The
Baja California Peninsula is located in the northwestern portion of the
Mexican Republic. This body of land extends approximately 775 miles (1,250
kilometers) from Tijuana in the north to Cabo San Lucas in the south and
is separated from the rest of Mexico by the Gulf of California (also
called the sea of Cortés).
Occupying the northern half of the peninsula, the state of Baja California
shares its northern boundary with two American states, California and
Arizona, and is also bordered on its northeast by the Mexican state of
Sonora. On its western flank, the state also shares a long coastline with
the Pacific Ocean.
Baja California
occupies a total area of 69,921 square kilometers (26,990 square miles),
which makes up 3.7% of Mexico’s national territory. On Baja California’s
southern border is another Mexican state, Baja California Sur, which
occupies a total area of 71,428 square kilometers (25,751 square miles),
taking up 3.7% of the national territory.
The story of the
indigenous peoples of the Baja Peninsula is a sad one. Living in an arid
environment, their susceptibility to the ravages of war and disease was
accentuated by their already marginal existence. The vast majority of the
Baja Indians have disappeared and those that have survived in the north
are represented by as few as a dozen individuals or as many as a few
hundred. Ironically, most of the Mexican indigenous languages spoken in
the two Bajas are actually tongues brought to the Peninsula by migrant
workers from other states, in particular Oaxaca.
Early Contacts
Between Spaniards and Indigenous Inhabitants
In 1532 – a decade
after the destruction of the Aztec Empire – the Spanish conqueror Hernán
Cortés sent an expedition commanded by his cousin, Diego Hurtado de
Mendoza, to explore the Baja California Peninsula and other locations
along the Pacific coastline of northwest México. A second expedition to
the area left Santiago, Colima, on October 29, 1533. The voyage was a
disastrous failure, but mutineers from this expedition explored the area
now called La Paz.
In April 1535, Cortés
himself led a third expedition of three ships that landed near present-day
La Paz on May 3, 1535, where he
formally took possession of the land for the King of Spain. Cortés founded
a small colony in the area, but the local Indians remained very hostile
towards the visitors. By November 1535, more than 70 of Cortés’ men had
died from starvation or skirmishes with the indigenous population.
Early in 1536, Cortés
posted 30 Spaniards to man the small colony and sailed back for Mexico. A
fourth expedition led by Francisco de Ulloa in June 1539 found that the
small colony had been destroyed. Other expeditions followed, but they
frequently encountered large groups of natives who strongly resisted their
intrusions. For this reason, the colonization and settlement of the Baja
Peninsula was a very slow process,
complicated by the hostility of the indigenous groups and the great
distance from sources of supply, as well as by inhospitable weather
conditions.
Indigenous Groups
at Contact
At the time of
contact, Baja California Norte was primarily inhabited by several
indigenous groups belonging to the Yuman language branch of the Hokan
linguistic family. Most of these early inhabitants lived by hunting and
fishing, but some of them also gathered acorns, seeds, prickly pears,
apples, pine nuts and other small edible plants found in the harsh desert
environment.
The northernmost
aboriginal Baja Californians spoke several closely-related Yuman
languages, most notably the Kiliwa, Paipai, Kumeyaay (Kumiai), and Cocopá
(Cucapá) tongues. Using the controversial technique of glottochronology,
it has been estimated that the initial separation of the Yuman family into
different languages occurred perhaps 2,500 years ago. The Cocopá and
Kumiai languages are believed to be very closely related to each other,
separated by perhaps about one thousand years of independent development.
Pai Pai
The Pai Pai Indians –
also known as Akwa'ala – occupied the northern Sierras in the interior of
the northern Baja California Peninsula. Their original territory included
the lower Colorado River Valley in the present day municipios of Ensenada
and Mexicali, as well as adjacent areas in western Arizona, southern
California, and northwestern Sonora.
Kumeyaay (Kumiai)
The Kumiai (Kumeyaay)
Indians were hunters, gatherers and fishers who inhabited coastal, inland
valley, and mountain regions along the present-day Baja California border
region with the United States. The traditional Kumeyaay territory
originally extended from around Escondido in California to the northern
part of the present day municipio of Ensenada. Occupying the southern
section of present-day San Diego County in California, the Kumeyaay
inhabited the region near the San Diego Presidio when it was founded in
1769. The Kumeyaay in the vicinity of San Diego were also referred to as
the Diegueño by the Spaniards.
