VICENTE,M.F.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/6592246401730315; VICENTE, Marcos Felipe.
Résumé:
The late occupation of the hinterlands of the captaincy of northern Portuguese colony in
America would make the seventeenth century one of the periods of greatest violence in
Brazil's history. The meeting of the settlers with the multiplicity of languages and
peoples who inhabited that lands, in contrast to the relative cultural homogeneity of
Tupi, on the coast, has with these people were generically called “Tapuia”. Among them
was Paiaku ethnicity, always considered a serious obstacle to the effective occupation of
the captaincy of Ceará. Were these natives who would become the main characters of
the conflicts in the Jaguaribe river, presenting a wide range of interests and actions
against the colonizing project. This work seeks therefore to examine the different
agencies of ethnic Paiaku before the colonization of the captaincy of Ceará, in different
moments of its evolution. Is valued, in this analysis, the installation of missionary
villages and conflicts resulting from this process.