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・ Chichimeca Jonaz people
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・ Chichimecacihuatzin I
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Chichimeca : ウィキペディア英語版
Chichimeca

Chichimeca(Spanish ) was the name that the Nahua peoples of Mexico generically applied to many bands and tribes of nomadic and semi-nomadic peoples who inhabited northern modern-day Mexico. Chichimeca carried the same sense as the Roman term "barbarian" to describe people living outside settled, agricultural areas. The name and its pejorative sense was adopted by the Spanish. For the Spanish, in the words of scholar Charlotte M. Gradie, "the Chichimecas were a wild, nomadic people who lived north of the Valley of Mexico. They had no fixed dwelling places, lived by hunting, wore no clothes and fiercely resisted foreign intrusion into their territory, which happened to contain silver mines the Spanish wished to exploit."〔Gradie, Charlotte M. "Discovering the Chichimecas" ''Academy of American Franciscan History'', Vol 51, No. 1 (July 1994), p. 68〕
In modern times only one ethnic group is customarily referred to as Chichimecs, namely the Chichimeca Jonaz of whom a few thousand live in the state of Guanajuato.
==Overview and identity==
The Chichimeca peoples were many groups of varying ethnicities and speaking distinct languages from different families. As the Spaniards worked towards consolidating the rule of New Spain over the indigenous peoples during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the Chichimecan tribes resisted. A number of ethnic groups of the region allied against the Spanish. The first and most long-lasting of these conflicts (1550–91) was the Chichimeca War.
Many of the peoples known broadly as Chichimeca are virtually unknown today; few descriptions recorded their names and they seem to have been absorbed into mestizo culture or into other indigenous ethnic groups. For example, virtually nothing is known about the peoples referred to as the ''Guachichil'', ''Caxcan'', ''Zacateco'', ''Tecuexe'', or ''Guamare''. Others, such as the ''Opata'' or ''Eudeve,'' are well described in records but extinct as a people.
Still other Chichimec peoples maintain separate identities into the present day, for example the ''Otomi'', ''Chichimeca Jonaz'', ''Cora'', ''Huichol'', ''Pame'', ''Yaqui'', ''Mayo'', ''O'odham'' and the ''Tepehuan'' peoples.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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