URI(s)
- http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85149664
- http://id.loc.gov/authorities/sh85149664#concept
Variants
- Be'ena'a Indians
- Ben 'Zaa Indians
- Binii Gula'sa' Indians
- Didxažon̳ Indians
- Tsapotecatl Indians
- Za Indians
- Zapoteca Indians
- Zapoteco Indians
Broader Terms
Narrower Terms
Related Terms
Closely Matching Concepts from Other Schemes
Broader Concepts from Other Schemes
- Zapotec Indians--Diseases
- Zapotec Indians--Economic conditions
- Zapotec Indians--Government relations
- Zapotec Indians--Kings and rulers
- Zapotec Indians--Land tenure
- Zapotec Indians--Legal status, laws, etc
- Zapotec Indians--Medicine
- Zapotec Indians--Migrations
- Zapotec Indians--Politics and government
- Zapotec Indians--Religion
- Zapotec Indians--Rites and ceremonies
- Zapotec Indians--Social conditions
- Zapotec Indians--Social life and customs
Sources
- found: Ethnologue:pp. 17-18 (Zapoteco)
- found: Murdock world cult.:p. 128 (Chatino)
- found: Swanton Ind. tribes:p. 624.
- found: Voegelin lang.p. 357 (Zapotec (Zapoteco) (Chatino and Zapotec are related))
- found: Enciclopedia de México, 1998(Zapotecas; los zapotecas)
- found: Wikipedia, June 22, 2016:Zapotec peoples (The Zapotecs (Zoogocho Zapotec: Didxažon̳ [note: the "n̳" in "Didxažon̳" appears as the International Phonetic Alphabet symbol for velar nasal]) are an indigenous people of Mexico. The population is concentrated in the southern state of Oaxaca, but Zapotec communities exist in neighboring states, as well The Zapotecs call themselves Be'ena'a, which means "The People")
- found: Ethnologue, via WWW, June 22, 2016(Zapotec. A macrolanguage of Mexico. ISO 639-3: zap.
LC Classification
- F1219.8.Z37
- F1221.Z3
Instance Of
Scheme Membership(s)
Collection Membership(s)
Change Notes
- 1986-02-11: new
- 2016-09-09: revised
Alternate Formats