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Lokono
View on WikipediaThe Lokono or Arawak are an Indigenous peoples from the northern coastal regions of South America. Today, approximately 10,000 Lokono live primarily along the coasts and rivers of Guyana, with smaller numbers in Venezuela, Trinidad, Suriname, French Guiana.[3]
Key Information
They speak the Arawak language,[3] the eponymous language of the Arawakan language family, as well as various Creole languages, and English.[4][5][6]
Name
[edit]
The name Lokono comes from the Arawak words loko meaning "people" and no, a suffix that makes a noun plural.[2] They are also called Arawak.[2]
In 1989, John Peter Bennet (Arawak) wrote that the word Arawak was not originally a Lokono word but was adopted by them.[7]
In the 19th century, when Western scholars had established that the major Indigenous population of the Caribbean during European contact (now known as the [Taíno] were culturally and linguistically related to the South American Lokono-Arawak, ethnologist Daniel Garrison Brinton proposed calling the Caribbean people "Island Arawak". Subsequent scholars shortened this convention to simply "Arawak", thereby causing confusion with the mainland people.[8]
The Tokono are also called Arawak-Taíno.[9]
In the 20th century, scholars such as Irving Rouse began using the older term Taíno for the Caribbean peoples to distinguish them from mainlanders. The mainland Arawak call themselves "Lokono" (also spelled "Locono" and "Lokomo"); this has become more common in scholarly literature since the late 20th century.[8][10]
History
[edit]The Arawakan languages may have developed in the Orinoco River Valley, and subsequently spread widely as speakers migrated, becoming the region's most extensive language family by the time of European contact.[11] The group that identified as the Arawak or Lokono settled the coastal and river valley areas of what is now Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, Barbados and parts of the island of Trinidad.[10][8][12][13]
While the Spanish rapidly colonized the Caribbean islands, the Lokono and other mainland peoples resisted colonization for a much longer period. The Spanish were unable to subdue them throughout the 16th century. However, with increased encroachment from other European powers in the early 17th century, the Lokono allied with Spain against the neighboring Kalina (Caribs), who had allied with the English and Dutch.[14] Subsequently, the Lokono engaged in trading relationships with the Europeans, an arrangement that led to prosperity. However, economic and social changes in the region in the early 19th century, including the end of the plantation economy, adversely affected the Lokono, and their population began to decline.[1]
In the 20th century, the Lokono supplemented their traditional agricultural economy by selling fish and lumber and through migrant labor. Their population has begun to rise again. Approximately 10,000 Lokono are living in Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana, as well as thousands of others with Lokono ancestry.[1]
Guyana
[edit]The Lokono are one of three Amerind peoples living in coastal Guyana. The other two are the Kalihna and Warau.[9] Historically, they had matrilineal, agrarian societies.[9] In the 18th century, Dutch colonists hired them as fishermen and salt miners, but they were not enslaved.[9] In the 19th century, Lokono people worked under the English colonists.[9] Lokono have often intermarried with Afro-Guyanese people, and their children are accepted as being Amerind. By the 20th century, many of them assimilated in part to the Afro-Guyanese and Indo-Guyanese cultures;[9] however, they have taken efforts to keep their Lokono language alive in their communities. In 1989, John Peter Bennet (Arawak) wrote an An Arawak-English Dictionary.[15] In the 20th century, schools have implemented a 10-month language programme for Lokono children.[16]
Barbados
[edit]In 1627, English colonists convinced a Lokono family to move to Barbados to help with farming.[17]
Suriname
[edit]Johannes Karwafodi (Lokono, 1878–after 1940) was an important botanist and researcher in Suriname.[18]
Religion
[edit]Lokono have their own Indigenous religion. They respected spirits found in nature. Spiritual healers could communicate with these spirits, cure people, and offer advice.[19]
In the 18th century, Jeptha (Lokono), aided by two boys, translated the Bible and German hymns into Lokono.[17]
Notable Lokono people
[edit]- Oswald Hussein, a Lokono sculptor who incorporates "rituals, spirits and animals held sacred by his culture" into his art.[20]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Olson, James Stewart (1991). The Indians of Central and South America: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary. Greenwood. p. 211. ISBN 0313263876. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
- ^ a b c "Arawak". Caribbean Indigenous and Endangered Languages. Mona, Jamaica: UNESCO in collaboration with the Jamaican Language Unit, University of the West Indies. 2007. Retrieved 5 September 2025.
