Kalin’a

E618487

The Kalin’a are an Indigenous people of northern South America, particularly the Guianas and parts of the Caribbean coast, known for their distinct language, rich oral traditions, and historical role in regional trade and resistance to colonization.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Indigenous people
encounteredColonialPower British colonial authorities
Dutch colonial authorities
French colonial authorities
Portuguese Empire NERFINISHED
Spanish Empire NERFINISHED
engagedIn coastal trade
riverine trade
hasCulturalTrait basketry
canoe building
ceremonial dances
rich oral traditions
ritual music
storytelling traditions
traditional body painting
hasNameVariant Carib NERFINISHED
Kalinago NERFINISHED
Mainland Carib NERFINISHED
hasPoliticalStatus Indigenous people recognized by several South American states
hasPopulationTrend communities still present in the 21st century
population reduced after European contact
hasRightClaim cultural rights
land rights
hasRightClaim language rights
hasSocialStructure extended kin groups
village-based communities
historicalRole regional trade networks
resistance to European colonization
inhabitsRegion Caribbean coast of South America
French Guiana NERFINISHED
Guyana NERFINISHED
Suriname NERFINISHED
eastern Venezuela NERFINISHED
northern Brazil NERFINISHED
northern South America
the Guianas NERFINISHED
isPartOf Indigenous peoples of South America NERFINISHED
Indigenous peoples of the Guianas NERFINISHED
isSubjectOf ethnographic research in the Guianas
languageFamily Cariban languages NERFINISHED
religiousBelief animism
shamanism
speaksLanguage Kalin’a language
traditionalSubsistence fishing
gathering wild resources
hunting
shifting cultivation
usesWatercraft dugout canoes

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.