetrating from mountain passes around the head of the Cautín River.[1][8] Albeit the Latcham hypothesis is consistent with linguistic features[8] it is rejected by modern scholars due to the lack of conclusive evidence, and the possibility of alternative hypotheses.[1]

Tomás Guevara has postulated another unproven hypothesis claiming that early Mapuches dwelled at the coast due to abundant marine resources and did only later moved inland following large rivers.[9] Guevara adds that Mapuches would be descendants of northern Changos, a poorly known coastal people, who moved southwards.[10] This hypothesis is supported by tenuous linguistic evidence linking a language of 19th century Changos (called Chilueno or Arauco) with Mapudungun.[11]

According to a theory of historian Roberto E. Porcel the Mapuche were descendants of a group of Aymaras that migrated south as consequence of a conflict between Antisuyu and Contisuyu.[12][6]

Tiwanaku and Puquina influence

It has been conjectured that the collapse of the Tiwanaku empire about 1000 CE caused a southward migratory wave leading to a series of changes in Mapuche society in Chile.[13][14] This explains how the Mapuche language obtained many loanwords from Puquina language including antu (sun), calcu (warlock), cuyen (moon), chadi (salt) and ñuque (mother).[13] Tom Dillehay and co-workers suggest that the decline of Tiwanaku would have led to the spread of agricultural techniques into Mapuche lands in south-central Chile. These techniques include the raised fields of Budi Lake and the canalized fields found in Lumaco Valley.[14]

...dispersing [Tiwanaku] populations in search of new suitable environments might have caused long-distance ripple effects of both migration and technological diffusion across the south-central and south Andes between c.AD 1100 and 1300...

Tom Dillehay and co-workers.[14]

A cultural linkage of this sort may help explain parallels in mythological cosmologies among Mapuches and peoples of the Central Andes.[13]

Possible Polynesian contact

Mocha Island off the coast of Arauco Peninsula, Chile

In 2007, evidence appeared to have been found that suggested pre-Columbian contact between Polynesians from the western Pacific and the Mapuche people. Chicken bones found at the El Arenal site in the Arauco Peninsula, an area inhabited by Mapuche, support a pre-Columbian introduction of chicken to South America.[15] The bones found in Chile were carbon-dated to between 1304 and 1424, before the arrival of the Spanish. Chicken DNA sequences taken were matched to those of chickens in present-day American Samoa and Tonga; they did not match the DNA of European chickens.[15][16] However, a later report in the same journal, assessing the same mtDNA, concluded that the Chilean chicken specimen matches with the European/Indian subcontinental/Southeast Asian sequences. Thus, it may not support a Polynesian introduction of chickens to South America.[17]

In December 2007, several human skulls with Polynesian features, such as a pentagonal shape when viewed from behind, were found lying on a shelf in a museum in Concepción. These skulls turned out to have come from people of Mocha Island, an island just off the coast of Chile in the Pacific Ocean, today inhabited by Mapuche. Professor Lisa Matisoo-Smith of the University of Otago and José Miguel Ramírez Aliaga of the University of Valparaíso hope to win agreement soon with the locals of Mocha Island to begin an excavation to search for Polynesian remains on the island.[18]

Mapuche expansion into Chiloé Archipelago

Reconstruction of a dalca in the museum of Dalcahue. This king of boats were used by both Chonos and the Mapuche of Chiloé (Cunco, Huilliche, Veliche). More northern Mapuche used simpler watercraft called wampu.

A theory postulated by chronicler José Pérez García holds the Cunco[upper-alpha 1] settled in Chiloé Island in Pre-Hispanic times as consequence of a push from more northern Huilliche who in turn were being displaced by Mapuche.[20][21]

Evidence for a Chono past of the southernmost Mapuche lands in Chiloé and the nearby mainland are various placenames with Chono etymologies despite the main indigenous language of the archipelago at the arrival of the Spanish being veliche (Mapuche).[22] This is in line with notions of ethnologist Ricardo E. Latcham who consider the Chono along other sea-faring nomads may be remants from more widespread indigenous groups that were pushed south by "successive invasions" from more northern tribes.[23]

The Payos an indigenous group in southern Chiloé encountered by the Spanish may have been Chonos en route to acculturate into the Mapuche.[24]

Inca expansion and influence

Troops of the Inca Empire are reported to have reached Maule River and had a battle with Mapuches from Maule River and Itata River there.[25] The southern border of the Inca Empire is believed by most modern scholars to be situated between Santiago and the Maipo River or somewhere between Santiago and the Maule River.[26] Spanish chroniclers Miguel de Olavarría and Diego de Rosales claimed the Inca frontier laid much further south at the Bío Bío River.[26] While historian José Bengoa concludes that Inca troops apparently never crossed Bío Bío River,[27] chronicler Diego de Rosales gives an account of the Incas crossing the river going south all the way to La Imperial and returning north through Tucapel along the coast.[28]

The main settlements of the Inca Empire in Chile lay along the Aconcagua River, Mapocho River and the Maipo River.[25] Quillota in Aconcagua Valley was likely their foremost settlement.[25] As result of Inca rule there was some Mapudungun–Imperial Quechua bilingualism among Mapuches of Aconcagua Valley.[7] Salas argue Mapuche, Quechua and Spanish coexisted with significant biligualism in Central Chile (between Mapocho and Bío Bío) rivers during the 17th century.[29]

As it appear to be the case in the other borders of the Inca Empire, the southern border was composed of several zones: first, an inner, fully incorporated zone with mitimaes protected by a line of pukaras (fortresses) and then an outer zone with Inca pukaras scattered among allied tribes.[27] This outer zone would according to historian José Bengoa have been located between Maipo and Maule Rivers.[27]

Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala's picture of the confrontation between the Mapuche (left) and the Inca Empire (right)

Incan yanakuna are believed by archaeologists Tom Dillehay and Américo Gordon to have extracted gold south of the Incan frontier in free Mapuche territory. Following this thought the main motif for Incan expansion into Mapuche territory would have been to access gold mines. Same archaeologists do also claim all early Mapuche pottery at Valdivia is of Inca design.[26] Inca influence can also be evidenced far south as Osorno Province (latitude 40–41° S) in the form of Quechua and Quechua–Aymara toponyms.[30] Alternatively these toponyms originated in colonial times from the population of the Valdivian Fort System that served as a penal colony linked to the Peruvian port of El Callao.[31]

