Middle American Peoples Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Amuzgo, ethnolinguistic Indian group of eastern Guerrero and western Oaxaca states, southern Mexico. Their language......
Aztec, Nahuatl-speaking people who in the 15th and early 16th centuries ruled a large empire in what is now central......
Boruca, Indians of western Panama and Costa Rica, one of a group known as Talamancan. Their languages are similar......
Bribrí, Indians of the tropical forests of eastern Costa Rica, closely associated with the Talamancan peoples of......
Caquetío, Indians of northwestern Venezuela living along the shores of Lake Maracaibo at the time of the Spanish......
Central American and northern Andean Indian, member of any of the aboriginal peoples inhabiting Central America......
Cenú, Indians of the northern lowlands of Colombia who became extinct under Spanish rule. The Cenú were a tropical-forest......
Chachi, Indians of the coastal lowlands of western Ecuador, one of the few aboriginal groups left in the region.......
Chatino, Mesoamerican Indians of southwestern Oaxaca state in southern Mexico. The Chatino language is closely......
Chichimec, any of several groups of Indians who invaded central Mexico from the north in the 12th and 13th centuries......
Chinantec, Middle American Indians of northwestern Oaxaca in southern Mexico. The area is mountainous and not easily......
Chocho, Middle American Indians of northern Oaxaca in southern Mexico, speaking a Popolocan language. The region......
Chocó, Cariban-speaking Indian people of the Panamanian and Colombian lowlands. The Northern Chocó, the most populous,......
Chol, Mayan Indians of northern Chiapas in southeastern Mexico. The Chol language is closely related to Chontal,......
Chontal, Mayan Indians of Oaxaca and Tabasco states in southeastern Mexico. They are linguistically closely related......
Chorotega, the most powerful American Indian tribe of northwest Costa Rica at the time of the Spanish conquest.......
Chortí, Mayan Indians of eastern Guatemala and Honduras and formerly of adjoining parts of El Salvador. The Chortí......
Ciboney, Indian people of the Greater Antilles in the Caribbean Sea. By the time of European contact, they had......
Coconuco, Indian people of what is now the southern Colombian highlands at the time of the Spanish conquest, related......
Cuicatec, Mesoamerican Indian people of northeastern Oaxaca in southern Mexico. They live in a hilly area, partly......
Cumanagoto, Indians of northeastern Venezuela at the time of the Spanish conquest. Since the 17th century they......
Cágaba, South American Indian group living on the northern and southern slopes of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta......
Cáhita, group of North American Indian tribes that inhabited the northwest coast of Mexico along the lower courses......
Diegueño, a group of Yuman-speaking North American Indians who originally inhabited large areas extending on both......
Goajiro, Indian people of La Guajira Peninsula in northern Colombia and adjacent Venezuela. Numbering about 199,000......
Guahibo and Chiricoa, two South American Indian groups inhabiting the savannas along the Orinoco River in eastern......
Guaymí, Central American Indians of western Panama, divisible into two main groups, the Northern Guaymí and the......
Huastec, Mayan Indians of Veracruz and San Luís Potosí states in east-central Mexico. The Huastec are independent......
Huave, Mesoamerican Indian peasants of the Pacific coast of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. The exact relationship......
Huichol and Cora, neighbouring Middle American Indian peoples living in the states of Jalisco and Nayarit in western......
Ixcatec, Middle American Indians living in a single town, Santa María Ixcatlán, in northern Oaxaca, Mex. There......
Jicaque, Indians of the northwest coast of Honduras. Their culture is similar to that of the Sumo and Miskito of......
Kaqchikel, Mayan people of the midwestern highlands of Guatemala, closely related linguistically and culturally......
Kekchí, Mayan Indians of central Guatemala, living in damp highlands and lowlands of irregular terrain. The Kekchí......
Kuna, Chibchan-speaking Indian people who once occupied the central region of what is now Panama and the neighbouring......
K’iche’, Mayan people living in the midwestern highlands of Guatemala. The K’iche’ had an advanced civilization......
Lacandón, Mayan Indians living primarily near the Mexico-Guatemala border in the Mexican state of Chiapas, though......
ladino, Westernized Central American person of predominantly mixed Spanish and indigenous descent. In that sense,......
Lenca, Indians of the northern highlands of Honduras and El Salvador who are somewhat intermediate culturally between......
maroon community, a group of formerly enslaved Africans and their descendants who gained their freedom by fleeing......