- ^ a b "Lokono" (PDF). DICE Missouri. Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 June 2024. Retrieved 5 September 2025.
- ^ Rybka, Konrad (June 2015). State-of-the-Art in the Development of the Lokono Language. University of Hawaii Press. OCLC 919313664.
- ^ "Suriname". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2019-06-02.
- ^ Brown, E. K.; Ogilvie, Sarah (2009). Concise encyclopedia of languages of the world. Elsevier. ISBN 9780080877747. OCLC 264358379.
- ^ Bennett, John Peter (1989). "An Arawak-English Dictionary" (PDF). Archaeology and Anthropology. 6 (1, 2). Georgetown, Guyana: Walter Roth Museum of Anthropology.
- ^ a b c Olson, James Stewart (1991). The Indians of Central and South America: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary. Greenwood. p. 29. ISBN 0313263876. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f "Indigenous peoples in Guyana". Minority Rights Group. 2023. Retrieved 6 September 2025.
- ^ a b Rouse, Irving (1992). The Tainos. Yale University Press. p. 5. ISBN 0300051816. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
Island Carib.
- ^ Hill, Jonathan David; Santos-Granero, Fernando (2002). Comparative Arawakan Histories: Rethinking Language Family and Culture Area in Amazonia. University of Illinois Press. pp. 1–4. ISBN 0252073843. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
- ^ "An Arawak Village for Barbados". Caribbean Life. 2 October 2018. Archived from the original on 2019-06-02. Retrieved 2019-06-02.
- ^ "1492 and Before: Amerindians in Barbados". Totally Barbados. Archived from the original on 2023-05-28. Retrieved 2019-06-02.
- ^ Hill, Jonathan David; Santos-Granero, Fernando (2002). Comparative Arawakan Histories: Rethinking Language Family and Culture Area in Amazonia. University of Illinois Press. pp. 39–42. ISBN 0252073843. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
- ^ Bennett, John Peter (1989). "An Arawak-English Dictionary" (PDF). Archaeology and Anthropology. 6 (1, 2). Georgetown, Guyana: Walter Roth Museum of Anthropology.
- ^ Outridge, Michael (8 September 2019). "Preserving the Lokono language". Guyana Chronicle. Retrieved 6 September 2025.
- ^ a b Rybka, Konrad (2022). "Reconstructing Lokono Contributions to Science: The Life Work of Johannes Karwafodi". New West Indian Guide. 97 (1–2): 73. Retrieved 6 September 2025.
- ^ Rybka, Konrad (2022). "Reconstructing Lokono Contributions to Science: The Life Work of Johannes Karwafodi". New West Indian Guide. 97 (1–2): 55, 57. Retrieved 6 September 2025.
- ^ The Journal of Caribbean History Volumes 17-19. St. Lawrence, Barbados: Caribbean Universities Press. 1982. p. 138. Retrieved 6 September 2025.
- ^ Twedell, Louise (3 October 2006). "Sculptor's trip shaped by fate". This Is London. Retrieved 8 September 2012.
