Pueden entender algo de tupi-guarani Amazónico? Intenta leer esta pasaje y ves que entiendes
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👤︎ u/linatet
📅︎ Apr 26 2021
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Alguém sabe tupi Guarani?

Salve glr, meus manos, alguém sabe tupi Guarani ou conhece alguém que saiba? Quero saber a tradução de uma parte da música do angra, tô a 2 anos tentando descobrir mas n acho nada, nem o cantor e guitarrista lembram kkkk A música é a unholy wars, no começo ele fala algo tipo "cana xanai bei" queria muito saber oq é... Vlw glr

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👤︎ u/Jhonny_XD
📅︎ Feb 27 2021
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Tupi-Guarani Pantheon

Hello, this is my first post on this subreddit (although I play frequently).

I would like to suggest a new pantheon, the Tupi-Guarani Pantheon. Guarani are the native people who lived (and still live today, in some more or less isolated tribes) in the Amazon rainforest, mainly in the Brazilian portion.

To inaugurate this pantheon, I would suggest "Tupã, The Spirit of the Thunder" (pronounced Too-pan). I already know what many (if not all) will say, "We already have many thunder gods." I know, but Tupã is different.

Like Zeus, Tupã is the most powerful and popular god in his pantheon. He is the creator of humanity and several other deities (such as Jaci, Goddess of the Moon and Guaraci, God of the Sun). He is also the creator of the skies, the land, the seas and the whole Pindorama (a way the natives called the territory that today comprises Brazil). He is also considered the God of Healing, for having taught the "Pajés" (shamans of the Guarani tribes) the knowledge of medicinal plants and magical healing rituals. OBS: Recent studies occurred that many of the myths found to Tupã (as the creation of Pindorama and of the humanity), were, in fact, of other gods that were forgotten and / or replaced.

Tupã would be an assassin.

Skills:

PASSIVE: Beware of the jaguar (name explanation, at the end of the post): While Tupã is inside the jungle or in a buff field he is always prepared to fight a jaguar.

  • 10% slowness reduction;
  • 10% critical chance on jungle monsters and bosses.

FIRST: Electric salvation: A lightning strikes over Tupã causing damage and paralyzing for 0.1 / 0.2 / 0.3 / 0.4 / 0.5 seconds (depending on skill level) all enemies in a small area (really small, similar to Sylvanus's basic attack) and 100% of the shooting damage is converted to healing (it's not life steal, it's more like Ratatoskr's green acorn). I know this ability may seem a little overpower, but it would do little damage.

I still have no ideas for 2 and 3 ;-;

ULTIMATE: Tupã's Smash: Tupã takes his magic bow and after absorbing energy from nature for 1.5 seconds, fires a thunder with all his strength at a single target up to 50 units away. In addition to the normal damage of the skill, it would deal an additional real damage of 10% of the current health of the target. The effect would spread to all enemy gods nearby (similar to the Odysseus Bow effect) causing 5% slowness for 2 seconds to all affected. While absorving natural power, Tupã would be imune to control effects

N

... keep reading on reddit ➡

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👤︎ u/R0DR160HM
📅︎ Nov 26 2020
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Uma cena pouco provável de se imaginar na cidade de São Paulo. Dois bois brigando na Estrada do M'boi Mirim. M'boi q não tem nada a ver com o animal, M'boi significa cobra no Tupi guarani v.redd.it/wjmefvhe76361
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📅︎ Dec 04 2020
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Sempre bom escutar um rock tupi-guarani
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📅︎ Sep 29 2020
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Tupi-Guarani mythology

Hello everyone,

I'm looking for detailed stories or books about Tupi-Guarani gods and myths. I can only find information in Portuguese, but I can't speak the language so I was wondering if it existed in English.

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👤︎ u/MukiTensei
📅︎ Jan 19 2021
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Material about Tupi or Guarani culture

Hello,

im very interested in Tupi/Guarani culture, especially in their religion and myths. But ive been searching about that and its very difficult to find accesible and introduction material like more general textbooks, online video/audio courses.

so, i ask you guys for tips and recommendations about Tupi/Guarani culture. Im brazilian so, if you knows some material in portuguese and spanish, im also able to read it or whatch it.

