List of extinct Indigenous peoples of Brazil

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At the time of the discovery of Brazil by the Europeans, a total of 2,000 Indigenous nations, divided into several thousand tribes, existed in Brazil. The total number of Native tribes which inhabited present day Brazil at the time of first contact is disputed and difficult to ascertain. The names of large number of tribes who were exterminated as a result of intertribal warfare are not recorded anywhere and so is the case of several smaller tribes who were wiped out by the colonizers. Curt Nimuendajú gives a list of 1,400 nations in his monumental work Mapa etno-histórico do Brasil e regiões adjacentes, but he ignored many smaller (extinct) tribes in Eastern Brazil, and was at the time of writing unaware of some other tribes which were uncontacted at that time. [1] Currently only 200 nations (790 tribes) are alive, with no survivors being reported for the remaining nations. However, this doesn't mean their bloodlines are extinct; only their cultures. Brazilian Pardo and Mestizo population have mostly unknown indigenous backgrounds, some or several of them likely stemming from extinct cultures. The Bandeirantes hunted and enslaved indigenous peoples in the then unexplored interior of Brazil from the 16th to the early 19th century. The indigenous peoples were eventually acculturated and integrated into European civilization.

Contents

Most of the recorded extinctions of the Brazilian tribes were caused by warfare with the neo-Brazilians and from the epidemics which were sometimes deliberately spread by the colonizers. Intertribal warfare between various native Brazilian tribes also caused a significant number of extinctions. For example, the Matses, one of the tribes in the Vale do Javari region exterminated at least 4 smaller tribes during the 20th century. [2]

Famous extinct Brazilian nations

Out of the more than 1,800 extinct nations and thousands of tribes, names are available for only a few of them.

Recent extinctions

According to Darcy Ribeiro, a total of 87 tribes became extinct during the 1900-57 period. Another 38 became Assimilated (detribalized and merged in to the general population).

Recorded extinctions of Brazilian tribes during the 1900–1957 time period: [16]

Tribe*Language FamilyLocation
AipatseCaribRio Culuene, MT
AminapeTupiRio Mequens, RO
Apaniekra JeRio Porquinhos, Maranhão
Apiaka TupiUpper Rio Tapajós
Arara do Xingu [Pariri, Timirem.etc.]CaribBetween Xingu and Tocantins
Arara [4 different tribes]NA1. Jamaxim 2. Manicore 3. Rio Preto 4. Rio Guaraibas, PA/AM
ArawineTupiRio 7 de Setembro, MT
Ariken TupiBetween Rio Candeia and Rio Jamari, RO
Arua TupiRio Branco, RO
Baenan BaenanLeft bank of Rio Pardo, Bahia
Botocudos [Pojixa, Nakreehe, Minajirum, Jiporok, Gutkrak, Krenak]BotocudosBahia & Minas Gerais
Emerilon TupiFar North Amapa
EspinhosPanoRio Corumaha, Acre
Guarategaja TupiRio Mequens, RO
Guato GuatoRio Paraguai, MS
Huari HuariRio Corumbiara, RO
Itogapuk TupiRio Madeirinha, AM
IpotewatTupiUpper Cacoal, RO
JabutifedTupiBetween Rio Cacoal & Rio Riosinho, RO
Jabuti NAUpper Rio Branco
Kabixiana TupiUpper Rio Corumbiara, RO
Kamakan KamakanBahia
Kanamari KatukinaUpper Inauini, AM
Karipuna do Rondonia PanoRio Capivari, RO
Karitiana TupiAlto Rio Candeias, AM
KatianaAruakUpper Rio Purus
Kaxarari AruakUpper Rio Curuquete, AM-AC
Kayapo-Kradau JeN. Araguaia, S.Para
Kayapo do Sul JeBoundary of Minas Gerais and São Paulo
Kayuixana AruakBetween Rio Japura and Rio Solimoes, AM
Kenkateye JeRio Alpercatas, Maranhao
Kepkiriwat TupiRio Pimenta Bueno, RO
Kinikinao AruakAquidauana, MS
Kokama TupiRio Solimoes, AM
Krem YeJeMaranhão - Para
Krikati JeMaranhão
KujijineriAruakBetween Upper Envira and Curumaha, Acre
KunibaAruakBetween Juruasinho and Jutai, AM
Kurina PanoRio Jutai & Rio Jandiatuba, AM
Kuruaya TupiRio Jamaxim, S Para
Kustenao AruakRio Batovi and Rio Ronuro, MT
KuyanawaPanoNW. Acre
LayanaAruakRio Miranda, MS
MakurapTupiRio Branco, RO
ManiteneriAruakRio Purus, Acre
ManitsawaTupiUpper Xingu, MT
MarakanaNAMountains south of Rio Uraricoera, Roraima
MarawaAruakLower Jutai, AM
MatanawiMatanawiLower Marmelos, AM
MayorunaPanoRio Javari, AM
MialatTupiUpper Leitao, RO
MiranhaWitotoRio Tefe, Rio Caicara, AM
Monde or SanamaikaTupiRight of Pimenta Bueno, RO
NaravuteCaribMiddle Culuene, MT
Natu NASergipe
Ofaye OfaieMS
Oti OtiCampos Novos, São Paulo
Oyanpik or Wayampi TupiOiapoque, Amapa
Palmelas CaribRight of Rio Guapore, RO
Parawa [Hon, Maro-Djapa]KatukinaLeft of Upper Jurua, AM
PaseAruakLower Rio Ica, AM
Pataxo-Hahahai PataxoJequitinhonha, Bahia
PauxiCaribRight of Middle Cumina, Para
PauxianaCaribBetween Rio Mocajai and Rio Catrimani, Roraima
Payaguá Guaycuruan?Along the Paraguay River and in Mato Grosso do Sul. The last Payaguá died in 1942.
Poyanawa PanoUpper Rio Moa, Acre
Purukoto CaribMaraca Island, Rio Uraricoera, Roraima
Rama RamaTupiRio Anari & Rio Machadinho, RO
SakuyaPanoExtreme NW Acre
SanamaikaTupiLeft of Pimenta Bueno, RO
TakuatepTupiRio Tamuripa, RO
ToraChapacuraLower Marmelos, AM
TsuvaCaribMiddle Culuene, MT
Turiwára TupiMaranhão
TxakamekraJeRio das Flores, Maranhão
Urumi TupiRight of Rio Jiparana, RO
Wainuma AruakMiddle Japura, Amazonas - Colombia border
Warekena AruakRio Icana and Rio Xie, NW AM
Wayoro NAUpper Rio Branco, RO
Xipaya TupiRio Iriri & Rio Curua, Para
YuberiAruakLower Tapaua & Middle Purus, AM
Yuma NAUpper Ipixuna & Tabocal, AM
Yuri Ticuna-Yuri Between Ica, Japura & Solimões

