Guarijío people

E833321

The Guarijío people are an Indigenous group of northwestern Mexico with their own Uto-Aztecan language, traditional agriculture, and distinct cultural practices rooted in the Sierra Madre Occidental region.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

Observed surface forms (1)

Surface form Occurrences
Guarijío communities 1

Statements (43)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Indigenous people
ceremonialLife Catholic feast day celebrations
agricultural cycle ceremonies
colonialHistory subject to Spanish colonization
continent North America
country Mexico
culturalRegion Sierra Madre Occidental NERFINISHED
economy livestock raising
small-scale farming
environment mountainous terrain
river valleys
ethnicGroupOf Mexico NERFINISHED
facedIssue cultural assimilation pressures
land dispossession
hasCustom collective work parties
seasonal agricultural rituals
hasOralTradition myths and legends about the natural world
indigenousTo Sierra Madre Occidental NERFINISHED
states of Chihuahua and Sonora
language Guarijío language NERFINISHED
languageFamily Uto-Aztecan
surface form: Uto-Aztecan languages
languageStatus endangered language
locatedIn Sierra Madre Occidental NERFINISHED
northwestern Mexico
populationTrend small population
recognizedAs Indigenous people of Mexico
relatedEthnicGroup Mayo people NERFINISHED
Tarahumara people NERFINISHED
Yaqui people NERFINISHED
religion syncretic Catholicism
traditional indigenous beliefs
traditionalCrop beans
maize
squash
traditionalDance ritual dances
traditionalHousing adobe houses
wattle-and-daub houses
traditionalMusic string instruments
traditionalSubsistence agriculture
gathering
hunting
uses terraced agriculture
usesWritingSystem Latin script (for Guarijío language)

Referenced by (8)

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

Estado de Sonora containsIndigenousGroup Guarijío people
Guarijío language spokenBy Guarijío people
Guarijío language ethnicity Guarijío people
Tarahumaran languages usedBy Guarijío people
this entity surface form: Guarijío communities
Mayo people ethnicallyRelatedTo Guarijío people
Taracahitic languages usedBy Guarijío people