Gold and silver bracelets and "sort of crowns" were used by Mapuches in the Concepción area at the time of the Spanish arrival is noted by Jerónimo de Vivar. This is interpreted either as Incan gifts, war spoils from defeated Incas, or adoption of Incan metallurgy.[28]

Through their contact with Incan invaders Mapuches would have for the first time met people with state-level organization. Their contact with the Inca gave them a collective awareness distinguishing between them and the invaders and uniting them into loose geopolitical units despite their lack of state organization.[32]

Mapuche society at the arrival of the Spanish

Demography and settlement types

At the time of the arrival of the first Spaniards to Chile the largest indigenous population concentration was in the area spanning from Itata River to Chiloé Archipelago—that is the Mapuche heartland.[33] The Mapuche population between Itata River and Reloncaví Sound has been estimated at 705,000–900,000 in the mid-16th century by historian José Bengoa.[34][note 1]

Mapuches lived in scattered hamlets, mainly along the great rivers of Southern Chile.[35][36] All major population centres lay at the confluences of rivers.[37] Mapuches preferred to build their houses on hilly terrain or isolated hills rather than on plains and terraces.[36]

Mythology and religion

Mapuche graveyard

The machi "shaman", a role usually played by older women, is an extremely important part of the Mapuche culture. The machi performs ceremonies for the warding off of evil, for rain, for the cure of diseases, and has an extensive knowledge of Chilean medicinal herbs, gained during an arduous apprenticeship. Chileans of all origins and classes make use of the many traditional herbs known to the Mapuche. The main healing ceremony performed by the machi is called the machitun.

Wampus were used in funerals and they are present in narratives about death in Mapuche religion.[38]

Social organization

The politics, economy and religion of the pre and early contact Mapuches were based on the lineages of local communities called lov. This kind of organization was replicated at the larger rehue level that encompassed several lov.[39] The politics of each lineage were not equally aggressive or submissive, but different from case to case.[39] Lineages were patrilineal and patrilocal.[40] Polygamy was common among Mapuches and together with the custom of feminine exogamy it has been credited by José Bengoa with welding the Mapuche into one people.[41]

Early Mapuches had two types of leaders secular and religious ones. The religious were machi, hechicero and the boquivoye. The secular were the reche, ülmen and gentyoke. Later the secular leaders were known as lonko, toki, ülmen and weupin.[40]

Economy

In South-Central Chile most Mapuche groups practised glade agriculture among the forests.[42] Other agriculture types existed; while some Mapuches and Huilliches practised a slash-and-burn type of agriculture some more labour-intensive agriculture is known to have been developed by Mapuches around Budi Lake (raised fields) and the Lumaco and Purén valleys (canalized fields).[14][43] Potato was the staple food of most Mapuches, "specially in the southern and coastal [Mapuche] territories where maize did not reach maturity".[44] The bulk of the Mapuche population worked in agriculture.[45] Mapuches did also cultivated quinoa, but it is not known if the variety originated in Central Chile or in the Central Andes.[14]

In addition the Mapuche and Huilliche economy was complemented with Araucana chicken and chilihueque raising[43][46] and collection of Araucaria araucana and Gevuina avellana seeds.[46] The southern coast was particularly rich in molluscs, algaes, crustaceans and fish and Mapuches were known to be good fishers.[42][46] Hunting was also a common activity among Mapuches.[46] The forests provided firewood, fibre and allowed the production of planks.[42]

Mapuche territory had an effective system of roads before the Spanish arrival as evidenced by the fast advances of the Spanish conquerors.[47]

Technology

The llolle in picture is a traditional Mapuche fish trap.

Tools are known to have been relatively simple, most of them were made of wood, stone or —more rarely— of copper or bronze.[43][45] Mapuche used a great variety of tools made of pierced stones.[45] Volcanic scoria, a common rock in Southern Chile, was preferentially used to make tools, possibly because it is ease to shape.[48] Mapuches used both individual digging sticks and large and heavy trident-like plows that required many men to use in agriculture.[48] Another tool used in agriculture were maces used to destroy clods and flatten the soil.[49]

The Mapuche canoes or wampus were made of hollow trunks.[50] In the Chiloé Archipelago another type of watercraft was common: the dalca. Dalcas were made of planks and were mainly used for seafaring while wampus were used for navigating rivers and lakes. It is not known what kind of oars early Mapuches presumably used.[50][51]

Early Hispanic period (1536–1598)

First contacts (1536–1550)

Toki Lautaro, an early Mapuche military leader. Painting by Pedro Subercaseaux.

The Spanish expansion into Chile was an offshoot of the conquest of Peru.[52] Diego de Almagro amased a large expedition of about 500 Spaniards and thousands of yanaconas and arrived at the Aconcagua Valley in 1536. From there he sent Gómez de Alvarado south in charge of a scouting troop. Alvarado reached the Itata River where he engaged in the Battle of Reynogüelén with local Mapuches. Alvarado then returned north and Diego de Almagro's expedition returned to Peru since they had not found the riches they expected.[52]

Another conquistador, Pedro de Valdivia, arrived in Chile from Cuzco in 1541 and founded Santiago that year.[53] In 1544 captain Juan Bautista Pastene explored the coast of Chile to latitude 41° S.[54] The northern Mapuche, better known as Promaucaes or Picunches, unsuccessfully tried to resist the Spanish conquest.[55] Northern Mapuche groups appear to have responded to the Spanish conquest abandoning their best agricultural lands and moving to remote localities away from the Spanish.[56][57] In this context one of the reasons the Spanish had to establish the city of La Serena in 1544 was to control Mapuche groups that had begun to migrate north following the Spanish founding of Santiago.[58] The Spanish understood this abandonment as an attempt to have them leave Chile much in the way Diego de Almagro did in his failed expedition of 1535–1537.[57][59] According to chronicler Francisco de Riberos northern Mapuche put cultivation on hold for more than five years.[59] 17th century Jesuit Diego de Rosales wrote that this was a coordinated strategy that was decided by a large assembly of many tribes.[59] The Spanish found themselves in great distress as a result of a lack of supplies, but ultimately this strategy was unsuccessful in forcing Spanish conquerors out of Central Chile.[59][60]

