Kadiwéu woman from Nabileque River region, Brazil, ca. 1892 |
Total population |
---|
1346 (2009)[1]–1400[2] |
Regions with significant populations |
Brazil (Mato Grosso do Sul) |
Languages |
Religion |
traditional tribal religion |
The Kadiwéu are an indigenous people of Brazil. As of 1998, they lived in four villages,[3] They are known for their horse riding skills.[1] with some families living independently in the jungle.[2]
Contents |
Their name is now spelled "Kadiwéu" in Portuguese (plural Kadiwéus).[3] The Kadiweu are also known as the Cadiguebo, Cadioeo, Caduveo, Caduvéo, Caduví, Cayua, Guaicuru, Kadiveo, Kadivéu, Kadiweu, Kaduveo, Kaiwa, or Mbayá-Guaikurú.[1][2]
They are a branch of the Guaycuru peoples and speak the characteristic Kadiweu language that belongs to the Mataco–Guaicuru family. They are the last surviving group of Mbayá peoples.[1]
The Kadiweu today live in the Kadiweu Indigenous Land, a large reserve established in 1903,[2] in the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso do Sul in the municipality of Porto Murtinho, between the Serra de Bodoquena and the Nabileque and Aquidavão rivers.[3]
The Kadiweu are the largest surviving brank of the Mbayá people. The Myabá were raiders in the 18th century and numbered 4,000, but smallpox and influenza radically decreased their population at the end of the 18th century.[2]
During the Gran Chaco War of 1865–1870, the Kadiweu fought against Paraguay on the side of Brazil.[1][2]