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Botocudo

The term Botocudo is used to describe multiple unrelated societies that resisted Portuguese colonialism in present-day Brazil and retained the practice of wearing wooden ear and lip plugs (Skoggard, 2020:1). This entry focuses on ethnographic evidence that reconstructs the life of the Naknenuk subtribe of the Krén, a Botocudo group inhabiting the upper
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Two new species of Botocudo from vertical rock faces in Indonesia (Hemiptera: Lygaeidae)

1987
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
Slater, J A, Polhemus, D A
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Uncertain Refuge: Frontier Formation and the Origins of the Botocudo War in Late Colonial Brazil

Hispanic American Historical Review, 2002
Deans-Smith, Judy Bieber, John M. Monteiro, Kerry J. Reynolds, and the HAHR’s anonymous reviewers, all of whom offered incisive commentaries on earlier versions of this article. Hendrik Kraay, Maria Leonia Chaves de Resende, and Laura de Mello e Souza shared valuable sources. The University of North Carolina at Wilmington, University of Texas at Austin,
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A Note on the Last Botocudo Language

International Journal of American Linguistics, 1985
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