1843 print TOMB OF AYMARA CHIEF, CARANGAS PROVINCE, OURO DEPT., BOLIVIA (#6)

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1843 print TOMB OF AYMARA CHIEF, CARANGAS PROVINCE, OURO DEPARTMENT, BOLIVIA (#6) Print from steel engraving titled Tombeau d'un chefAimara, de la Province de Carangas, published in a volume of L'Univers, Histoire et description de tous les peuples , Paris, approx. image size 9.5 x 13.5 cm, nice hand coloring. Aymara large South American Indian group living in the vast windy Titicaca plateau of the central Andes in modern Peru and Bolivia. They speak languages of the Aymaran group. In colonial times the Aymara tribes were the Canchi, Colla, Lupaca, Collagua, Ubina, Pacasa, Caranga, Charca, Quillaca, Omasuyo, and Collahuaya. In addition, the Aymaran language was anciently spoken in portions of southern Bolivia, northern Chile, and southern Peru. The modern Aymara of Peru, Bolivia, and neighbouring sections of Argentina, numbered 1,500,000—2,000,000 in the late 20th century. Basically agriculturalists and herders, the Aymara live in an area of poor soil and harsh climate. Coarse grass gives pasturage for llama and alpaca herds. Staple crops include potatoes, oca (Oxalis tuberosa), ullucu (Ullucus tuberosus), quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa), corn (maize), beans, barley, and wheat. Fishing is done from rowboats and totora-reed rafts. Before they were conquered by the Incas, the Aymara had a number of independent states, the most important read more