11 Facts About Chamorro people

1.

Chamorro people are the indigenous people of the Mariana Islands, politically divided between the United States territory of Guam and the encompassing Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in Micronesia.

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2.

Today, significant Chamorro populations exist in several U S states including Hawaii, California, Washington, Texas, Tennessee, Oregon, and Nevada, all of which together are designated as Pacific Islander Americans according to the U S Census.

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3.

Some people theorize that Spanish definitions of the word Chamorro played a role in its being used to refer to the island's indigenous inhabitants.

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4.

Chamorro people language is included in the Malayo-Polynesian subgroup of the Austronesian family.

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5.

Chamorro people is often spoken in many homes, but this is becoming less common.

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6.

Spanish colonial records show that Chamorro people farmers planted seeds according to the phases of the Moon.

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7.

Chamorro people's used his eyes to create the Sun and Moon, his eyebrows to make rainbows, and most of the rest of his parts into various features of the Earth.

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8.

Chamorro people society was divided into two main castes, and continued to be so for well over a century after the Spanish first arrived.

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9.

Le Gobien theorized that Chamorro society comprised the geographical convergence of peoples of different ethnic origins.

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10.

Chamorro people culture has over the years acquired noticeable influences from Spanish, Mexican, American, Japanese and Filipino cultures, as well as the presence of fellow Oceanic groups.

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11.

Diabetes and heart disease have become increasingly common among the indigenous population as well as among non-indigenous Oceanic Chamorro people living in the Marianas, particularly the Carolinian Refaluwasch.

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