Purí People
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Purí People
The purí (also puri, puri-cororado, coroado, colorado, telikong and paquiOLIVEIRA, Enio Sebastião Cardoso deThe Paradigm of Extinction: Disappearance of the Puri Indians in Campo Alegre do Sul of Paraíba Valley(in Portuguese). ''Anais do XV encontro regional de história da ANPUH-Rio''. Access on 15 March 2015.) tribe lived along the northern coast of South America and in Brazil. They are now extinct but have mixed with people of Paraiba do Sul, though last original groups were last found in the lowlands of the Mato Grosso. Due to the disappearance of their society having occurred prior to the 20th century, they were still seen as "dehumanization, faithless, primitive half-man half-beasts," in accordance to the Portuguese Empire's general view on indigenous peoples (already manifested in Africa), focused on ethnology rather than history. Accounts and modern research According to Brazilians, Brazilian journalist and State University of Norte Fluminense, UENF press secretary ...
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Rugendas - Puri
Johann Moritz Rugendas (29 March 1802 – 29 May 1858) was a German painter, famous in the first half of the 19th century for his works depicting landscapes and ethnography, ethnographic subjects in several countries in the Americas. Rugendas is considered "by far the most varied and important of the European artists to visit Latin America." He was influenced by Alexander von Humboldt. Biography Rugendas was born in Augsburg, then part of the Prince-Bishopric of Augsburg in the Holy Roman Empire, now (Germany), into the seventh generation of a family of noted painters and engravers of Augsburg (he was a great grandson of Georg Philipp Rugendas, 1666–1742, a celebrated painter of battles). He first studied drawing and engraving with his father, Johann Lorenz Rugendas II (1775–1826). From 1815-17, he studied with Albrecht Adam (1786–1862), and later in the Academy de Arts of Munich, with Lorenzo Quaglio II (1793–1869). When Rugendas was born, Augsburg was a Free Imperial ...
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