War with Spaniards (1550–1598)

In 1550 Pedro de Valdivia, who aimed to control all of Chile to the Straits of Magellan, traveled southward to conquer Mapuche territory.[54] Between 1550 and 1553 the Spanish founded several cities[note 2] in Mapuche lands including Concepción, Valdivia, Imperial, Villarrica and Angol.[54] The Spanish did also established the forts of Arauco, Purén and Tucapel.[54] The key area of conflict that the Spanish attempted to secure south of Bío Bío River were the valleys around Cordillera de Nahuelbuta. The Spanish designs for this region was to exploit the placer deposits of gold using unfree Mapuche labour from the densely populated valleys.[47]

Following these initial conquests the Arauco War, a long period of intermittent war, between Mapuches and Spaniards broke out. A contributing factor was the lack a tradition of forced labour like the Andean mita among the Mapuches who largely refused to serve the Spanish.[62] On the other hand, the Spanish, in particular those from Castile and Extremadura, came from an extremely violent society.[63] Since the Spanish arrival to the Araucanía in 1550 the Mapuches frequently laid siege to the Spanish cities in the 1550–1598 period.[61] The war was mostly a low intensity conflict.[64]

The Mapuches, led by Caupolicán and Lautaro, succeeded in killing Pedro de Valdivia at the Battle of Tucapel in 1553.[54] The outbreak of a typhus plague, a drought and a famine prevented the Mapuches from taking further actions to expel the Spanish in 1554 and 1555.[65][66] Between 1556 and 1557 a small party of Mapuches commanded by Lautaro attempted to reach Santiago to liberate the whole of Central Chile from Spanish rule.[65] Lautaros attempts ended in 1557 when he was killed in an ambush by the Spanish.[65]

The Spanish regrouped under the governorship of García Hurtado de Mendoza (1558–1561) and managed to kill Caupolicán and Galvarino, two key Mapuche leaders. In addition during the rule of García Hurtado de Mendoza the Spanish reestablished Concepción and Angol that had been destroyed by Mapuches and founded two new cities in Mapuche territory: Osorno and Cañete.[67][68] In 1567 Spaniards conquered Chiloé Archipelago which was inhabited by Huilliches.[69][70]

In the 1570s Pedro de Villagra massacred and subdued revolting Mapuches around the city of La Imperial. Warfare in Araucanía intensified in the 1590s.[71] Over time the Mapuche's of Purén and to a lesser extent also Tucapel gained a reputation of fierceness among Mapuches and Spaniards alike. This allowed the Purén Mapuches to rally other Mapuches in the war with the Spanish.[47]

Adaptations to the war

In the early battles with the Spaniards Mapuches had little success but with time the Mapuches of Arauco and Tucapel adapted by using horses and massing the large quantities of troops necessary to defeat the Spanish.[55] Mapuches learned from the Spanish to build forts in hills, they also begun digging traps for Spanish horses, use helmets and wooden shields against arquebuses.[55] Mapuche warfare evolved toward guerrilla tactics including the use of ambushes.[55] The killing of Pedro de Valdivia in 1553 marked a rupture with the earlier ritual warfare tradition of the Mapuches.[65] By the late 16th century a handful of Mapuche warlords had emerged near La Frontera as result of the constant Mapuche–Spanish warfare.[72] Mapuche organization changed in response to the war and the aillarehue, a new macro-scale political unit consisting of several rehue, appeared in the late 16th century.[39] This scaling-up of political organization continued until the early 17th century when the butalmapu emerged, each of these units grouped several aillarehues.[39] At a practical level this meant that the Mapuches achieved a "supra-local level of military solidarity" without having state organization.[40]

Changes in population patterns

Mapuche population decreased following contact with the Spanish invaders. Epidemics decimated much of the population as did also the war with the Spanish.[55][73] Others died in the Spanish gold mines.[62] From archaeological evidence it has been suggested that the Mapuche of Purén and Lumaco valley abandoned the very scattered population pattern to form more dense villages as response to the war with the Spanish.[74] Declining population meant that as agriculture diminished many open fields in southern Chile were overgrown with forest.[73]

By the 1630s it was noted by the Spanish of La Serena that Mapuches (Picunches) from the Corregimiento of Santiago, likely from Aconcagua Valley, had migrated north settling in the Combarbalá and Cogotí. This migration appear to have been done freely without Spanish meddling.[58]

In the late 16th century the indigenous Picunche begun a slow process of "disappearance" by losing their indigenous identity. This happened by a process of mestization by gradually abandoning their villages (pueblo de indios) to settle in nearby Spanish haciendas. There Picunches mingled with disparate indigenous peoples brought in from Peru, Tucumán, Araucanía (Mapuche), Chiloé (Huilliche, Cunco, Chono, Poyas[75]) and Cuyo (Huarpe[76]).[77] Few in numbers, disconnected from their ancestral lands, living next to the Spanish and diluted by mestizaje the Picunche and their descendants lost their indigenous identity.[77]

Independence and war (1598–1641)

Fall of the Spanish cities

Settlements of the Conquistadores before the Destruction of the Seven Cities

A watershed event happened in 1598. That year a party of warriors from Purén were returning south from a raid against the surroundings of Chillán. In their way back home they ambushed Martín García Óñez de Loyola and his troops that were sleeping without any night watch. It is not clear if they found the Spanish by accident or if they had followed them. The warriors, led by Pelantaro, killed both the governor and all his troops.[78]

In the years following the Battle of Curalaba a general uprising developed among the Mapuches and Huilliches. The Spanish cities of Angol, La Imperial, Osorno, Santa Cruz de Oñez, Valdivia and Villarrica were either destroyed or abandoned.[79] Only Chillán and Concepción resisted the Mapuche sieges and attacks.[80] With the exception of Chiloé Archipelago all the Chilean territory south of Bío Bío River became free of Spanish rule.[79]

