- Cazigazgo
Cazigazgo is a phonetic anglicized form of "Cacicazgo", the Spanish transliteration (or a derivative) of the
Taíno word for the lands ruled by a cacique. [http://www.elhabanero.cubaweb.cu/servicios/espa_106.html] .Use of the term "cacigazgo"
This term is found in contexts such as "la princesa de Cofachiqui, señora de un cacigazgo indígena" [http://www.editoraperu.com.pe/Identidades/90/ensayo.asp] or, for example: "In November of 1493, the island of Boriquén had approximately 20 cacigazgos." [http://www.saxakali.com/caribbean/rosado.htm] According to Spanish chronicles, the cacique was at the apex of a
feudal structure.Bartolomé de las Casas refers to these cacigazgos as kingdoms.Quasi-equivalence to minor kingdom
Given the extent of the lands he ruled, a Taíno cacique was a minor prince, somewhere between an Irish king and a clan leader in
Scotland , in terms of his power. Anthony Lane, in reference to the father ofPocahontas ,Powhatan , equates the paramount leader of an indigenous American Nation (commonly, but less precisely, called a "tribe"), who is supreme in rank, power, or authority [http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=Paramount] , to a "local king".Extended use of the word in political context
By extension the word is used in
Latin America n politics to denote the area controlled by a strong semi-permanent political leader. (See Wiesheu Forster, 1996).References
*Bartolomé de las Casas. "A short account of the destruction of the Indies", translated by Nigel Griffin. Penguin Books, 1992. ISBN 0-14-044562-5
*Lane, Anthony 2005 The Other: "Munich," "Hidden," and "The New World." In: The Current Cinema section of The New Yorker. December 26, 2005 & January 2, 2006. p. 151.
*Wiesheu Forster, Walburga. 1996 Cacigazgo y estado arcaico: la evolución de organizaciones sociopolíticas complejas. INAH (Colección Científica, 310), México.
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