Aymara people
Pavel Špindler - CC BY 3.0
Martin St-Amant (S23678) - CC BY 3.0
Pedro Szekely from Los Angeles, USA - CC BY-SA 2.0
Jorge Nicolás Bohórquez - CC BY-SA 4.0
Caleidoscopic - CC BY-SA 3.0
Martin St-Amant (S23678) - CC BY 3.0
Pedro Szekely from Los Angeles, USA - CC BY-SA 2.0
AgainErick - CC BY-SA 4.0
Roderick Peel - CC BY-SA 4.0
User:Jerrywills - CC BY-SA 3.0
AgainErick - CC BY-SA 4.0
Dan Lundberg - CC BY-SA 2.0
Pavel Špindler - CC BY 3.0
Pedro Szekely from Los Angeles, USA - CC BY-SA 2.0
José Carlos Rozas Carazas - CC BY-SA 4.0
Lunaloop - CC BY-SA 4.0
Mhwater - Public domain
Arabsalam - CC BY-SA 4.0
Martin Lang - CC BY 2.0
Risa_kročil - CC BY-SA 3.0
Pavel Špindler - CC BY 3.0
Bachelot Pierre J-P - CC BY-SA 3.0
Aurimaz - CC BY-SA 4.0
Pablo Rimachi - CC BY-SA 4.0
No machine-readable author provided. Heretiq assumed (based on copyright claims). - CC BY-SA 2.5
Roderick Peel - CC BY-SA 4.0
Esme Vos from San Francisco and Amsterdam, Netherlands - CC BY 2.0
Aurimaz - CC BY-SA 4.0
David Stanley from Nanaimo, Canada - CC BY 2.0
Olga Lidia Paredes Alcoreza - CC BY-SA 4.0
Jorge Láscar from Australia - CC BY 2.0
Pedro Szekely from Los Angeles, USA - CC BY-SA 2.0
rewbs.soal - CC BY-SA 2.0
Jduranboger - CC BY-SA 3.0
Emilio Erazo-Fischer (Flickr profile) - CC BY-SA 2.0
Dan Lundberg - CC BY-SA 2.0
No images
Context of Aymara people
The Aymara or Aimara (Aymara: aymara, ) people are an Indigenous people in the Andes and Altiplano regions of South America. Approximately 2.3 million Aymara live in northwest Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, and Peru. The ancestors of the Aymara lived in the region for many centuries before becoming a subject people of the Inca Empire in the late 15th or early 16th century and later of the Spanish in the 16th century. With the Spanish American wars of independence (1810–1825), the Aymaras became subjects of the new nations of Bolivia and Peru. After the War of the Pacific (1879–1883), Chile annexed territory with the Aymara population.