Chiloé did however also suffer Mapuche (Huilliche) attacks when in 1600 local Huilliche joined the Dutch corsair Baltazar de Cordes to attack the Spanish settlement of Castro.[81][82] While this was a sporadic attack the Spanish believed the Dutch could attempt to ally the Mapuches and establish a stronghold in southern Chile.[83] As the Spanish confirmed their suspicions of Dutch plans to establish themselves at the ruins of Valdivia they attempted to re-establish Spanish rule there before the Dutch arrived again.[84] The Spanish attempts were thwarted in the 1630s when Mapuches did not allow the Spanish to pass by their territory.[84]

Captured Spanish women

With the fall of the Spanish cities thousands of Spanish were either killed or turned into captives. Contemporary chronicler Alonso González de Nájera write that Mapuches killed more than three thousand Spanish and took over 500 women as captives. Many children and Spanish clergy were also captured.[85] Skilled artisans, renegade Spanish, and women were generally spared by the Mapuches.[85] In the case of the women it was, in the words of González de Nájera, "to abuse them" (Spanish: aprovecharse de ellas). While some Spanish women were recovered in Spanish raids, other were only set free in agreements following the Parliament of Quillín in 1641.[85] Some Spanish women became accostumed to Mapuche life and stayed voluntarly among the Mapuche.[85] Women in captivity gave birth to a large number of mestizos who were rejected by the Spanish but accepted among the Mapuches.[85] These women's children may have had a significant demographic impact in the Mapuche society, long ravaged by war and epidemics.[85] The capture of women during the Destruction of the Seven Cities initiated a tradition of abductions of Spanish women in the 17th century by Mapuches.[85]

Adoption of Old World crops, animals and technologies

Overall the Mapuche of Araucanía appear to have been very selective in adopting Spanish technologies and species. This meant that the Mapuche way of living remained largely the same after Spanish contact. The scant adoption of Spanish technology has been characterized as mean of cultural resistance.[36]

Mapuches of Araucanía were fast to adopt the horse and wheat cultivation from the Spanish.[36] In Chiloé Archipelago wheat came to be grown in lesser quantities compared to the native potatoes given the adverse climate.[86] Instead, in these islands the introduction by the Spanish of pigs and apple trees proved a success. Pigs benefited from abundant shellfish and algae exposed by the large tides.[86]

Until the arrival of the Spanish the Mapuches had had Chilihueque (Llama) livestock. The introduction of sheep caused some competition among both domestic species. Anecdotal evidence of the mid-17th century show that both species coexisted but that there were many more sheep than chilihueques. The decline of chilihueques reached a point in the late 18th century when only the Mapuche from Mariquina and Huequén next to Angol raised the animal.[86]

Jesuit activity

The first Jesuits arrived to Chile 1593 and based themselves in Concepción to Christianize the Araucanía Mapuches.[87] Jesuit Father Luis de Valdivia believed Mapuches could be voluntarily converted to Christianity only if there was peace.[87][88] He arranged with Spanish authorities the abolition of Mapuche servitude and the start of the so-called Defensive War. Luis de Valdivia took away warlord Anganamón's wives as the Catholic church opposed polygamy. Anganamón retaliated killing on December 14 of 1612 three Jesuit missionaries.[87] This incident did not stop the Jesuit Christianization attempts and Jesuits continued their activity until their expulsion from Chile in 1767. Activity was centered around Spanish cities from where missionary excursions departed.[89] No permanent mission was established in free Mapuche lands during the 17th or 18th century.[89] To convert the Mapuches Jesuits studied and learned their language and customs. Contrasting with their high political impact in the 1610s and 1620s Jesuits had little success in their conversion attempts.[88]

Slavery of Mapuches

Formal slavery of indigenous people was prohibited by the Spanish Crown. The 1598–1604 Mapuche uprising that ended with the Destruction of the Seven Cities made the Spanish in 1608 declare slavery legal for those Mapuches caught in war.[90] Rebelling Mapuches were considered Christian apostates and could therefore be enslaved according to the church teachings of the day.[91] This legal change formalized Mapuche slavery that was already occurring at the time, with captured Mapuches being treated as property in the way that they were bought and sold among the Spanish. Legalisation made Spanish slave raiding increasingly common in the Arauco War.[90] Mapuche slaves were exported north to La Serena and Lima.[92] Slavery for Mapuches "caught in war" was abolished in 1683 after decades of legal attempts by the Spanish Crown to suppress it. By that time free mestizo labour had become significantly cheaper than ownership of slaves which made Mario Góngora in 1966 conclude that economic factors were behind the abolition.[92]

Age of Parliaments (1641–1810)

Mapuches during a malón raid

Araucanization

Republican period (1810–1990)

Role in Chilean Independence War (1810–1820)

Coexistence with the Republic of Chile (1820–1861)

Mapuche lands around south of Bío-Bío River began to be bought by non-Mapuches in the late 18th century, and by 1860 land between Bío-Bío and Malleco River was mostly under control of Chileans.[93][94] The Chilean wheat boom increased the pressure to acquire lands in Araucanía by Chileans and lead to numerous scams and frauds against Mapuches.[95] A limited number of speculators obtained control over vast lands through frauds and maintained control over their assets with the help of gunmen.[96]

The encroachment of settlers that had advanced over time from the north across Bío Bío River into Mapuche territory and the appearance of German settlers in the south of the Mapuche territory lead chief Mañil in 1859 to call for an uprising to assert control over the territory.[97] Most Mapuches responded to the call, except the communities at Purén, Choll Choll, and the southern coastal Mapuches who had strong links with Valdivia.[97] The towns of Angol, Negrete and Nacimiento were attacked.[97] A peace proposal made by settlers was accepted in 1860 during a meeting of several Mapuche chiefs.[97] In the agreement it was established that land transfers could only be made with the approval of the chiefs.[97]

End of Mapuche independence (1861–1883)

