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The Spanish conquistadors who arrived in Central America found that the territory of western and central El Salvador was actually divided into two aboriginal Pipil states: Izalco to the west and Cuscatlan in central El Salvador.
the late pre-Columbian Nahuat-speaking Pipils of El Salvador with detailed analyses of the material culture of the conquest-period site of Ciudad Vieja, which a small number of Spanish residents shared with Pipils and other indigenous Mesoamericans.
This chapter describes the ongoing revitalization process of the Pipil/Nahuat language of El Salvador, an endangered language with less the 200 elder speakers and with no intergenerational transmission. The process is based on a five-component revitalization model developed by the author.
This paper examines how and why Iberians reused aspects of indigenous literature as a foundation for nation building in El Salvador and specifically explores the socio-political reasons for its impact in politics, and in literature.
The best archaeological evidence bearing on the problem of the Pipil migrations and the Toltec-related presence in El Salvador has emerged from research on the sites of Cihuatán and Santa María, two settlements located in the Paraíso Basin of the middle Lempa drainage in North-Central El Salvador (Fowler 1981; Fowler and Earnest 1985 ...
Each volume offers a comprehensive grammatical description of a single language together with fully analyzed sample texts and, if appropriate, a word list and other relevant information which is ...
PDF | On Mar 1, 2003, Jorge E Lemus published Revitalizing indigenous languages: the case of Pipil in El Salvador | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate
Globalization: Nahuatl Pipiles in El Salvador Today. What happened to their foodways? The Pipiles had long maintained subsistence crops and communal lands, known in Spanish as ejidos. However, in the middle of the 19th century, the coffee became an important export crop for El Salvador.
At the time of the Spanish conquest in 1524, the Pipils were the dominant indigenous culture of El Salvador, occupying about two-thirds of the territory of the modern republic (Fowler 1989, 1991b). Two major Pipil polities dominated the area: the small Izalcos kingdom in the west and the larger Cuscatlán kingdom in the central region.
Campbell the Pipil Language of El Salvador - Free ebook download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read book online for free. Investigacion del Nahuat, lengua madre de los Pipiles, aborigenes de El Salvador.