Cochimí
The Cochimí Indians
inhabited a considerable part of the central Baja
Peninsula, from north of Rosario to
the vicinity of Loreto in east central Baja California. Like many of the
other Baja tribes, the Cochimí Indians survived by fishing in the coastal
areas and gathering fruits and seeds for sustenance in other areas.
Cucapás (Cocopá)
The Cucapás, living
in the desert region along the Colorado River in the frontier zone of Baja
California Norte and Sonora, fished and hunted deer, rabbit, moles,
mountain lion and coyote. They also collected a wide variety of desert
products, including cactus flowers, potatoes, and wild wheat.
Kiliwa
The Kiliwa Indians
were hunters who inhabited northeastern Baja California. The Kiliwa lived
along the eastern slope of the Sierra San Pedro Mártir and ranged down the
Gulf
Coast. Their habitat also extended into
the Colorado Desert.
Guaycura (Guaicura
or Waicuri)
The Guaycuras lived
in the middle part of the lower Baja peninsula, inhabiting the Magdalena
Plains from Loreto down to and including the La Paz area.
Pericú
The Pericú occupied
the southern tip of the peninsula around San José del Cabo and several
large Gulf islands, including Cerralvo, Espíritu Santo, San José, and
Santa Catalina.
The Colonization
of Baja California Sur
In 1596, King Felipe
II of Spain ordered the colonization of the Baja California Peninsula.
Six years later, Sebastián Vizcaíno made his famous voyage to Baja,
exploring the present-day site of Cabo San Lucas, where he was confronted
by a force of 800 native warriors. Vizcaíno managed to build a fort at La
Paz, but after a skirmish with local natives, the post had to be abandoned
by the Spaniards.
In 1683, Admiral
Isidro Atondo y Antillón led a state-sponsored expedition to Baja and
established a settlement at La Paz. However, according to Mr. Laylander,
the settlement “was abandoned after a few months because of escalating
conflicts with the native inhabitants.” Another post was established at
San Bruno, north of Loreto, but was also abandoned in 1685 “because of
meager local resources and uncertain outside supplies.”
In October 1697,
Jesuit missionaries started arriving in the southern Baja peninsula with
the intention of establishing missions. On October 19, 1697, Father Juan
María de Salvatierra established the first permanent mission in Baja
California Sur, dedicating it with the name of Our Lady of Loreto de
Concho, near present-day Loreto, Baja California
Sur.
Between 1697 and 1767, Jesuit missionaries would establish sixteen
missions throughout the length of the
Baja
Peninsula.
The Jesuit missions
played an integral role in the Christianizing of the indigenous peoples.
However, to accomplish their objectives, the missionaries resettled and
congregated many of their converts in rancherías that were located close
to the missions. Although this practice was effective in enforcing
religious instruction, tribute collection, and the organization of a work
force, the concentration of the natives had a devastating effect on the
aboriginal groups and made them more susceptible to smallpox, typhus,
measles and other infectious diseases.
Don Laylander, in
“The Linguistic Prehistory of Baja California,” has written that “the
linguistic map of Baja California underwent dramatic changes during the
historic period, culminating in the extinction of many of its aboriginal
languages. Before extinction, prehistoric lifeways were altered in a
myriad of ways, through such factors as externally-introduced epidemic
diseases, military conflicts, and the relocation of populations to mission
settlements.” The most serious epidemic was the typhus epidemic of
1742-1744, which probably killed 8,000 Indians. During the following
decades, entire tribes disappeared, while small bands of Pericú, Guaycura,
and Cochimí – struggled to survive in the south.
The Revolts of
1734-1744
The most serious
rebellion in the southern part of the Baja
Peninsula took place in 1734-1737.
This uprising of the Pericú and Guaycuras engulfed several missions in the
southern part of the peninsula, most of which had to be abandoned. In
January 1735, indigenous forces ambushed the Manila Galleon that had
stopped at San José del Cabo for supplies. “The revolt and its subsequent
suppression,” according to Don Laylander, “hastened the disorganization
and declines of the southern aboriginal groups.