Cornelio Saavedra Rodríguez in meeting with the main lonkos of Araucania in 1869
Vintage engraving of Mapuche

In the 19th century Chile experienced a fast territorial expansion. Chile established a colony at the Strait of Magellan in 1843, settled Valdivia, Osorno and Llanquihue with German immigrants and conquered land from Peru and Bolivia.[98][99] Later Chile would also annex Easter Island.[100] In this context Araucanía begun to be conquered by Chile due to two reasons. First, the Chilean state aimed for territorial continuity[101] and second it remained the sole place for Chilean agriculture to expand.[93]

Between 1861 and 1871 Chile incorporated several Mapuche territories in Araucanía. In January 1881, having decisively defeated Peru in the battles of Chorrillos and Miraflores, Chile resumed the conquest of Araucanía.[102][103][104]

The campaigns of the Argentine Army against Mapuches in the other side of the Andes pushed in 1880 many Mapuches into Araucanía.[105] Pehuenche chief Purrán was taken prisoner by the Argentine Army and the Argentine Army penetrated into the valley of Lonquimay which Chile considered part of its legal territory.[105] The fast Argentine advance alarmed Chilean authorities and contributed to the Chilean-Mapuche confrontations of 1881.[105]

On January 1 of 1883 Chile refounded the old city of Villarrica ending thus formally the process of occupation of Araucanía.[95][106]

From dispossession to vindication (1883–1990)

Historian Ward Churchill has claimed that the Mapuche population dropped from a total of half a million to 25,000 within a generation as result of the occupation.[107] The conquest of Araucanía caused numerous Mapuches to be displaced and forced to roam in search of shelter and food.[108] Some Chilean forts responded by providing food rations.[108] Until around 1900 the Chilean state provided almost 10000 food rations monthly to displaced Mapuches.[108] Mapuche poverty was a common theme in many Chilean Army memoirs from the 1880s to around 1900.[108] Scholar Pablo Miramán states that the introduction of state education during the Occupation of Araucanía had detrimental effects on traditional Mapuche education.[109]

In the years following the occupation the economy of Araucanía changed from being based on sheep and cattle herding to one based on agriculture and wood extraction.[110] The loss of land by Mapuches following the occupation caused severe erosion since Mapuches continued to practice a massive livestock herding in limited areas.[111]

Recent history (1990–present)

Many ethnic Mapuche now live across southern Chile and Argentina; some maintain their traditions and continue living from agriculture, but a majority have migrated to cities in search of better economic opportunities. Many are concentrated around Santiago.[112] Chile's Araucanía Region, the former Araucanía, has a rural population that is 80% Mapuche; substantial Mapuche populations occupy areas of the regions of Los Lagos, Bío-Bío, and Maule.

In the 2002 Chilean census 604,349 people identified as Mapuche, and of these the two regions with the largest numbers were Araucanía with 203,221, and Santiago Metropolitan Region with 182,963.[113] Each major population is greater than the total Mapuche population in Argentina as of 2004-2005.[114]

In recent years, the Chilean government has tried to redress some of the inequities of the past. The Parliament passed in 1993 Law n° 19 253 (Indigenous Law, or Ley indígena),[115] which officially recognized the Mapuche people and seven other ethnic minorities, as well as the Mapudungun language and culture. Mapundungun, which use was prohibited before, is now included in the curriculum of elementary schools around Temuco.

Despite representing 4.6% of the Chilean population, few Mapuche have reached government positions. In 2006 among Chile's 38 senators and 120 deputies, only one identified as indigenous. The number of indigenous politicians in electoral office is higher at municipal levels.[116]

Representatives from Mapuche organizations have joined the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation (UNPO), seeking recognition and protection for their cultural and land rights.

Modern conflict

Land disputes and violent confrontations continue in some Mapuche areas, particularly in the northern sections of the Araucanía region between and around Traiguén and Lumaco. In an effort to defuse tensions, the Commission for Historical Truth and New Treatments issued a report in 2003 calling for drastic changes in Chile's treatment of its indigenous people, more than 80 percent of whom are Mapuche. The recommendations included the formal recognition of political and "territorial" rights for indigenous peoples, as well as efforts to promote their cultural identities.

Composite of Mapuche activists killed in confrontations with the Chilean police in the 2000s

Though Japanese and Swiss interests are active in the economy of Araucanía (Mapudungun: "Ngulu Mapu"), the two chief forestry companies are Chilean-owned. In the past, the firms have planted hundreds of thousands of acres with non-native species such as Monterey pine, Douglas firs and eucalyptus trees, sometimes replacing native Valdivian forests, although such substitution and replacement is now forbidden.

Chile exports wood to the United States, almost all of which comes from this southern region, with an annual value of $600 million and rising. Forest Ethics, a conservation group, has led an international campaign for preservation, resulting in the Home Depot chain and other leading wood importers agreeing to revise their purchasing policies to "provide for the protection of native forests in Chile." Some Mapuche leaders want stronger protections for the forests.

In recent years, the delicts committed by Mapuche activists have been prosecuted under counter-terrorism legislation, originally introduced by the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet to control political dissidents. The law allows prosecutors to withhold evidence from the defense for up to six months and to conceal the identity of witnesses, who may give evidence in court behind screens. Violent activist groups, such as the Coordinadora Arauco Malleco, use tactics such as burning of structures and pastures, and death threats against people and their families. Protesters from Mapuche communities have used these tactics against properties of both multinational forestry corporations and private individuals.[117][118] In 2010 the Mapuche launched a number of hunger strikes in attempts to effect change in the anti-terrorism legislation.[119]

Notes

  1. Note that the Chiloé Archipelago with its large population is not included in this estimate.
  2. These "cities" were often in fact more forts than cities.[61]
  1. The indigenous inhabitants of the northern half of Chiloé Island, of Mapuche culture, are variously referred as Cunco, Huilliche or Veliche.[19]
gollark: Not my phone.
gollark: I mean, you're actually being emulated on one of the GTech™ computing servers.
gollark: This is FURTHER evidence that I made Macron.
gollark: I tried with a prompt:> My opinion on apioforms is ~~not real~~<|endoftext|>I think bees have been mostly created.<|endoftext|>Who doesn't save their money? Just buy bees?<|endoftext|>The apioformic database is actually NOT to be tolerated.<|endoftext|>I'll make macron and macron on bees.<|endoftext|>I think this is a separate token for some reason. I'll have to make macron and macron on osmarks.tk.<|endoftext|>I can't really, I don't really like this.<|endoftext|>I'll make macron and then make macron and macron.<|endoftext|>Anyway, I think I should probably make an apioformic database somehow.<|endoftext|>Nim is for wimps.<|endoftext|>I can't tell, however LyricLy is on my phone.<|endoftext|>I don't like this thus no.<|endoftext|><@!2930660666066606666606688> are inescapable cryoapiaristic beeoids.<
gollark: Anyway, I don't have the compute available to do this sort of thing *regularly*.

