Machiguenga

This image is of a Machiguenga woman who is dressed in traditional garb. Photo taken in the Pangoa province of Peru.

The Machiguenga (also Matsigenka, Matsigenga[A 1]) are an indigenous people who live in the high jungle, or montaña, area on the eastern slopes of the Andes and in the Amazon Basin jungle regions of southeastern Peru. Their population in 2020 amounted to about 18,000. Formerly they were hunter-gatherer but today the majority are sedentary swidden cultivators. The main crops grown are manioc, maize, and bananas, but today commercial crops such as coffee and cacao are increasingly important. Their main source of protein used to be peccary and monkeys but today fish has become more important as game animals have become increasingly scarce as a consequence of the encroachment from highland immigrants to the area and the exploitation of the Camisea gas finds.[1] The Machiguenga people have a preference for self-sufficiency when it comes to cultivating essential crops, made possible by their generous land allocation per capita, and the lack of conflict in their area.[2]


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  1. ^ Rosengren, D. 'Los Matsigenka', in Guía Etnográfica de la Alta Amazonía, ed. by Santos-Granero, F. and F. Barclay (2004)
  2. ^ Johnson, Allen (1983), "Machiguenga Gardens", in Raymond B. Hames; William T. Vickers (eds.), Adaptive Responses of Native Amazonians, Elsevier, pp. 29–63, doi:10.1016/b978-0-12-321250-4.50006-3, ISBN 978-0-12-321250-4