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Xingu: Contacts


Timeline

c. 800

Beginnings of habitation in the Upper Xingu in what is today the state of Mato Grosso by peoples of the Arawak linguistic family.

c.1250

Increased population density, with peoples of the Arawak (Mehinako and Waujá) and Karib language families (Kuikuro, Kalapalo, Nafukuá and Matipu). Archaeological studies suggest the existence during this period of large settlements interconnected by roadways, with practice of agriculture, canals and bridges, and protected by defensive fortifications.

c. 1650

Other peoples arrive in the region such as the Kamaiurá and Aweti (of the Tupi language group), Yawalapiti and Trumai.

c. 1720

The gold rush in Mato Grosso attracts prospectors who kidnap and enslave indigenous peoples in the Xingu.

1884

First expedition led by German ethnologist Karl von den Steinen arrives in Bakairi communities. They encounter the Trumai who flee in fear of gunshots, and some Khisêtje people.

1887

Von den Steinen’s second expedition reaches people of the Nafukuá, Kuikuro, Mehinako, Aweti, Waujá, Yawalapiti, Kamaiurá and Trumai peoples. Member of the team, Paul Ehrenreich takes the first known photographs of the Xingu.

1896

Expedition of German anthropologist Hermann Meyer.

1899

Meyer’s second expedition, with ethnologist Theodor Koch-Grünberg.

1900

German ethnologist Max Schmidt observes that the Bakairi are travelling away from the Upper Xingu to obtain industrialized goods from farms. Contact with non-indigenous people spreads flu and measles, reducing the population considerably.

1910

Creation of the Serviço de Proteção ao Índio (SPI) [Service for the Protection of Indians], directed by Marshal Cândido Rondon. Leading the commission that installed electricity lines throughout the interior of the country from 1907, Rondon defended the integration of indigenous peoples, following the motto “Die if need be. Never kill.”

1924

Rondon Commission arrives in the Upper Xingu. Cinematographer for the expedition, Major Thomaz Reis captures the first moving images in the region.

People of the Kuikuro, Kalapalo, Matipu and Nafukuá start going with increasing frequency to the Simão Lopes post where the Bakairi had lived in order to obtain goods. On these journeys Narru Kuikuro learns the Portuguese language.

1925

English Colonel Percy Fawcett disappears in the Xingu while searching for a supposed lost civilization in the region.

1943

Getúlio Vargas creates the Expedição Roncador-Xingu (ERX) [Roncador-Xingu Expedition] and the Fundação Brasil Central (FBC) [Central Brazil Foundation], as part of a plan to occupy the country’s interior, known as the March to the West. Brothers Orlando, Cláudio and Leonardo Villas Bôas join the expedition, which leaves in August from Uberlândia, Minas Gerais.

1944-45

SPI expeditions produce newsreels about the Upper Xingu. At this time, major epidemics break out causing many deaths among local people.

1945

ERX crosses the Mortes River and makes the first contact with the Xavante.

1946

ERX arrives in the Upper Xingu and contacts the Kalapalo, Trumai, Kuikuro, Yawalapiti, Nafukuá and Matipu.

1947

Contact with the Kamaiurá.

1949

Orlando Villas Bôas takes on leadership of the ERX. Contact with the Kawaiweté.

1952

Commission presents a call for the creation of the Xingu National Park to the federal government. The document is written by Darcy Ribeiro and approved by Rondon.

1953

Contact with the Mẽtyktire (Kayapó).

1954

President Getúlio Vargas visits the Xingu to inaugurate the Cachimbo Base, of the Brazilian Air Force.

The Captain Vasconcelos Post is founded, the hub for SPI activity in the Upper Xingu.

SPI reveals that more than 6 million hectares of land protected by demarcation had been transferred to realtors.

1960

Contact with the Khisêtje.

1961

Decree from President Jânio Quadros establishes the Xingu National Park, later renamed Parque Indígena do Xingu (PIX) [Xingu Indigenous Park]. The demarcated area is ten times smaller than proposed in the original plans.

Leonardo Villas Bôas dies. The Captain Vasconcelos Post is renamed in his memory.

1964

Contact with the Ikpeng in the region of the Jatobá and Batovi rivers, tributaries of the Xingu River.

1966

The Ikpeng are transferred to the PIX when their ancestral land is invaded by miners.

1967

SPI is closed and replaced by the Fundação Nacional do Índio (Funai) [National Indian Foundation].