References

  1. Bengoa 2000, pp. 16–19.
  2. Rey, Diego; Parga-Lozano, Carlos; Moscoso, Juan; Areces, Cristina; Enriquez-de-Salamanca, Mercedes; Fernández-Honrado, Mercedes; Abd-El-Fatah-Khalil, Sedeka; Alonso-Rubio, Javier; Arnaiz-Villena, Antonio (2013). "HLA genetic profile of Mapuche (Araucanian) Amerindians from Chile". Molecular Biology Reports. 40 (7): 4257–4267. doi:10.1007/s11033-013-2509-3. PMID 23666052.
  3. Goicochea, Alicia Susana; Soria, Marcelo; Haedo, Ana; Crognier, Emile; Carnese, Francisco Raúl (1996). "Distancias genéticas en poblaciones aborígenes de la Argentina". Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica (in Spanish). 1 (1). Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  4. Arnaiz-Villena, Antonio; Juarez, Ignacio; Lopez-Nares, Adrian; Palacio-Grüber, José; Vaquero, Christian; Callado, Alvaro; H-Sevilla, Alejandro; Rey, Diago; Martin-Villa, José Manuel (2019). "Frequencies and significance of HLA genes in Amerindians from Chile Cañete Mapuche". Human Immunology. 80 (7): 419–420. doi:10.1016/j.humimm.2019.04.015. PMID 31101374.
  5. Ritchie Key, Mary (1978). "Araucanian genetic relationships". International Journal of American Linguistics. 44 (4): 280–293. doi:10.1086/465556.
  6. Rothhammer, Francisco; Puddu, Giannina; Fuentes-Guajardo, Macarena (2017). "¿Puede el ADN mitocondrial proporcionar información sobre la etnogénesis de los pueblo originarios chilenos?" [Can mitochondrial DNA provide information on the ethnogenesis of Chilean native populations?]. Chungará (in Spanish). 49 (4). doi:10.4067/S0717-73562017005000028.
  7. Téllez 2008, p. 43.
  8. Croese, Robert A. (1985). "21. Mapuche Dialect Survey". In Manelis Klein, Harriet; Stark, Louisa R. (eds.). South American Indian Languages: Retrospect and Prospect. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press. pp. 784–801. ISBN 978-0-292-77592-3.
  9. Bengoa 2003, pp. 33–34.
  10. Bengoa 2003, p. 52.
  11. D'Ans, André-Marcel (1976). "Chilueno o arauco, idioma de los changos del norte de Chile, dialecto mapuche septentrional" (PDF). Estudios Atacameños (in Spanish) (4): 113–118. doi:10.22199/s07181043.1976.0004.00010. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2014. Retrieved February 22, 2014.
  12. Porcel, R.E. (2007). La Araucanización de Nuestra Pampa. Los Tehuelches y Pehuenches. Los Mapuches Invasores. Porcel, R.E., Buenos Aires.
  13. Moulian, Rodrígo; Catrileo, María; Landeo, Pablo (2015). "Afines quechua en el vocabulario mapuche de Luis de Valdivia" [Akins Quechua words in the Mapuche vocabulary of Luis de Valdivia]. Revista de lingüística teórica y aplicada (in Spanish). 53 (2): 73–96. doi:10.4067/S0718-48832015000200004.
  14. Dillehay, Tom D.; Pino Quivira, Mario; Bonzani, Renée; Silva, Claudia; Wallner, Johannes; Le Quesne, Carlos (2007). "Cultivated wetlands and emerging complexity in south-central Chile and long distance effects of climate change" (PDF). Antiquity. 81 (314): 949–960. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00096034.
  15. Storey, A. A.; Ramirez, J. M.; Quiroz, D.; Burley, D. V.; Addison, D. J.; Walter, R.; Anderson, A. J.; Hunt, T. L.; Athens, J. S.; Huynen, L.; Matisoo-Smith, E. A. (2007). "Radiocarbon and DNA evidence for a pre-Columbian introduction of Polynesian chickens to Chile". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104 (25): 10335–10339. doi:10.1073/pnas.0703993104. PMC 1965514. PMID 17556540.
  16. Whipps, Heather (June 4, 2007). "Chicken Bones Suggest Polynesians Found Americas Before Columbus". Live Science. Retrieved 2007-06-05.
  17. Gongora, J.; Rawlence, N. J.; Mobegi, V. A.; Jianlin, H.; Alcalde, J. A.; Matus, J. T.; Hanotte, O.; Moran, C.; Austin, J. J.; Ulm, S.; Anderson, A. J.; Larson, G.; Cooper, A. (2008). "Indo-European and Asian origins for Chilean and Pacific chickens revealed by mtDNA". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 105 (30): 10308–10313. doi:10.1073/pnas.0801991105. PMC 2492461. PMID 18663216.
  18. Lawler, Andrew (11 June 2010). "Beyond Kon-Tiki: Did Polynesians Sail to South America?". Science. 328 (5984): 1344–1347. doi:10.1126/science.328.5984.1344. PMID 20538927.
  19. Harb, D Zuraiya; Llop, R Elena; Moreno, S Rodrigo; Quiroz, L Daniel (1998). "Poblaciones costeras de Chile: marcadores genéticos en cuatro localidades". Revista Médica de Chile. 126 (7). doi:10.4067/S0034-98871998000700002.
  20. Alcamán 1997, p. 32.
  21. Alcamán 1997, p. 33.
  22. Ibar Bruce, Jorge (1960). "Ensayo sobre los indios Chonos e interpretación de sus toponimías". Anales de la Universidad de Chile. 117: 61–70.
  23. Trivero Rivera 2005, p. 41.
  24. Cárdenas, Renato; Montiel, Dante y Hall, Catherine (1991). Los chono y los veliche de Chiloé. Santiago: Olimpho. 277 p.
  25. Bengoa 2003, pp. 37–38.
  26. Dillehay, Tom; Netherly, Patricia (1988). La Frontera del Estado Inca: proceedings, 45 Congresso internacional de Americanistas. B. A. R. pp. 183–196.
  27. Bengoa 2003, p. 39.
  28. Silva Galdames, Osvaldo (1983). "¿Detuvo la batalla del Maule la expansión inca hacia el sur de Chile?". Cuadernos de Historia (in Spanish). 3: 7–25. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
  29. Hernández Salles, Arturo. "Influencia del mapuche en el castellano". Documentos Lingüisticos y Literarios (in Spanish). 7: 34–44.
  30. Ramírez Sánchez, Carlos (1997). Onomástica indígena de Chile: Toponimia de Osorno, Llanquihue y Chiloé (in Spanish). Santiago, Chile: Universidad Austral de Chile.
  31. Bernales Lillo, Mario (1984). "Aspectos diacrónicos en la toponimia de Valdivia". Anales de la Universidad de Chile (in Spanish). 5 (5): 79–94.
  32. Bengoa 2003, p. 40.
  33. Otero 2006, p. 36.
  34. Bengoa 2003, p. 157.
  35. Bengoa 2003, p. 29.
  36. Dillehay, Tom D. (2014). "Archaeological Material Manifestations". In Dillehay, Tom (ed.). The Teleoscopic Polity. Springer. pp. 101–121. ISBN 978-3-319-03128-6.
  37. Bengoa 2003, p. 56–57.
  38. Bengoa 2003, p. 86–87.
  39. Dillehay 2007, p. 336.
  40. Dillehay 2007, p. 337–338.
  41. Bengoa 2003, p. 83–85.
  42. Otero 2006, pp. 21-22.
  43. Villalobos et al. 1974, p. 50.
