Llamero

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A llamero from Paucartambo, Peru, in 2023. Llamero de Colquepata - Cuzco.png
A llamero from Paucartambo, Peru, in 2023.

Llameros (lit. "people who drive llamas"; also known as pastores or caravaneros) are indigenous peasants who run llama caravans throughout the Andes of South America. [1] [2]

During the Inca Empire, llameros were high-ranking officials tasked with managing the emperor's llama and alpaca herds, and facilitating trade and communication throughout the empire. Nowadays, roads have reduced the need for llameros, and they now mostly serve isolated mountain villages inaccessible by road. [Documentary 1]

History

Llama caravans have been historically used by Andean people for transport of goods and people. With the modernization of transport in Bolivia, as well as climatic and economic changes, llamas have been significantly replaced by motorized vehicles. [3] [2]

Llameros are usually fluent in Quechua and Spanish. They do not use money for the exchange of goods, instead relying on bartering alone. Some groups are composed of family members, including young boys and women. [3]

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References

  1. Vilá, Bibiana (2018). "On the Brink of Extinction: Llama Caravans Arriving at the Santa Catalina Fair, Jujuy, Argentina". Journal of Ethnobiology. 38 (3): 372–389. doi:10.2993/0278-0771-38.3.372. hdl: 11336/97922 . ISSN   0278-0771.
  2. 1 2 Shimada, Melody; Shimada, Izumi (1985). "Prehistoric Llama Breeding and Herding on the North Coast of Peru". American Antiquity. 50 (1): 3–26. doi:10.2307/280631. ISSN   0002-7316. JSTOR   280631.
  3. 1 2 Vilá, Bibiana; Arzamendia, Yanina (2022). "South American Camelids: their values and contributions to people". Sustainability Science. 17 (3): 707–724. Bibcode:2022SuSc...17..707V. doi:10.1007/s11625-020-00874-y. ISSN   1862-4065. PMC   7586864 . PMID   33133295.
  1. "LE LLAMERO ET L'ENFANT AU LAMA BLANC". Vodeo.tv. Vodeo. Retrieved 18 May 2016.