Maps of Totonakan
Mexico: Mesoamerican Languages (Public Content)
Mesoamerican Languages
Map Creator(s): Maunus
Source: Mesoamerican Languages. Wikimedia Commons.
Usage Notes/Copyright Status: GNU Free Documentation License
Date Created: 4-Jan-2007
Map Description:
Map showing the languages of Mesoamerican (Some smaller languages are missing, particularly the languages of the Mayan highlands and Oaxaca)
Source: Mesoamerican Languages. Wikimedia Commons.
Usage Notes/Copyright Status: GNU Free Documentation License
Date Created: 4-Jan-2007
Map Description:
Map showing the languages of Mesoamerican (Some smaller languages are missing, particularly the languages of the Mayan highlands and Oaxaca)
Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).
Totonakan in Contemporary Meso-America
Totonakan in Contemporary Meso-America
Map Creator:
The LINGUIST List
Data Sources:
The LINGUIST List. 2008. Totonacan: Composite 2008. The LINGUIST List MultiTree Language Database.
Kaufman, Terrence. 2007. Meso-America. In R. E. Asher & Christopher Moseley (eds.), Atlas of the World’s Languages. 57. Oxford: Routledge.
Date Created: Jun-2009.
Map Description:
The areas pictured display locations of where Totonakan languages are spoken today. Totonako speakers and Tepewa speakers number around 230,000 and 10,000 respectively, although the number of those who are dialectal speakers is unknown. (Asher, Moseley et al.).
This original map was made by vectorizing data from the MultiTree language database and the Altas of the World's Languages.
Other resources related to this project:
This folder (Contemporary Meso-American Languages) contains other maps showing linguistic subgroups and their time of contact. The maps may be overlaid on each other for a more complete picture.
Data Sources:
The LINGUIST List. 2008. Totonacan: Composite 2008. The LINGUIST List MultiTree Language Database.
Kaufman, Terrence. 2007. Meso-America. In R. E. Asher & Christopher Moseley (eds.), Atlas of the World’s Languages. 57. Oxford: Routledge.
Date Created: Jun-2009.
Map Description:
The areas pictured display locations of where Totonakan languages are spoken today. Totonako speakers and Tepewa speakers number around 230,000 and 10,000 respectively, although the number of those who are dialectal speakers is unknown. (Asher, Moseley et al.).
This original map was made by vectorizing data from the MultiTree language database and the Altas of the World's Languages.
Other resources related to this project:
This folder (Contemporary Meso-American Languages) contains other maps showing linguistic subgroups and their time of contact. The maps may be overlaid on each other for a more complete picture.
Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process.
Totonakan in Meso-America at the Time of Contact
Totonakan in Meso-America at the Time of Contact
Map Creator:
The LINGUIST List
Data Sources: The LINGUIST List. 07 Aug 2008. "Totonacan: Composite 2008." The LINGUIST List MultiTree Language Database.
Terrence Kaufman, Stephanie Koerner, et al. 2007. R. E. Asher and Christopher Moseley (eds.), Atlas of the World's Languages: 56. Oxford: Routledge.
Date Created: Jun-2009.
Map Description:
The areas pictured display locations of where Totonakan subgroup languages were spoken when they were first encountered and knowledge of them was recorded. As specified by Asher and Moseley, the time of contact varied for each language; most of the coastal languages were first identified during the 16th and 17th centuries, although some languages in the interior of South America became known much more recently during the 20th century (Asher, Moseley et al.).
This original map was made by vectorizing data from the MultiTree language database and the Altas of the World's Languages.
Other resources related to this project:
This folder (Meso-America at the Time of Contact) contains other maps showing linguistic subgroups and their time of contact. The maps may be overlaid on each other for a more complete picture.
Data Sources: The LINGUIST List. 07 Aug 2008. "Totonacan: Composite 2008." The LINGUIST List MultiTree Language Database.
Terrence Kaufman, Stephanie Koerner, et al. 2007. R. E. Asher and Christopher Moseley (eds.), Atlas of the World's Languages: 56. Oxford: Routledge.
Date Created: Jun-2009.
Map Description:
The areas pictured display locations of where Totonakan subgroup languages were spoken when they were first encountered and knowledge of them was recorded. As specified by Asher and Moseley, the time of contact varied for each language; most of the coastal languages were first identified during the 16th and 17th centuries, although some languages in the interior of South America became known much more recently during the 20th century (Asher, Moseley et al.).
This original map was made by vectorizing data from the MultiTree language database and the Altas of the World's Languages.
Other resources related to this project:
This folder (Meso-America at the Time of Contact) contains other maps showing linguistic subgroups and their time of contact. The maps may be overlaid on each other for a more complete picture.
Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process.