  44. Bengoa 2003, pp. 199–200.
  45. Bengoa 2003, pp. 190–191.
  46. Bengoa 2003, pp. 208–209.
  47. Zavala C., José Manuel (2014). "The Spanish-Araucanian World of the Purén and Lumaco Valley in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries". In Dillehay, Tom (ed.). The Teleoscopic Polity. Springer. pp. 55–73. ISBN 978-3-319-03128-6.
  48. Bengoa 2003, pp. 192–193.
  49. Bengoa 2003, p. 194.
  50. Bengoa 2003, pp. 72–73.
  51. Bengoa 2003, p. 74.
  52. Villalobos et al. 1974, pp. 91−93.
  53. Villalobos et al. 1974, pp. 96−97.
  54. Villalobos et al. 1974, pp. 98−99.
  55. Bengoa 2003, pp. 250–251.
  56. León 1991, p. 13.
  57. León 1991, p. 14.
  58. Téllez 2008, p. 46.
  59. León 1991, p. 15.
  60. León 1991, p. 16.
  61. "La Guerra de Arauco (1550-1656)". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved January 30, 2014.
  62. Bengoa 2003, pp. 252–253.
  63. Bengoa 2003, p. 261.
  64. Dillehay 2007, p. 335.
  65. "El toqui Lautaro (ca.1534-1557)". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved January 30, 2014{{inconsistent citations}}
  66. Bengoa 2003, pp. 258–259.
  67. "García Hurtado de Mendoza". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved January 30, 2014.
  68. Villalobos et al. 1974, p. 102.
  69. Hanisch 1982, pp. 11–12
  70. Villalobos et al. 1974, p. 49.
  71. Bengoa 2003, pp. 312–213.
  72. Bengoa 2003, pp. 310–311.
  73. Otero 2006, p. 25.
  74. Dillehay, Tom D.; Paige Silcox, J.; Ocampo E., Carlos (2014). "Site Distribution and Settlement Patterns". In Dillehay, Tom (ed.). The Teleoscopic Polity. Springer. pp. 255–274. ISBN 978-3-319-03128-6.
  75. Urbina Burgos, Rodolfo (2007). "El pueblo chono: de vagabundo y pagano a cristiano y sedentario mestizado" (PDF). Orbis incognitvs: avisos y legados del Nuevo Mundo (in Spanish). Huelva: Universidad de Huelva. pp. 325–346. ISBN 9788496826243.
  76. Villalobos et al. 1974, pp. 166–170.
  77. Contreras Cruces, Hugo (2016). "Migraciones locales y asentamiento indígena en las estancias españolas de Chile central, 1580-1650". Historia (in Spanish). 49 (1): 87–110. doi:10.4067/S0717-71942016000100004.
  78. Bengoa 2003, pp. 320–321.
  79. Villalobos et al. 1974, p. 109.
  80. Bengoa 2003, pp. 324–325.
  81. "La encomienda". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved January 30, 2014{{inconsistent citations}}
  82. Urbina Burgos, Rodolfo (1990). "La rebelión indigena de 1712: Los tributarios de Chiloé contra la encomienda" (PDF). Tiempo y Espacio (in Spanish). 1: 73–86. Retrieved February 22, 2014.
  83. Clark 2006, p. 13.
  84. Bengoa 2003, pp. 450–451.
  85. Guzmán, Carmen Luz (2013). "Las cautivas de las Siete Ciudades: El cautiverio de mujeres hispanocriollas durante la Guerra de Arauco, en la perspectiva de cuatro cronistas (s. XVII)" [The captives of the Seven Cities: The captivity of hispanic-creole women during the Arauco's War, from the insight of four chroniclers (17th century)]. Intus-Legere Historia (in Spanish). 7 (1): 77–97. doi:10.15691/07176864.2014.094 (inactive 2020-04-01).
  86. Torrejón, Fernando; Cisternas, Marco; Araneda, Alberto (2004). "Efectos ambientales de la colonización española desde el río Maullín al archipiélago de Chiloé, sur de Chile" [Environmental effects of the Spanish colonization from de Maullín river to the Chiloé archipelago, southern Chile]. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural (in Spanish). 77 (4): 661–677. doi:10.4067/s0716-078x2004000400009.
  87. Pinto Rodríguez, Jorge (1993). "Jesuitas, Franciscanos y Capuchinos italianos en la Araucanía (1600-1900)". Revista Complutense de Historia de América (in Spanish). 19: 109–147.
  88. "Misioneros y mapuche (1600-1818)". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved January 30, 2014{{inconsistent citations}}
  89. Clark 2006, p. 15.
  90. Valenzuela Márquez 2009, p. 231–233
  91. Foerster, Rolf (1993). Introducción a la religiosidad mapuche (in Spanish). Editorial universitaria. p. 21.
  92. Valenzuela Márquez 2009, pp. 234–236
  93. Bengoa 2000, p. 156.
  94. Bengoa 2000, p. 157.
  95. "Ocupación de la Araucanía: El fin de la autonomía territorial mapuche". Memoria Chilena. Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved June 30, 2013{{inconsistent citations}}
  96. "Ocupación de la Araucanía: Estafas". Memoria Chilena. Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved June 30, 2013{{inconsistent citations}}
  97. Bengoa 2000, pp. 166–170.
  98. "El fuerte Bulnes". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved January 3, 2014{{inconsistent citations}}
  99. Villalobos R., Sergio; Silva G., Osvaldo; Silva V., Fernando; Estelle M., Patricio (1974). Historia de Chile (1995 ed.). Editorial Universitaria. pp. 456–458, 571–575. ISBN 978-956-11-1163-9.
  100. "Incorporándola al territorio chileno". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved January 3, 2014{{inconsistent citations}}
  101. Pinto 2003, p. 153.
  102. Bengoa 2000, pp. 275–276.
  103. Ferrando 1986, p. 547
  104. Bengoa 2000, pp. 277–278.
  105. Bengoa 2000, pp. 273–274.
  106. Pinto 2003, p. 194.
  107. Ward Churchill, A Little Matter of Genocide, 109.
  108. Bengoa 2000, pp. 232–233.
  109. Pinto 2003, p. 205.
  110. Pinto Rodríguez, Jorge (2011). "Ganadería y empresarios ganaderos de la Araucanía, 1900-1960". Historia. 44 (2): 369–400{{inconsistent citations}}
  111. Bengoa 2000, pp. 262–263.
  112. Chile I., 1992, "Censo de Población, Instituto Nacional de Estatisticas, Santiago de Chile.
  113. "2012 census". Censo.cl. Retrieved 2013-09-25.
  114. ECPI Archived 2008-06-11 at the Wayback Machine, 2004-2005.
  115. "Law n° 19 253 Indigenous Law" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-10-30. Retrieved 2013-09-25.
  116. "Portal de Registro y Autentificación El Mercurio". Diario.elmercurio.cl. Retrieved 2013-09-25.
  117. "Redireccionando". Cooperativa.cl. Retrieved 2013-09-25.
  118. "Mapuche struggle for autonomy in Chile", Spero Forum
  119. "Mapuche hunger strike in Chile highlights the real problem facing President Sebastian Pinera", Sounds and colors website