Lokono
View on GrokipediaEtymology and Identity
Origins of the Name
The self-designation Lokono derives from the singular form loko, denoting a person, human being, Amerindian, or specifically a member of the Arawak/Lokono group, with the plural lokono extending to "people" or "the people" in reference to the ethnic collective.[8] This autonym, rooted in the group's Arawakan language, underscores an internal identity tied to humanity and indigeneity, as evidenced in linguistic documentation from mid-20th-century fieldwork.[8] The term also appears in Lokono dian, the language's own name meaning "people's talk" or the speech of the indigenous persons.[9] In contrast, "Arawak" functions as an exonym originating from European colonial encounters, first applied in the early 16th century to coastal populations in the Guianas (present-day Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, and Venezuela) during initial Spanish and Portuguese explorations.[8] This label encompassed a wider linguistic family rather than the precise Lokono subgroup, potentially deriving from terms like Aruacay (a place name) or harho (manioc, implying "manioc eaters").[8] Lokono communities have increasingly rejected "Arawak" as an external imposition post-dating Christopher Columbus's 1492 voyages, favoring their endonym to affirm autochthonous self-perception.[8] Historical European records from the 16th to 19th centuries reflect inconsistent nomenclature by colonizers: Dutch accounts, such as those from Guiana settlements, often employed "Arawak" interchangeably for Lokono groups while engaging them in trade and labor; British sources in Berbice (17th century) similarly grouped them under this broad term; and French documentation in Cayenne maintained the label amid alliances against rival powers.[8] These variations stemmed from limited ethnographic precision, conflating distinct subgroups within the Arawakan family based on shared linguistic traits observed in early contacts.[8]Distinctions from Broader Arawak Groups
The Lokono constitute a coastal subgroup within the Northern Arawakan branch of the Arawakan language family, characterized by settlement patterns in the peri-coastal zones of the Guianas, including Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana, which facilitated Tropical Forest agriculture and trade via river and sea routes.[8] In contrast, inland Arawak groups, such as those in the Amazon basin associated with Southern Arawakan languages, adapted to more remote, smaller-scale villages in dense forest-riverine environments, reflecting divergent ecological pressures rather than a uniform cultural continuum.[10] Archaeological associations link Lokono specifically to the Aristé ceramic tradition, dated to approximately 1760 ± 45 BP in French Guiana, with features like secondary urn burials distinguishing these sites from broader Arawakan manifestations elsewhere.[11] Linguistically, Lokono dialects form part of the Caribbean clade alongside languages like Palikúr, exhibiting closer lexical and structural ties to the extinct Taíno of the Caribbean islands—such as shared canoe-based dispersal vocabularies—than to inland or southern Arawakan variants, which display greater phonological and morphological divergence.[8][11] This positioning underscores localized phonetic innovations and syntax adapted to coastal interactions, evidenced by historical lexicons documenting 45 related but distinct Arawakan tongues.[8] However, classifications remain contested, with scholars debating the lumping of diverse Northern and Southern branches under expansive "Arawak" labels versus splitting into subgroups like Lokono, where nomenclature preferences—favoring the autochthonous "Lokono" (meaning "person" or "human") over the exonym "Arawak"—highlight identity-based resistance to pan-Arawakan homogenization.[8][10] Empirical data from trade artifacts, such as green stones and gold plates in Lower Orinoco networks, further delineate Lokono adaptations from island Arawak (e.g., Taíno hierarchical systems with advanced cassava gridders) or inland groups' less centralized economies, prioritizing evidence of regional specificity over unsubstantiated narratives of cultural uniformity across the family.[8] Phylogenetic calibrations using such archaeological markers reject overly broad origins, instead supporting clade-specific ethnogenesis tied to Guianese lowlands post-Orinoco migrations around 2000–1500 BP.[11] These distinctions emphasize causal environmental and migratory factors shaping subgroup divergence, rather than assuming inherent Arawakan cohesion.[8]Geographic Distribution and Demographics
Historical Range
The Lokono, a subgroup of the Arawak-speaking peoples, maintained pre-colonial territories primarily along the coastal and riverine zones of northeastern South America, encompassing modern-day Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, and northern Venezuela. Archaeological investigations along Guyana's Berbice River have uncovered village sites with material culture indicative of Lokono occupation, including habitation mounds and associated artifacts dating to the late pre-colonial period, demonstrating sustained settlement in these lowland environments.