Maya, Mesoamerican Indians occupying a nearly continuous territory in southern Mexico, Guatemala, and northern......
Mayo, Indian people centred in southern Sonora and northern Sinaloa states on the west coast of Mexico. They speak......
Mazatec, Mesoamerican Indians of northern Oaxaca in southern Mexico. The region is mostly mountainous, with small......
Mesoamerican Indian, member of any of the indigenous peoples inhabiting Mexico and Central America (roughly between......
Middle American Indian, member of any of the aboriginal peoples inhabiting the area from northern Mexico to Nicaragua.......
Miskito, Central American Indians of the lowlands along the Caribbean coast of northeastern Nicaragua. They were......
Mixe-Zoquean, group of Middle American Indian peoples inhabiting territories in southern Mexico. The Mixe-Zoquean......
Mixtec, Middle American Indian population living in the northern and western sections of the state of Oaxaca and......
Mompox, Indian people of what are now the northern Colombia lowlands who became extinct under Spanish rule. Culturally......
Motilón, (Spanish: “Hairless Ones”), collective name loosely applied by the Spaniards to various highland and lowland......
Nahua, Middle American Indian population of central Mexico, of which the Aztecs (see Aztec) of pre-Conquest Mexico......
northern Mexican Indian, member of any of the aboriginal peoples inhabiting northern Mexico. The generally accepted......
Olmec, the first elaborate pre-Columbian civilization of Mesoamerica (c. 1200–400 bce) and one that is thought......
Otomí, Middle American Indian population living in the central plateau region of Mexico. The Otomí peoples speak......
Palenque, Indian tribe of northern Venezuela at the time of the Spanish conquest (16th century). The Palenque were......
Palta, Ecuadorian Indian ethnolinguistic group that lived in the Andean highlands at the time of the Spanish conquest......
Patángoro, Indian people of western Colombia, apparently extinct since the late 16th century. They spoke a language......
Pocomam, Mayan Indians of the highlands of eastern Guatemala. The Pocomam are primarily agriculturists; they cultivate......
Popoloca, Middle American Indians of southern Puebla state in central Mexico (not to be confused with the Popoluca......
Puruhá, Ecuadorian Indians of the Andean highlands at the time of the Spanish conquest. Although the highlands......
Páez, Indians of the southern highlands of Colombia. The Páez speak a Chibchan language very closely related to......
Seri, a tribe of Mesoamerican Indians who live on Tiburón Island in the Gulf of California and on the adjacent......
Sumo, Mesoamerican Indian people of the eastern coastal plain of Nicaragua, closely related to the neighbouring......
Taino, Arawakan-speaking people who at the time of Christopher Columbus’s exploration inhabited what are now Cuba,......
Tairona, Indians of the northern Colombian Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, known only from occasional references......
Tarahumara, Middle American Indians of Barranca de Cobre (“Copper Canyon”), southwestern Chihuahua state, in northern......
Tarasco, Indian people of northern Michoacán state in central Mexico. The area in which the Tarasco live is one......
Tepehuan, Middle American Indians of southern Chihuahua, southern Durango, and northwestern Jalisco states in northwestern......
Tequistlatec, Indian people centred in the Sierra Madre del Sur of Oaxaca estado (“state”), Mexico. Their subsistence......
Tojolabal, Mayan Indians of Chiapas in southeastern Mexico, near the Guatemalan border. The Tojolabal language......
Toltec, Nahuatl-speaking tribe who held sway over what is now central Mexico from the 10th to the 12th century......
Totonac, Middle American Indian population of east-central Mexico. Totonac culture is in many ways similar to other......
Tsáchila, Indian people of the Pacific coast of Ecuador. They live in the tropical lowlands of the northwest, where,......
Tzeltal, Mayan Indians of central Chiapas, in southeastern Mexico, most closely related culturally and linguistically......
Tzotzil, Mayan Indians of central Chiapas in southeastern Mexico. Linguistically and culturally, the Tzotzil are......
Tz’utujil, Mayan Indians of the midwestern highlands of Guatemala. The Tz’utujil language is closely related to......
Xinca, Mesoamerican Indians of southeastern Guatemala. Xinca territory traditionally extended about 50 miles (80......
Yaqui, Indian people centred in southern Sonora state, on the west coast of Mexico. They speak the Yaqui dialect......
Yucatec Maya, Middle American Indians of the Yucatán Peninsula in eastern Mexico. The Yucatec were participants......
Zapotec, Middle American Indian population living in eastern and southern Oaxaca in southern Mexico. The Zapotec......