To suppress the
revolt, the Jesuits were forced to call in outside military assistance.”
In 1742, King Felipe V authorized the use of royal funds to suppress the
revolt. The arrival of a military force from Sinaloa helped to restore
order and reestablish control of the southern Baja lands. The last
scattered resistance to the Spaniards did not end until 1744.
The Expulsion of
the Jesuits
In June 1767, King
Carlos III of Spain expelled all the Jesuit missionaries from México.
Eventually, the Dominicans continued the missionary efforts of the
Jesuits, especially in the territories of the Cochimí, Kiliwa, Paipai, and
Kumeyaay. However, by this time, southern Baja’s indigenous populations
had declined to the point of no return. Don Laylander explains that “in
the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the role of aboriginal peoples in
the peninsula’s history has become increasingly marginal. In the central
and southern portions of the peninsula, culturally distinct aboriginal
populations had disappeared before 1900.”
The Kiliwa were one
of the few Baja groups that was able to hang on, albeit precariously. In
1840, the Kiliwa, who lived in Baja’s northeast corner, successfully
rebelled against the Dominicans and fled into quiet isolation. This
seclusion enabled the Kiliwa to survive into the Twentieth Century. In
1938, University of California
Berkeley anthropologist, Peveril
Meigs, searched the entire Baja
Peninsula for surviving bands. At
that time, he located and did studies on a small band of about fifty
Kiliwa living in the east-facing canyons of northern Baja’s mountains.
Political
Chronology
In January 1824,
after the Mexican Republic was constituted, the central government
organized and oversaw the Territory of
Baja.
Twenty four years later, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo – which ended the
Mexican-American War – divided the territory of
California,
with the northern half, called Alta
California, being ceded to the United States, while the southern half
remained with Mexico as Baja California.
On April 26, 1850,
two partidos (secondary administrative divisions) were created as Baja
California Norte and Baja California Sur. On December 14, 1887, the
status of both partidos was changed to distritos (districts), and on
January 1, 1888, the northern part of the peninsula became known as the
Northern District of Baja California. On December 30, 1930, the separate
territories of Baja California Norte and Baja California Sur were created,
effective February 7, 1931. The northern territory became a state on
January 16, 1952, while the southern Baja
State achieved statehood on October
24, 1974.
Indigenous Groups
of the Twentieth Century
By the end of the
Nineteenth Century, the aboriginal population of the entire Baja
Peninsula had been severely
depleted. Up until the 1910 census, the population statistics for Baja
California Sur and Baja California Norte were tallied together as one
jurisdiction. According to the 1895 Mexican census, some 2,150 individuals
spoke indigenous languages in Baja California. However, this tally dropped
to 1,111 at the time of the 1900 census.
The indigenous
speaking population for the Baja territories dropped further in 1910 to
711, representing only 1.36% of the total population. Although most of the
indigenous speakers spoke languages indigenous to other states, 96 Cochimí
speakers were counted. Yaqui-speaking individuals (primarily from the
state of Sonora) were tallied at 65, while Otomí speakers from central
México numbered 40.
The 2000 Census
According to the 2000
census, the population of persons five years of age and more in the
northern state of Baja California who spoke indigenous languages amounted
to 37,685 individuals. These individuals spoke at least forty-five
languages from Mexico and United States but represented only 1.87% of the
total state population 5 years of age and older (2,010,869).
Interestingly, the
great majority of the indigenous-speakers in Baja California Norte in 2000
were actually transplants from other parts of the Mexican Republic. The
largest language groups represented were the Mixteco (11,962 speakers),
Zapoteco (2,987), Náhuatl (2,165), and Purépecha (2,097), and Triqui
(1,437), all languages that are indigenous to other parts of the Mexican
Republic.
Transplanted
Languages
As a matter of fact,
2000 census statistics indicate that 1,025,754 of the 2,487,367 residents
of Baja California Norte were, in fact, natives of other entities,
representing a total migrant population of 41.2%. In the 2000 census,
41,014 persons in Baja claimed Oaxaca as their birthplace, and it is
likely that most of the 11,962 Mixtecos and 2,987 Zapotecos living in the
state were probably natives of that state. Already, in the 1970s, Baja had
become a major zone of attraction for Mixtec farm laborers, with Ensenada
and Tijuana as their primary destination points. Baja California growers
almost exclusively recruited Oaxacans laborers for their agricultural
labor needs. An additional 89,083 residents of Baja claimed Michoacán de
Ocampo as their birthplace, possibly explaining the substantial number of
Purépecha-speaking individuals living in the state (2,097).