[12][13] Ethnohistorical accounts and colonial-era mappings confirm concentrations in coastal lowlands and major river valleys, such as those of the Essequibo, Berbice, and Courantyne in Guyana and Suriname, as well as the Oyapock in French Guiana and Orinoco tributaries in Venezuela. These distributions aligned with ecological niches suitable for raised-field agriculture and fishing, as evidenced by site distributions avoiding interior highlands. Pottery styles, including incised and zoned-decorated wares, link Lokono material culture to broader Arawak traditions, with parallels found in northern Venezuelan sites suggesting interconnected riverine networks.[8][14] Archaeological correlations extend to peripheral outposts in the Lesser Antilles, where shared ceramic motifs and crop residue profiles—such as manioc processing tools—indicate episodic Lokono or proto-Lokono expansions or exchanges reaching Barbados and nearby islands by the late Ceramic Age (circa 1000–1500 CE). Colonial censuses from the 17th–18th centuries, including Dutch records in Suriname and Guyana, estimated Lokono populations in the low thousands within these core zones, reflecting pre-contact densities before depopulation from disease and conflict.[11][15]Contemporary Populations and Settlements
Estimates place the contemporary Lokono population at approximately 16,000 individuals, with the majority residing in Guyana and smaller numbers in Suriname and French Guiana.[16] In Guyana, Lokono communities number around 10,000 to 15,000, concentrated in coastal and riverine areas such as the Pomeroon-Supenaam region.[1] Key settlements include Wakapau village, comprising Arawak-speaking Lokono families across 20 islands along the Wakapau River, and Pakuri (also known as St. Cuthbert's Mission), home to about 1,700 Lokono.[17][5] In Suriname, Lokono account for an estimated 2,000 to 2,500 people, forming part of the 20,344 indigenous individuals recorded in the 2012 census.[18][19] They inhabit northern lowland villages, including Tapoeripa, Post Utrecht, and Cupido, where they maintain traditional livelihoods alongside broader Surinamese society.[20] In French Guiana, around 1,600 Lokono live, primarily in the settlement of Sainte-Rose-de-Lima, the largest such community, established through mid-20th-century migrations from Suriname.[15] Lokono populations exhibit significant intermarriage with Afro-descendants and other groups, resulting in mixed ancestries that are generally accepted within Lokono communities as part of their ethnic identity.[2] This pattern has contributed to assimilation trends, with many individuals integrating into urban or multicultural settings while retaining communal ties in rural villages.[2]History
Pre-Columbian Settlement and Society
Archaeological evidence from the Berbice River region in Guyana indicates that Lokono ancestors, as part of broader Arawak expansions, established semi-permanent settlements along coastal and fluvial zones by approximately 1000 BCE, transitioning from mobile foraging to sedentism driven by agricultural intensification.[21] Slash-and-burn cultivation of root crops like cassava (manioc), adapted from Amazonian origins dating to around 7000 BP, provided a reliable starch source suited to nutrient-poor tropical soils, yielding surpluses that supported population densities of 10-20 individuals per hectare in village clusters.[22] Maize, introduced via Mesoamerican diffusion pathways around 1000 BCE, and sweet potatoes, domesticated in Andean-South American zones by 5000 BP, complemented these systems, enabling field rotation cycles of 3-5 years that minimized soil depletion and fostered stable communities rather than nomadic patterns.[23] Village layouts, reconstructed from midden deposits and posthole patterns at sites like those in the middle Berbice, reveal circular or rectangular house arrangements housing extended kin groups of 50-200 people, with central plazas suggesting ritual or communal functions that reinforced social cohesion.[13] These polities exhibited hierarchical elements inferred from differential artifact distributions—such as prestige goods like polished stone tools and ceramic variability—indicating emergent elites who coordinated labor for crop processing and defense, a causal outcome of surplus agriculture allowing specialization beyond subsistence. Matrilineal kinship, evidenced indirectly through post-contact continuities and comparative Arawak ethnography, likely structured inheritance and residence, with descent traced through female lines to maintain resource access in matrilocal households.[24] Inter-settlement trade networks, traced via exchanged lithics and exotic botanicals along the Guianas' riverine corridors, facilitated the flow of tobacco (a ritual stimulant cultivated in upland plots) and proto-pineapple varieties from interior Amazonian sources, integrating Lokono groups into regional exchange spheres that enhanced dietary diversity and technological diffusion without necessitating large-scale coercion.[25] This connectivity, spanning hundreds of kilometers, underscores how agricultural sedentism not only anchored populations but also amplified economic interdependence, as evidenced by uniform ceramic styles across sites, promoting cultural uniformity amid ecological variability.[11]European Contact and Colonial Period
