Taínos BBC Spirits of the Jaguar 3of4 Hunters of the Caribbean Sea
Documental sobre la etnia Taína a la llegada de los Europeos al
Nuevo Mundo. Episodio completo sobre los
Taínos. Filmado en
Puerto Rico.
Puerto Rico: Historians believe the island nation was once ruled by about 20
Taíno "Caciques," or states, and sheltered dozens of Taíno cities. One unearthed by archaeologists boasted seven plazas and is believed to have held thousands of residents, who eventually succumbed to the
Spanish soldiers and
European diseases that followed
Columbus's arrival in the
New World in
1492.
Hurricane, canoe, barbecue, hammock. The words roll comfortably off our tongues, but they were probably first spoken by voices from the past: the Taíno, the virtually forgotten people who first occupied the
Caribbean islands more than 2,
000 years ago. Archaeologists believe the Taíno, whose story is told in the third installment of SPIRITS OF THE
JAGUAR, originally lived on the shores of northeastern
South America, near present-day
Venezuela.
As their population grew, it became traditional for young people to be evicted from their villages and sent out into wilderness to found new settlements.
Eventually, some pioneering groups built log canoes and began settling the islands that could be seen offshore to the east, low on the horizon. Over the centuries, they island-hopped their way north through the
Caribbean, eventually following the crescent of islets all the way to the
Florida peninsula.
By the 1400s, the Taíno had forged a highly organized society divided into dozens of political divisions similar to states. Puerto Rico, for instance, is believed to have been governed by about 20 "Caciques," or states, while Hispaniola (the island which includes
Haiti and the
Dominican Republic) was divided into five Caciques. In addition to providing defense against raiding parties from hostile islands, the nobles who led the caciques sponsored artists, shepherded the economy, and organized periodic festivals that brought
Taino communities together for games and religious celebrations. The games weren't always just for fun: the Taíno version of soccer, for instance, was played with a potentially lethal solid ball made from rubber and cotton.
Players wore special protective belts and pads to protect their bodies.
For more than
200 years, from 1200 to the late 1400s, Taíno chiefs were lords of millions of island inhabitants. In 1492, however, they were among the first New Worlders to welcome
Columbus -- and the meeting marked the beginning of the end for the Taíno. Unable to resist either the disease brought by the
Europeans or their military might, the Taíno culture collapsed and virtually disappeared. For generations, it attracted little notice from historians or archaeologists.
In 1492, the Taíno were among the first to welcome Columbus.
In recent years, however, spectacular finds have rekindled interest in the original inhabitants of the Caribbean. In
1997, for instance, archaeologists found the remains of a major Taíno city on the eastern most part of the Dominican Republic.
The discovery of the city's long-hidden ceremonial plazas and homes "is going to give us more insight into the Taíno than has ever been known before," says
Indiana University archaeologist
Charles Beeker.
Particularly exciting is the treasure trove of artwork and everyday items found, almost perfectly preserved, in a 200-foot-deep cenote, or natural well, next to the ancient city.
Everything from wooden axes and pottery to woven baskets and jewelry sits in silt at the bottom of the pool, according to divers. There is even a priceless "duho," the carved wooden throne of a Taíno chief. For perhaps
500 years, the throne has sat empty, waiting for its royal owner to return.(from:
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/spirits/html/tainobodytaino
.html)