Jesús Arango Cano

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Jesús Arango Cano
Born (1915-06-21)June 21, 1915[1]
La Tebaida,[2] Quindío,
 Colombia
Died January 9, 2015(2015-01-09) (aged 99)
Armenia, Quindío, Colombia
Nationality Colombian
Fields Archaeology, anthropology
Known for Archaeology, anthropology, folklore
Spouse Marina Montoya
Bachué, mother goddess in the Muisca religion, described by Arango Cano
Quimbaya cacique, civilization from central Colombia where Jesús Arango Cano published about
Arango Cano published about the Calima

Jesús Arango Cano (La Tebaida, Colombia, 21 June 1915 - Armenia, 9 January 2015) was a Colombian economist, diplomat, anthropologist, archaeologist and writer.

Biography

Arango Cano was born on June 21, 1915 in La Tebaida, the village in the department of Quindío, Colombia that his father, archaeologist Luis Arango Cardona, founded a year after his birth.[3] He attended the Rutgers Preparatory School in New Brunswick, New Jersey and studied Economy at the University of California and later International Relations at Columbia University, New York.[4]

In the 1940s Arango Cano became consul for Colombia in São Paulo, Brazil[4] and Undersecretary of International Relations.[3][4]

Arango Cano has written more than fifty books of which 40 are published. His first two books were Inmigración para Colombia, published in 1951, and Inmigración y Colonización en la Gran Colombia in 1953.[3][4]

In 1965 Arango published his book Mitos, leyendas y dioses chibchas, about the myths, legends and deities of the Muisca.[5] He also wrote about the Quimbaya, Calima and other indigenous groups, not only of Colombia, but also about the Aztec and Incas. Arango published about the Eje Cafetero, the coffee region in central Colombia where he was born.

In the 1970s, Arango Cano followed his father and became an archaeologist.[3][4] In 1974 his work Las esmeraldas sagradas: el tesoro de Furatena about Furatena, mythological figure for the Muzo people was published.

On May 23, 1980, Arango Cano together with other historians founded the Academia de Historia del Quindío.[1]

Jesús Arango Cano has published mainly in Spanish and also in English and German.[6]

Arango Cano died on January 9, 2015, at age 99.

Works

This list is a selection.[6][7][8]

Books

Articles

See also

List of Muisca scholars
Muisca

References

Notable works by Arango Cano

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