Bibliography

  • Bengoa, José (2000). Historia del pueblo mapuche: Siglos XIX y XX (in Spanish) (Seventh ed.). LOM Ediciones. ISBN 978-956-282-232-9.
  • Bengoa, José (2003). Historia de los antiguos mapuches del sur (in Spanish). Santiago: Catalonia. ISBN 978-956-8303-02-0.
  • Clark Berger, Eugene (2006). Permanent war on Peru's periphery: Frontier identity and the politics of conflict in 17th century Chile (PDF) (Ph.D.). Vanderbilt University. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  • Dillehay, Tom (2007). Monuments, empires, and resistance: The Araucanian polity and ritual narratives. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-110-7407-74-9.
  • Ferrando Kaun, Ricardo (1986). Y así nació La Frontera... (in Spanish) (Second ed.). Editorial Antártica. ISBN 978-956-7019-83-0.
  • Foerster, Rolf (1993). Introducción a la religiosidad mapuche (PDF) (in Spanish). Editorial Universitaria. ISBN 956-1 1-0912-3. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
  • Hanisch, Walter (1982). La Isla de Chiloe, Capitana de Rutas Australes (in Spanish). Academia Superior de Ciencias Pedagógicas de Santiago.
  • León, Leonardo (1991). La merma de la sociadad indígena en Chile central y la última guerra de los promaucaes (PDF) (in Spanish). Institute of Ameriendian Studies, University of St. Andrews. ISBN 1873617003.
  • Otero, Luis (2006). La huella del fuego: Historia de los bosques nativos. Poblamiento y cambios en el paisaje del sur de Chile (in Spanish). Pehuén Editores. ISBN 978-956-16-0409-4.
  • Pinto Rodríguez, Jorge (2003). La formación del Estado y la nacion, y el pueblo mapuche (in Spanish) (Second ed.). Ediciones de la Dirección de Bibliotecas, Archivos y Museos. ISBN 978-956-244-156-8.
  • Téllez, Eduardo (2008). Los Diaguitas: Estudios (in Spanish). Santiago, Chile: Ediciones Akhilleus. ISBN 978-956-8762-00-1.
  • Valenzuela Márquez, Jaime (2009). "Esclavos mapuches. Para una historia del secuestro y deportación de indígenas en la colonia". In Gaune, Rafael; Lara, Martín (eds.). Historias de racismo y discriminación en Chile (in Spanish).
  • Villalobos, Sergio; Silva, Osvaldo; Silva, Fernando; Estelle, Patricio (1974). Historia de Chile (in Spanish) (14th ed.). Santiago de Chile: Editorial Universitaria. ISBN 978-956-11-1163-9.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.