Authors: Jose Barreiro
TaÃno.
(Caribbean Indian) The aboriginal inhabitants of Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, and other lesser islands; self-descriptive, meaning “noble” or “good” people
Tamayo.
Enriquillo's principal captain
Turey.
(TaÃno) Sky; also a type of medallion worn by chiefs
Urayoán.
Boricua
cacique
, sometimes written as Broyoan, who drowned a Spaniard to test whether in fact the covered men were immortal
xaiba.
(TaÃno) Antillean freshwater crab (
Callinectes diacanthus
)
Xamayca.
(TaÃno) Present-day Jamaica
Xaraguá.
Territory of
cacique
Bohechio, in southwestern Española
xiba.
(TaÃno) Stone and woody mountain
xikÃ.
(TaÃno) A tree that has a very hard wood
Ya.
(TaÃno) Strong or vital spirit
yaguasa.
(TaÃno) An indigenous Cuban duck
Yara.
Place near Cuban city of Bayamo, where Hatuey was immolated
Yaquimo.
Port town in southern Española; also, Puerto Brazil
Yoruba.
Tribal people from eastern Africa, many of whom were brought to the Caribbean as slaves
yuán.
A reconstructed TaÃno word for “penis,” from
iu
, “yucca,” the form of the tuber, and
ia
or
an
, “vital force”
Yucahuguama Bagua Maórocoti.
Supreme being in the TaÃno cosmology. A triple name meaning “One who brings the
yucca
,” “rules the sea,” and “is without ancestral grandfathers,” born of woman only
yucca.
(TaÃno) Manioc, a primary tropical root crop
yukaieke.
(TaÃno) Village or settlement
Yunque.
A flat-peaked promontory form found near the ocean in Cuba and in Borikén
About the Author
Presently a senior scholar at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian,
José Barreiro
is a novelist, essayist, and activist of nearly four decades on American indigenous hemispheric themes. Barreiro is a member of the TaÃno Nation of the Antilles.