- Coahuiltecan
Coahuiltecan is a general name for a group of people who previously lived in the southern Texas region near the
Rio Grande river. The earliest Spanish explorers to make contact with the natives in this region describe a prosperous and friendly people. However, they are most often described in their post-contact condition which left them in a state very similar to a society that has survived a terrible disaster. Accounts of these people state that they lived in very dirty and smelly camps and were seen eating rotten meat, dirt,maggots , and bugs. If food was found it was generally deer, rabbit, mesquite beans, nuts,berries, worms, lizards, insects, roots, cacti and occasionally buffalo. Many scholars now believe that as many as 90% of these people have lost their lives due to Europeandisease which in turn may account for how they existed after contact was made. The Coahuiltecan language and culture are now extinct although their descendants are absorbed into the Hispanic populations living in the south Texas region today. A group called theQuems were also recorded as having settled along both banks of the Rio Grande.Language family
Coahuiltecan (also Paikawa) was a proposed language family that consisted of
Coahuilteco andCotoname . A later proposal expanded the family to also include Comecrudo (Comecrudan),Karankawa , andTonkawa .It is now generally believed that all of these languages are unrelated
language isolate s, with Comecrudo now part of the Comecrudan family.The Coahuiltecan proposal appeared in John Wesley Powell's 1891 classification of
Native American languages .ee also
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Coahuilteco Bibliography
* Mithun, Marianne. (1999). "The languages of Native North America". Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23228-7 (hbk); ISBN 0-521-29875-X.
External links
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* [http://data2.itc.nps.gov/parks/saan/ppdocuments/san%20juan%20cultural%20study2.htm Reassessing Cultural Extinction: Change and Survival at Mission San Juan Capistrano, Texas — Chapter 8: Linguistics]
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