Tegua people

Tegua
Total population
0[1] (end 19th century)
Regions with significant populations
Boyacá, Casanare  Colombia
Languages
Arawakan, Colombian Spanish
Religion
Traditional religion, Catholicism
Related ethnic groups
U'wa, Muisca, Achagua, Guayupe
Map of pre-Columbian civilizations. The Tegua lived east of the Muisca

The Tegua or Tecua were an Arawak-speaking[2] indigenous people of Colombia who died out in the 19th century.[1]

The territories of the Tegua stretched from Macanal, Boyacá in the west to Aguazul in the east and from Berbeo in the north to Villanueva in the south, on the eastern flanks of the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes.

Knowledge of the Tegua is scarce,[3] but has been provided by pre-modern scholars Lucas Fernández de Piedrahita, Basilio Fernández de Oviedo and Pedro Simón and in modern times by Javier Ocampo López and Pedro Gustavo Huertas Ramírez.[3][4]

Etymology

The name of the people Tegua, originally meaning "boy",[5] is presently a word in Colombian Spanish and means "shaman" or "witchdoctor", referring to the advanced knowledge the Tegua had of medicinal plants.[1][3][6]

Tegua territory

The Tegua inhabited the area of the lower and central Lengupá River valley in the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes and the foothills (Piedemonte) towards the Llanos Orientales, such as the Casanare municipalities Recetor, Chámeza and Aguazul.[1][7][8] To the south, the Guayupe were living, the eastern part was bordering the territories of the Achagua and the western and northern terrains were inhabited by the Muisca. The Tegua living east of Guatavita paid tribute to the Muisca.[9] The origin of the Tegua people was in Campohermoso, Boyacá, where both the Lengupá and Upía Rivers flow.[10][11]

Municipalities belonging to Tegua territories

Name Department Altitude (m)
urban centre
Map
Campohermoso Boyacá 1100
Páez Boyacá 1300
Berbeo Boyacá 1335
Miraflores Boyacá 1432
Macanal
(shared with Muisca)
Boyacá 1680
San Luis de Gaceno Boyacá 395
Santa María Boyacá 850
Aguazul
(shared with Achagua)
Casanare 290
Recetor
(shared with Achagua)
Casanare 800
Chámeza
(shared with Achagua)
Casanare 1150
Sabanalarga Casanare 450
Villanueva Casanare 420

Description

De Piedrahita has written that the Tegua spoke another language and looked different from the Muisca.[3]

As noted by Pedro Simón, the Tegua had a diet formed by maize, honey, fish, coca and peanuts.[1] They cultivated yuca and made pies of yuca and ants.[12]

The chroniclers of the 17th century describe a Tegua woman with the assigned name La Cardeñosa, as a beautiful Tegua.[6][11]

First contact with the Tegua was made in 1538 by Juan de San Martín.[11] In 1556 the evangelisation process was started to convert the Tegua to catholicism.[11]

Names of Tegua caciques are reinstalled as street names of Campohermoso; Pirazica, Yayogua, Onayomba and Yapompo.[4][10]

See also

Muisca
U'wa
Achagua, Guayupe

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.