Artículo
Autoría
Fecha
2009
Editorial y Lugar de Edición
International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences
Revista
Nomadic Peoples,
vol. 13
(pp. 36-50)
- ISSN 0822-7942
International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences
International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences
ISSN
0822-7942
Resumen
Información suministrada por el agente en
SIGEVA
This article summarizes part of the history of the Andean herders during the colonial period. After the conquest, the Spaniards reorganized the American world in order to satisfy their primary needs: food, labor and transportation. During the silver boom of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, Potosí, the most important mining city in the Andes, surpassed 130,000 inhabitants, and there were many other settlements around smaller mining centres. All these urban inhabitants n...
This article summarizes part of the history of the Andean herders during the colonial period. After the conquest, the Spaniards reorganized the American world in order to satisfy their primary needs: food, labor and transportation. During the silver boom of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, Potosí, the most important mining city in the Andes, surpassed 130,000 inhabitants, and there were many other settlements around smaller mining centres. All these urban inhabitants needed to be fed, and because of the location of these cities, food was often brought from distant places. This article shows how the pastoral peoples of the Andes managed to participate in, and adapt to, the colonial economy while at the same time retaining their pastoral way of life.
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Palabras Clave
INDIGENOUSCOLONIAL PERIODSOUTHERN ANDESPASTORALISMMINING
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