Thanks

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📅︎ Feb 17 2021
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(God concept) Anhangá The protector of nature (Pantheon: Tupi-Guarani) (Role:Assasin) reddit.com/gallery/k2xaan
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👤︎ u/Didimendoo
📅︎ Nov 28 2020
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Tupi Guarani, Frantz(me), Digital Painting, 2020
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👤︎ u/luisfrantz
📅︎ Nov 18 2020
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Tupi Guarani - Digital Painting by me
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👤︎ u/luisfrantz
📅︎ Nov 18 2020
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Meet Nhenai, the simple conlang based on Brazillian Portuguese and Tupi-Guarani

I'm new to this community, but I'm very interested in conlangs. My new language is Nhenai (ɲenaj), and it's based on two mains real-world languages: Brazillian Portuguese and Tupi-Guarani. The former is my natural language and the latter is one of the languages of the Tupi (a great South American native linguistic family).

The reason we're creating this conlang is mostly for fun, but we also intend to apply it to a fiction project in the future. It's a fantasy world and we got the same language for the whole continent for the sake of simplicity. As we're not very far into the story nor the conlang creation process, I'm not sure what I like or dislike about it yet. Maybe It feels like the words are too short? I don't know. I'd love some feedback and tips for the future, but honestly, I'm mostly here just to share the progress with y'all, haha!

It's not a professional work and I'm still at the beginning of the process. I created a lot of the lexicon, but proper grammar is still to be established - be mindful of that. Nevertheless, here are some words and phrases in Nhenai!

Forgive my casual misplacement of the IPA, I'm still getting used to its nuances

Nhen /ɲen/ = (n.) Speech, any kind of communication using voice; (v.) Speak, to talk, to express something by way of speech
Nhenai /ɲenaj/ = (n.) Language, speech, conversation
Nhe'o /ɲeʔo/ = (n.) Shout, command, loud talking; (v.) (colloquial) To talk too much, to mumble, to talk senseless

Ypa /ipɐ/ = (n.) Sky
Ypaok /ipɐok/ = 1. (s.) Space; 2. (s.) The Realm of Dreams
Ypai /ipɐj/ = (a.) Beautiful, gracious, wise, dreamful
Ypa'i /ipɐʔi/ = 1. (a.) Cute, adorable; 2. (a.) (colloquial) Smileful, happy

Kóe /kɔe/ = (v.) To be generally or always
Plóe /plɔe/ = (v.) To be right now, in the specific moment

Etá /eta/ = (a.) Many
Ó'oe /ɔʔoe/ = (a.) Very much

Tua /tuɐ/ = (v.) To love, to adore, to appreciate very much
Tatauá /tatɐwa/ = (v.) To love in a romantic and/or sexual way

Un /un/ = And, also
U'alu /uʔalw/ = Followed by, also, with
U'ato /uʔato/ = But

Ara /aɾɐ/ = (n.) Air/Wind
Tatá /tɐta/ = (n.) Fire, bonfire

PRONOUNS
Singular
1st person = E /e/
2nd person = Vo /vo/
3rd person = (M.) Li /li/ (F.) La /la/ (N.) Lus /lus/

Plural
1st person* = (w/ 2nd) Epó /epɔ/ (w/o 2nd) Ófus /ɔfus/
2nd person = Vouf /vowf/
3rd person = (M.) Kwoli /kʷoli/ (F.) Kwola /kʷola/ (N.) Kwolus *

