(Redirected from Quiché):''This page is about the Native American people; for other uses, the dish, see
Quiché (disambiguation).''
The 'K'iche' ' (or 'Quiché' in
Spanish spelling), are a
Native American people, one of the
Maya ethnic groups. Their
indigenous language, the
K'iche' language, is a
Mesoamerican language of the
Mayan language family. The highland K'iche' states in the
pre-Columbian era are associated with the ancient
Maya civilization.
El Quiché is also the name of a department of modern
Guatemala.
The meaning of the word "k'iche'" is "many trees." The word is broken into two parts, "k'i," meaning "many" and "che'," meaning "tree." the Nahuatl translation is Cuauhtēmallān which gave the name to the modern Nation of Guatemala
Rigoberta Menchú, an activist for indigenous rights who won the
Nobel Peace Prize in 1992, is perhaps the best-known K'iche'.
People
The K'iche' people live mostly in the highlands of
Guatemala. Most of them speak the
K'iche' language, although most also have at least a working knowledge of
Spanish, except in some isolated rural villages.
The Guatemalan department of
El Quiché is named after the K'iche' people. The department is the heartland of the people, but in former times they were spread over a wider area of the Guatemala highlands.
History
In pre-Columbian times, the K'iche' were one of the most powerful states in the region. 'K’iche'' was an independent state that existed after the decline and abandonment of the
Maya Civilization with the Classic collapse. K'iche' lay a highland mountain valley of
Guatemala, and during this time they were also founded in parts of El Salvador. The
Spanish conquerors have described the splendid towns such as Q'uma'rka'aj (
Utatlan), the capital of Ki'che'.
[1] They bordered the
Kaqchikel.
The K'iche' were conquered by the
conquistador Pedro de Alvarado in
1524. Their last king,
Tecún Umán, who was killed by Alvarado, remains a folk-hero and figure of legend. Umán died fighting Alvarado's army at the valley of Xelaju (
Quetzaltenango), where as many as 10,000 K'iche' lost their lives. After the battle, the K'iche' surrendered and invited Alvarado to their capital,
Gumarcaj, however Alvarado suspected an ambush and had the city burned. The ruins of the city can still be seen, just a short distance from
Santa Cruz del Quiché.
One of the most significant surviving Mesoamerican literary documents and primary sources of knowledge about Maya societal traditions, beliefs and
mythological accounts is a product of the 16th century K'iche' people. This document, known as the ''
Popol Wuj'' ("Pop wuj" in proper K'iche - "the book of events") and originally written around the 1550s, contains a compilation of mythological and ethno-historical narratives known to these people at that time, which were drawn from earlier pre-Columbian sources (now lost) and also oral traditional storytelling. This narrative includes a telling of their version of the creation myth, relating how world and humans were created by the gods, the story of the divine brothers, and the history of the K'iche' from their migration into their homeland up to the
Spanish conquest.
Notes
1. The Maya, , Michael D., Coe, Thames & Hudson, 1999, ISBN 0-500-28066-5
External links
★
K'iche' - an introduction - much more detailed article at ''
Citizendium''