- Source: Ese Ejja people
The Ese Ejja are an indigenous people of Bolivia and Peru, in the southwestern Amazon basin. 1,687 Ese Ejja live in Bolivia, in the Pando and Beni Departments, in the foothills along the Beni and the Madre de Dios Rivers. In Peru, they live along the Tambopata and Heath Rivers, near Puerto Maldonado.
Name
Their name derives from their autonym, Ece'je, which means "people." They are also known as the Chama, Ese Eja, Ese Exa, Ese’ejja, Huarayo, Tambopata-Guarayo, or Tiatinagua people.
Language
The Ese Ejja language is a Tacanan language, spoken by all ages, and written in the Latin script. A dictionary has been produced for the language.
Subsistence
Ese Ejja people are traditionally hunter-gatherers, farmers, rangers, and fishermen.
Notes
External links
Ese Ejja artwork Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine, National Museum of the American Indian
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ese Ejja people
- Ese Ejja
- Ese Ejja language
- Chama
- Ch'unchu
- Indigenous peoples in Bolivia
- List of Indigenous peoples of South America
- Languages of Bolivia
- Indigenous peoples of Peru
- Cavineño people
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