Yine people

The Yine (also Piro[1]) are an indigenous people in Peru. In the Cusco, Loreto, and Ucayali Departments, they live along the Urubamba River. They live along the Madre de Dios River in the Madre de Dios Department.[1]

Yine
Total population
4000–5000[1] (2000)
Regions with significant populations
 Peru
Languages
Yine, Asháninka, Machiguenga, Spanish, Quechua[1]
Religion
Christianity[1]
Related ethnic groups
Machinere[1]

Name

Besides Yine, they are also called Chontaquiro, Contaquiro, Pira, Piro, Pirro, Simiranch, and Simirinche.[1]

Economy and subsistence

Yine people farm, fish, and raise livestock, particularly cattle. They also work in the lumber industry.[1] They traditionally used swidden agriculture to grow yuca. Oxfam helped the Yine to secure ownership rights to their traditional farmlands and to develop sustainable farming practices. They grow several varieties of yuca today, as well as medicine plants, such as sangre de grado (Croton lechleri).[2]

Language

Yine people speak the Yine language, which is a Piro language and part of the Southern Maipuran language family. It is written in the Latin script. Over half of the Yine people have a basic literacy rate.[1]

gollark: Anyway, this would never happen on Linux. My swap partition is only 12GB. Which is excessive and I don't know why I did that.
gollark: <@332271551481118732> Do you think I can find minoteaur contributors? All I need is people who know Nim/web stack, can somehow fit with my programming style, and who share approximately the same extremely vague vision.
gollark: Interestingly, according to heavpoot, the 34th version of minoteaur is to be rewritten in heavlisp 7.0 after it subsumes JavaScript.
gollark: All insanity can be bidirectionally mapped to an instance of heavlisp.
gollark: Heavlisp is isomorphic to insanity.

See also

  • Mashco Piro

Notes

  1. "Ticuna." Ethnologue. Retrieved 19 Feb 2012.
  2. Gelbspan, Thea. "Community gardens help anchor indigenous villages in Peru." Oxfam International. Jan 2007. Retrieved 19 Feb 2012.
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