The Keñewe or Yamjatrráwich

The Indians of the South make abundant use of leather. In primitive times, the guanaro, the fox, the skunk, the puma, the hare, the huemul, the ostrich and perhaps the otter were the main suppliers of the rustic indigenous industry, and later the cow, the horse, the sheep and the goat. The skins of...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Harrington, Tomás
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Universidad Nacional de Córdoba 1943
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/REUNC/article/view/10521
Aporte de:
id I10-R344-article-10521
record_format ojs
spelling I10-R344-article-105212023-11-28T14:33:41Z The Keñewe or Yamjatrráwich El Keñewe o Yamjatrráwich Harrington, Tomás araucano mapu aóeni künk teuelche patagon guwüna küne pampa keñewe yamjatrráwich araucano mapu aóeni künk teuelche patagon guwüna küne pampa keñewe yamjatrráwich The Indians of the South make abundant use of leather. In primitive times, the guanaro, the fox, the skunk, the puma, the hare, the huemul, the ostrich and perhaps the otter were the main suppliers of the rustic indigenous industry, and later the cow, the horse, the sheep and the goat. The skins of these imported animals have acquired visible preponderance and together with those of guanaco, fox and skunk, in frank decline, are the most used today. The puma and the almost extinct huemul have ceased to be victims of the aboriginal's needs, and the same happens with the hare (Dolichotis patagónica), whose skins, once turned into quillangos, were painted with exclusive designs. The other hare, called "European" in Patagonia to distinguish it from the native one, invaded those lands very recently. In Chubut, where the first ones began to be seen in 1920, it is now an indestructible plague, and the poor Indians take advantage of its meat, without industrializing the skin, which they sell for a few cents or a few grams of yerba mate, sugar or flour. Los indios del Sur usan abundantemente el cuero. En tiempos primitivos fueron principales proveedores de la rústica industria indígena, el guanaro, el zorro, el zorrino, el puma, la liebre, el huemul, el avestruz y tal vez la nutria, nómina que más tarde integran la vaca, el caballo, la oveja y la cabra. Los pellejos de estos animales importados han adquirido preponderancia visible y junto con los de guanaco, zorro y zorrino, en franca declinación, son los más usados en el día. El puma y el casi extinguido huemul han dejado de ser víctimas de las necesidades del aborigen, y sucede lo propio con la liebre (Dolichotis patagónica), cuyas pieles una vez convertidas en quillangos se pintaban con diseños exclusivos. La otra liebre, denominada "europea" en la Patagonia para distinguirla de la autóctona, invadió aquellas tierras hace muy poco. En Chubut, donde empezaron a verse las primeras en 1920, constituye ahora plaga indestructible, y de su carne aprovecha el indio paupérrimo, sin industrializar la piel que enajena por pocos centavos o unos gramos de yerba, azúcar o harina. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba 1943-03-01 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/REUNC/article/view/10521 Revista de la Universidad Nacional de Córdoba; Vol. 30 Núm. 1/4 (1943): Marzo-Junio; 79-88 0370-7687 spa https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/REUNC/article/view/10521/11202 Derechos de autor 1943 Universidad Nacional de Córdoba https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
institution Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
institution_str I-10
repository_str R-344
container_title_str Revista de la Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
language Español
format Artículo revista
topic araucano
mapu
aóeni künk
teuelche
patagon
guwüna küne
pampa
keñewe
yamjatrráwich
araucano
mapu
aóeni künk
teuelche
patagon
guwüna küne
pampa
keñewe
yamjatrráwich
spellingShingle araucano
mapu
aóeni künk
teuelche
patagon
guwüna küne
pampa
keñewe
yamjatrráwich
araucano
mapu
aóeni künk
teuelche
patagon
guwüna küne
pampa
keñewe
yamjatrráwich
Harrington, Tomás
The Keñewe or Yamjatrráwich
topic_facet araucano
mapu
aóeni künk
teuelche
patagon
guwüna küne
pampa
keñewe
yamjatrráwich
araucano
mapu
aóeni künk
teuelche
patagon
guwüna küne
pampa
keñewe
yamjatrráwich
author Harrington, Tomás
author_facet Harrington, Tomás
author_sort Harrington, Tomás
title The Keñewe or Yamjatrráwich
title_short The Keñewe or Yamjatrráwich
title_full The Keñewe or Yamjatrráwich
title_fullStr The Keñewe or Yamjatrráwich
title_full_unstemmed The Keñewe or Yamjatrráwich
title_sort keñewe or yamjatrráwich
description The Indians of the South make abundant use of leather. In primitive times, the guanaro, the fox, the skunk, the puma, the hare, the huemul, the ostrich and perhaps the otter were the main suppliers of the rustic indigenous industry, and later the cow, the horse, the sheep and the goat. The skins of these imported animals have acquired visible preponderance and together with those of guanaco, fox and skunk, in frank decline, are the most used today. The puma and the almost extinct huemul have ceased to be victims of the aboriginal's needs, and the same happens with the hare (Dolichotis patagónica), whose skins, once turned into quillangos, were painted with exclusive designs. The other hare, called "European" in Patagonia to distinguish it from the native one, invaded those lands very recently. In Chubut, where the first ones began to be seen in 1920, it is now an indestructible plague, and the poor Indians take advantage of its meat, without industrializing the skin, which they sell for a few cents or a few grams of yerba mate, sugar or flour.
publisher Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
publishDate 1943
url https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/REUNC/article/view/10521
work_keys_str_mv AT harringtontomas thekeneweoryamjatrrawich
AT harringtontomas elkeneweoyamjatrrawich
AT harringtontomas keneweoryamjatrrawich
first_indexed 2024-09-03T21:32:19Z
last_indexed 2024-09-03T21:32:19Z
_version_ 1809212127757467648