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Extinct languages of the Marañón River basin

The Marañón River basin, at a low point in the Andes which made it an attractive location for trade between the Inca Empire and the Amazon basin, once harbored numerous languages which have been poorly attested or not attested at all. Those of the middle reaches of the river, above the Amazon basin, were replaced in historical times by Aguaruna, a Jivaroan language from the Amazon which is still spoken there. The languages further upriver are difficult to identify, due to lack of data. The region was multilingual at the time of the Conquest, and the people largely switched to Spanish rather than to Quechua, though Quechua also expanded during Colonial times.

Patagón
Patagón (Patagón de Perico, not to be confused with the Chonan languages of Tierra del Fuego and Patagonia): Four words are recorded, tuná 'water', anás 'maize', 'firewood', coará 'sheep' (evidently the word for 'sloth'). These suggest that Patagón was one of the Cariban languages, and therefore, like Aguaruna, from the Amazon. ==Bagua==
Bagua
Bagua (Patagón de Bagua) is attested by three words, tuna 'water', lancho 'maize', nacxé 'come here'. Tuna 'water' suggests it may be a Cariban language, like Patagón de Perico, but is insufficient evidence for classification. ==Chacha==
Chacha
Chacha is the name sometimes given to the language of the Chachapoya culture. The Chachapoya, originally from the region of Kuelap to the east of the Marañón, were conquered by the Inca shortly before the Spanish conquest, and many were deported after the Inca Civil War. They sided with the Spanish and achieved independence for a time, but were then deported again by the Spanish, where most died of introduced disease. Their language is essentially unattested apart from toponyms and several hundred family names, which are mostly short and have been distorted through adaptation to Quechua. ==Copallén==
Copallén
Four words are attested from Capallén (Copallín): quiet 'water', chumac 'maize', olaman 'firewood', ismare 'house'. It was spoken in villages of Llanque, Las Lomas, and Copallen, department of Cajamarca. ==Tabancale==
Tabancale
Five words of Tabancale (Tabancal, Aconipa) are recorded: yema 'water', moa 'maize', 'firewood', 'fire', tie 'house'. These do not correspond to any known language or family, so Tabancale is unclassified and potentially a language isolate. It was spoken in Aconipa, department of Cajamarca. ==Chirino==
Chirino
The Chirino were one of the principal peoples of the area. Based on the four words which were recorded, yungo 'water', yugato 'maize', xumás 'firewood', paxquiro 'grass', their language would appear to be related to Candoshi (Torero 1993, Adelaar 2004:406). ==Sácata==
Sácata
Three words of the language of Sácata (Zácata), apparently that of the Chillao people, are recorded: unga 'water', umague 'maize', chichache 'fire'. Connections have been suggested with Candoshí (the word for water is similar to that of Chirino) and Arawakan, but the evidence is insufficient. == Rabona ==
Rabona
Rabona, formerly spoken in the district of Santiago de las Montañas in Ecuador, is poorly attested. Based on limited evidence, predominantly plant names, many sources have grouped Rabona with Candoshi-Shapra. ==Vocabulary==
Vocabulary
The following is a vocabulary table for Patagón, Bagua, Chacha, Copallén, Tabancale, Chirino, Palta (Xoroca) and Sácata, with Candoshi, proto-Taranoan and proto-Arawakan forms given for comparison, combined from data given in the sections above: ==See also==
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