The Yanesha' are also known as Amage, Amagues, Amaje, Amajo, Amoishe, Amueixa, Amuese, Amuesha, Amuetamo, Lorenzo, and Omage.
Language
The Yanesha people speak Yanesha', a language belonging to the Maipureanlanguage family, that also includes Asháninka, Yine, and others. A dictionary and grammar have been published in Yanesha', which is written in the Latin script.
History
The tribe's first contact with non-native people came through friars who, in the second half of the 16th century, made an incursion into the region. However, it was not until the 18th century that missionaries managed to establish steady relations with the Yanesha' and other ethnic groups living nearby. Father Francisco de San José founded various missions around Cerro de la Sal and Quimiri to convert the indigenous populations to Christianity. However, in 1742, indigenous people commanded by Juan Santos Atahualpa rebelled against the Spaniards and destroyed a number of missions, effectively cutting off outside contact for several decades. It’s not known for sure the population of the Yanesha' people at this time but they had certainly already begun to die off from European diseases. During the 19th century, the area inhabited by the Yanesha' and other groups was reexplored by expeditions looking to establish routes to the lower Amazon and to colonize the area. The arrival of westerners represented for the Yanesha' the loss of land and a dramatic change of living customs ensued; they were grouped into towns and their extensive territories became the property of colonists. With this situation, they were compelled to group together and became the first ethnic group to form a professional organization: the Amuesha Congress. This later became the Yanesha' Federation. The Law of Indigenous Communities, promulgated in 1974, partly repaired the situation of dispossession by granting some land to Yanesha' groups. The Yanesha' people once lived through hunting, fishing, and subsistence agriculture; in modern times, the emphasis is on agricultural diversification and cultivation of cash crops like coffee and annatto. Hunting became much rarer after the Yanesha' people began raising animals for consumption. In addition, groups have begun exploiting Cat’s claw. The marketing of ceramic crafts has also become a source of income. In 1988, a territory of over 34,774 hectares was set up in Palcazu District as the Yanesha' Communal Reservation with the purpose of protecting important fauna that serves as sustenance to Yanesha' communities in the area.