1968

Territorial area of the PIX is expanded.

1970

Plan for National Integration created by the dictatorship proposes the construction of Transamazonian, BR-80 and BR-163 highways.

Persecuted and afflicted by disease in their territory in Mato Grosso, the Tapayuna are relocated to the PIX.

1971

The BR-80 highway is opened. It cuts through the PIX leaving most of the Mẽtyktire territory outside of the demarcated area.

1973

First contact with the Panará.

The Statute of the Indian is enacted.

The first school for formal education in the PIX is created at the Leonard Post, with non-indigenous teachers.

1975

Panará are relocated to the PIX but do not adapt.

Agriculturalists found the cities of Canarana and Água Boa, Mato Grosso, to the south of the PIX.

1978

Timber merchants occupy the region that goes on to become the municipality of Feliz Natal, Mato Grosso, to the west of the PIX.

1979

Sale of urban and rural lots accelerates in the region that eventually becomes the city of Gaúcha do Norte, Mato Grosso, to the south of the PIX.

1983

Kawaiweté hijack a plane as a protest aimed at receiving better treatment from Funai.

Born in a Xavante community, Mário Juruna becomes the first indigenous person to be elected a federal deputy in Brazil.

1984

Led by Raoni, the Mẽtyktire protest for the demarcation of their territory, granted in the same year as Capoto/Jarina IT, in the state of Mato Grosso.

Nephew of Raoni, Megaron Txukahamãe is named director of PIX, the first indigenous person to take on the role.

1988

New Constitution is enacted with a chapter dedicated to indigenous rights: “Indians are recognized for their social organization, customs, languages, beliefs and traditions, and their original rights over the lands they traditionally occupy”.

1989

First Meeting of Indigenous Peoples of the Xingu takes place in Altamira, Pará, against the construction of the Belo Monte hydroelectric power station in the region of the Xingu River known as Volta Grande. The project has been planned since the dictatorship.

1994

The Associação Terra Indígena do Xingu (ATIX) [Indigenous Land Association of the Xingu] is founded. Representing the peoples that inhabit the territory, ATIX is responsible for territorial management, areas of transport, health and education, and economic and cultural projects.

1995

The Panará return to their traditional territory, approved as Panará IT, Pará and Mato Grosso.

1997

First audiovisual workshop for indigenous people as part of the Vídeo nas Aldeias project at the Diauarum Post, in the Xingu.

2001

The Khisêtje return to their traditional territory, approved as Wawi IT, Mato Grosso.

2004

Conflict as a result of the hydroelectric construction on the Culuene River.

2011

The Dilma Rousseff government reinitiates the Belo Monte hydroelectric project and construction begins at Volta Grande do Xingu.

2013

First meeting of the Rede Xingu+ in Altamira, with representatives from indigenous communities, riverine populations and institutions throughout the Xingu basin.

2015

First generation of high school graduates of the Ikpeng people with indigenous teachers.

2016

Belo Monte power station is inaugurated bringing devastation to the Xingu River and the region of Altamira.

Demarcation of the Pequizal of Naruvôtu which, together with the PIX and the Wawi and Batovi ITs, forms the Xingu Indigenous Territory (MT), with a population of more than 6 thousand people from 16 ethnicities.

2018

Jair Bolsonaro is elected president with the promise of paralyzing the demarcation of indigenous territories throughout Brazil.

2021

On the 60th anniversary of the first demarcation, the Xingu faces advancing deforestation in the Amazon, encouraged by the Bolsonaro government, while fires spread on an unprecedented scale fought by indigenous Ibama-trained firefighters.

2022

Elected president for the third time, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva commits to continuing the demarcation of indigenous territory and creates the Ministry of Indigenous Peoples.

2023

On the 1st of January, during Lula’s acceptance ceremony, indigenous leader Raoni climbs the ramp of the Palácio do Planalto with the president and seven other representatives from civil society.

Federal deputy Sonia Guajajara takes on the newly created role of Minister of Indigenous Peoples. Renamed the National Foundation of Indigenous Peoples, Funai is transferred to the new ministry and for the first time has an indigenous director, Joenia Wapichana.

2023

The Indian Museum is now known as the National Museum of Indigenous Peoples and has, for the first time, an indigenous director, Fernanda Kaingang.

2024

Inauguration of the Audiovisual Center, a Funai center linked to the National Museum of Indigenous Peoples in Goiânia (Goiás), created for the education of indigenous students and professionals throughout Brazil.