Native Baja
California Tribes in 2000
Unfortunately, the
Indian groups indigenous specifically to Baja California never recovered
from their initial declines of the Seventeenth Century and are few in
number. The primary native speakers of indigenous languages in Baja
California Norte in the 2000 census were the Pai-Pai (193 speakers);
Kumiai (159); Cucapá (82); Cochimí (80), and Kiliwa (46 people). All of
these tribes were of the Yuman Linguistic family whose ancestors had
probably migrated to the Baja
Peninsula thousands of years
earlier.
The Pai Pai, living
in the Santa Catarina community of the Ensenada municipio in the north,
had become bilingual and concerns have been expressed that their language
is nearly dead.
Estimates of the
Kumiai population in Mexico
at the end of the Twentieth Century put their numbers at 600. However, by
2000, the Mexican census recorded only 159 persons five years of age and
older who actually spoke the Kumiai language in the state and all but 13
of these also spoke Spanish and were thus bilingual. Most of the Kumiai
lived near Tecate.
The Cochimí culture –
located primarily in the central and southern parts of Baja California –
also declined dramatically by beginning of the Nineteenth Century. By
2000, only 80 Cochimí speakers were registered as inhabitants of the
northern Baja state, most of them living in the municipios of Ensenada,
Mexicali,
and Tecate. In the 2000 census, only 46 persons were classified as
speakers of the Kiliwa language. Readers who are interested in studying
more detailed information about the nearly extinct indigenous languages of
Baja California can learn more by accessing the Ethnologue website at the
following link:
http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=MX
Indigenous
Speakers of Baja California Sur
In the 2000 census,
the government classified 5,353 inhabitants 5 years of age or more as
speakers of more than fifty Indian languages. However, these indigenous
speakers represented a mere 0.22% of the total population of the same age
group. The primary groups were the Mixteco (1,955), Náhuatl (987),
Zapoteco (606), and Amuzgo (126), Trique (113), and Purépecha (106), all
imports from the Mexican states of Oaxaca, Michoacán and Guerrero.
Oaxaca Migrants
In the same census,
it was reported that 137,928 of the residents of Baja Sur (out of the
total population of 424,041) were born in other political entities,
indicating that migrants represented 32.5% of the total population of the
state. Today, the Mixteco and Zapoteco Indians are the only significant
indigenous languages spoken in Baja California Sur. It is likely that most
of the 1,955 Mixtecos and 606 Zapotecos living in Baja were probably born
in Oaxaca. In the 2000 census, 8,083 persons in Baja Sur claimed Oaxaca
as their birthplace, while another 8,564 listed Michoacán as their
birthplace, the original home of the Purépecha language.
The use of Oaxacan
migrant labor in Baja California Sur has been a well-established practice
since the 1970s. For more than thirty years, many Baja California growers
have recruited Oaxacans almost exclusively, with La Paz as a major
destination for most Mixteco laborers.
Copyright © 2007, by John P. Schmal. All Rights
Reserved.
Sources:
Homer Aschmann, “The
Central Desert of Baja California: Demography and Ecology,” Ibero-Americana
42 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1959).
Don Laylander, “The
Linguistic Prehistory of Baja California,” in Gary S. Breschini and Trudy
Haversat, “Contributions to the Linguistic Prehistory of Central and Baja
California,” Archives of California Prehistory Number 44 (Salinas,
California: Coyote Press, 1997).
William C. Massey,
“Tribes and Languages of Baja California,” Southwestern Journal of
Anthropology, V (Autumn 1949): 272-307.
William C. Massey,
“Brief Report on Archaeological Investigations in Baja California,”
Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, III (Winter 1947): 344-359.
Peveril Meigs, “The
Kiliwa Indians of Lower California,” Ibero-Americana, 15 (Berkeley,
California: University of California, 1939).