The Lokono encountered Europeans primarily through Dutch traders and settlers in the Guianas beginning in the late 16th century, with the Dutch West India Company establishing a trading post on the Essequibo River by 1616.) Early interactions involved barter exchanges, where Lokono supplied large quantities of manioc flour—capable of being transported in canoes carrying thousands of tons—to Dutch outposts, alongside cotton, tobacco, and other local products, in return for iron tools, cloth, and beads.[16] This trade highlighted Lokono agricultural expertise, including the processing of cassava into durable flour, which supported European expeditions and nascent colonies.[12] Strategic alliances formed between the Lokono and Dutch against aggressive Carib (Kali'na) groups, with Lokono providing military auxiliaries, intelligence, and logistical support in raids and defenses during the 17th century.[26] These partnerships enabled the Lokono to secure firearms and territorial advantages, exercising agency amid colonial encroachment, though they also entangled communities in inter-ethnic conflicts amplified by European rivalries. In Barbados, English captain Henry Powell's 1627 expedition recruited a Lokono family from the Essequibo region to instruct settlers in cultivating tropical staples like cassava, maize, and sweet potatoes, facilitating the island's shift to plantation agriculture.[27] Contact precipitated severe demographic collapses, driven by Old World pathogens including smallpox, measles, and influenza, to which the Lokono lacked immunity; combined with enslavement, warfare, and disrupted food systems, these factors caused population reductions exceeding 90% among indigenous peoples of the Americas, including Guianan groups, from 1492 to the mid-17th century.[28] Enslavement targeted Lokono for labor in Dutch and later British plantations, with captives shipped to Caribbean islands; in Barbados, expanding English sugar estates by the 1660s displaced and marginalized remnant Arawak communities, including Lokono descendants, forcing assimilation into coerced workforces or relocation.[29] Colonial subjugation intensified through missionary efforts and plantation economies, as Dutch authorities and later Moravian missionaries from the 1730s onward established settlements that concentrated Lokono populations, eroding traditional autonomy while imposing Christianity and wage labor.[2] Despite these pressures, Lokono leveraged alliances to negotiate limited protections and trade concessions into the early 18th century, though overall losses from disease and exploitation dwarfed gains in agency.[30]Post-Colonial Adaptations and 20th-Century Changes
Following the abolition of slavery in British Guiana in 1834, Lokono communities shifted toward wage labor opportunities under colonial administration, including work on sugar estates and in the mahogany industry, which had employed Arawak groups as early as the 1820s.[31][21] In Dutch Suriname, Lokono similarly participated in colonial fishing and salting operations along coastal areas, supplementing subsistence with cash-based activities.[2] By the 20th century, Lokono economies diversified further through sales of fish and lumber, alongside seasonal migrant labor to urban centers and plantations, reducing reliance on traditional swidden farming amid growing cash needs.[2][31] Post-World War II economic strains, including inflation and commodity price fluctuations in Guyana and Suriname, accelerated this transition, with many Lokono men seeking off-reservation employment while women maintained household agriculture.[31] Intermarriage with Afro-descended populations became common in coastal Guyana, where Lokono communities integrated into broader Creole societies; offspring of such unions retained Amerindian legal and cultural status under colonial and early national policies.[2] This pattern contributed to partial assimilation, particularly in Suriname and Guyana, where Lokono adopted elements of national economies and Creole kinship norms without fully abandoning ethnic identity.[2]Language
Classification and Features
Lokono belongs to the Northern branch of the Arawakan (Maipurean) language family, specifically the Eastern Northern subgroup, and is spoken primarily in Suriname and Guyana.[9][32] It shares ancestral ties with other Northern Arawakan varieties like Taíno but differs in phonology, such as through historical sound shifts (e.g., Taíno retention of /b/ in words like guanábana 'soursop' contrasting with Lokono developments) and lexical specifics.[33] The language displays agglutinative morphology, building words through sequential affixes for categories like possession (e.g., prefix da- 'my'), tense-aspect-mood (e.g., suffix -ka perfective), and subordination (e.g., -n). Syntactically, it is predominantly head-initial with subject-verb-object order in eventive clauses, postpositions for locatives, and right-branching structure where noun modifiers precede heads except for complex relatives.[9][34] Phonology includes 17 consonants (stops like /p/, /t/, /k/; nasals /m/, /n/; fricatives /s/, /h/; aspirates like /kʰ/), five vowels (/i/, /e/, /a/, /o/, /y/), penultimate stress, vowel harmony, palatalization (e.g., /d/ to [dʒ] before /i/), syllable-final nasalization, and contrastive tone (e.g., kháli vs. khàle).[9] Lexical items often encode environmental and subsistence realities, with vocabulary samples documented in missionary records and modern grammars. Historical efforts include Theodor Schulz's 1803 German-Lokono dictionary compiled during Moravian missionary work.[35] Examples include:| Category | Lokono Term | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Kinship | ithi | father |
| Kinship | ojo | mother |
| Kinship | ibili | child |
| Kinship | da-thi | my father |
| Subsistence | khali | cassava |
| Subsistence | jokhan | hunt |
| Subsistence | hime | fish |
| Subsistence | khin | eat |