*Ribeiro grouped several nations into one in certain cases. For example, the Arara are actually 4 different tribes, which may or may not be linguistically and ethnically related. In such cases, the names of the known individual nations are given in Square Brackets.
In some cases, the tribes which were classified as extinct later re-emerged and exerted their identity. Examples are Krenak and Apiacá
In certain other cases, tribes which became extinct in Brasil existed as a living nation elsewhere, such as the Oyanpik

References

  1. "Unidentified tribes" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2023-08-21.
  2. "Formation of the Matsés people and contact history > Matsés". pib.socioambiental.org. Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  3. "The land of the Amazons" . Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  4. 1 2 Aĭkhenvalʹd, A.I.U.; Aikhenvald, A.Y. (2012). Languages of the Amazon. OUP Oxford. p. 86. ISBN   9780199593569 . Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  5. 1 2 "Arikapú". pib.socioambiental.org. Retrieved 2023-08-21.
  6. Olson, J.S. (1991). The Indians of Central and South America: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary. Greenwood Press. p. 170. ISBN   9780313263873 . Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  7. Olson, J.S. (1991). The Indians of Central and South America: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary. Greenwood Press. p. 69. ISBN   9780313263873 . Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  8. Greene, Margaret E.; Crocker, William H. (March 1994). "Some Demographic Aspects of the Canela Indians of Brazil" (PDF). Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 November 2018. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
  9. Olson, J.S. (1991). The Indians of Central and South America: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary. Greenwood Press. p. 78. ISBN   9780313263873 . Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  10. "Usina de Letras". usinadeletras.com.br. Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  11. "Subgroups, migrations and contact > Kayapó". pib.socioambiental.org. Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  12. 1 2 Hopper, J.H.; Dole, G.E. (1967). Indians of Brazil in the Twentieth Century. Institute for Cross-Cultural Research. ISBN   9780911976021 . Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  13. Aĭkhenvalʹd, A.I.U. (2002). Language Contact in Amazonia. Oxford University Press. p. 282. ISBN   9780199257850 . Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  14. Olson, J.S. (1991). The Indians of Central and South America: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary. Greenwood Press. p. 206. ISBN   9780313263873 . Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  15. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2012-10-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  16. Ribeiro, D. (1967). Indigenous cultures and languages of Brazil. In J. H. Hopper (Ed.), Indians of Brazil in the Twentieth Century (pp. 77–166). Washington D.C.: Institute for cross-cultural research.