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Quiché

This page is about the Native American people; for the dish, see quiche.

The Ki'che' , or Quiché in Spanish spelling, are a Native American people, part of the Maya ethnic group. The term also denotes their native language, and their nation in pre-Columbian times, a part of the ancient Maya civilization.

El Quiché is also the name of a department of modern Guatemala.

Rigoberta Menchú, an activist for indigenous rights who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1992, is perhaps the best-known Quiché.

The Quiché People

The Quiché people live mostly in the highlands of Guatemala, and in pre-Columbian times they were one of the most powerful states in the region. Their capital city was Gumarcaj, the ruins of which are a short distance from Santa Cruz del Quiché. Most of them speak the Quiché language, although most also have at least a working knowledge of Spanish,except in some isolated rural villages.

The Quiché were conquered by the conquistador Pedro de Alvarado in the early 16th century. Their last king, Tecún Umán, who was killed by Alvarado, remains a folk-hero and figure of legend.

The El Quiché department of Guatemala is named after them. The department is the heartland of the people, but in former times they were spread over a wider area of the Guatemala highlands.

The Popol Vuh, the most extensive and complete pre-Columbian literary text known today, tells how the world and humans were created by the gods, the story of the divine brothers, and the history of the Quiché from their migration into their homeland up to the Spanish conquest.

11-30-2008 18:11:33
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