... keep reading on reddit ➡

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👤︎ u/Raiorai
📅︎ Jul 10 2020
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Jaci, Tupi Guarani moon Goddess.
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👤︎ u/Azartras
📅︎ Jul 25 2020
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My interpretation of Anhangá, a tupi-guarani/ brazilian god
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👤︎ u/JoaoVoltZ
📅︎ Jun 02 2020
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TIL of the Battle of Mborore. South America, 1641: Spanish missions inhabited by Jesuits and indigenous Guarani, were threatened by Portuguese slavers. The Jesuits armed the Guarani. Together, they repelled the slavers and their Tupi allies, driving them onto the land of the cannibalistic Gualachi. historynet.com/fighting-f…
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👤︎ u/SomeGuy671
📅︎ Jul 09 2019
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A game about brazilian's tupi guarani folklore is under development, this is the teaser. youtube.com/watch?v=itivM…
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📅︎ Nov 09 2018
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MPF quer que Funai conclua demarcação de terras indígenas iniciada há 11 anos em SP. Processo nunca saiu da primeira etapa; atraso contraria Constituição e põe aldeias Tupi-Guarani em risco. mpf.mp.br/sp/sala-de-impr…
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👤︎ u/KaXaSA
📅︎ Jan 22 2019
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A banda que toca heavy metal em tupi-guarani bbc.com/portuguese/brasil…
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👤︎ u/pizzaiolo_
📅︎ Oct 20 2016
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Why were the Guarani people and their language better off than the Tupi people and language? (Clarification in comments)

One of Paraguay's official languages is Guarani, an indigenous language, which a majority of the population speaks. But, Brazil does not have the same situation (I am aware that early settlers spoke the Tupi language).

I was curious because a quick Wikipedia search indicated that at the time of colonization, Brazil had a population of 1 million Tupi, while Paraguay had a population of 400,000 Guarani. Now, Brazil has around 10,000 Tupi and Paraguay has around 300,000 Guarani. So, the Guarani population has not experienced a massive change like the Tupi population did.

Furthermore, the Guarani culture is quite vibrant, considering how their language has been adopted by the larger population. On the other hand, the Tupi language is considered endangered and many Tupi people can no longer speak it.

What caused such a huge disparity between these groups? My question is motivated by the fact that Tupi and Guarani are closely related.

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👤︎ u/BobXCIV
📅︎ Jun 28 2019
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A banda que toca heavy metal em tupi-guarani bbc.com/portuguese/brasil…
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📅︎ Oct 20 2016
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TIL - Existe uma banda que toca heavy metal em tupi-guarani (Arandu Arakuaa) bbc.com/portuguese/brasil…
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👤︎ u/antun3s
📅︎ Jan 05 2017
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Anyone know a good English source on Tupi and / or Guarani history and culture?

Everything I'm turning up is either about Tupi-Guarani languages or in Portuguese (or, more rarely, Spanish). Thanks for the help.

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👤︎ u/Reedstilt
📅︎ Aug 21 2013
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Where are the Mapuche and Guarani people from?

Are they descendants of a tribe like the Nahua people are descendants of the Aztecs?

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📅︎ Mar 24 2021
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Almeida Júnior - Decoying Countrymen (1888)
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📅︎ Feb 07 2021
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Titanus Bune

The Titan emerged from a collapsed Hollow Earth point under Fort Beekenburg near the Caracas Bay in Curaçao.

Monarch Designation: Bune

Classification: Titanus Bune

Nature: Bio-Chlorokinetic

Body Length: 599ft

Body Height: 511ft

Wingspan: 923ft

Behavior: Destroyer

Range: Worldwide

Bune is a Duke of Hell and said to be a mighty three headed beast, he is the 26th Spirit of Solomon, and is in control of 30 legions of Hell. Said to take the form of a three headed dragon with the head of a Dog, Gryphon, and Man and to speak with a high voice, he brings the knowledge of how to become better and more knowledgable to those who summon him as well as giving true answers if asked. He is also said to be an entity who gathers shades and the dead to gather information from the long dead such as knowledge or desires by bringing them to the conjurer's home to allow them to get the answers in a dream state. The demon is said to be associated with Azrael the Angel of Death as well. Another myth related to the Titan behind the myth is Teju Jagua of Tupi-Guarani mythology, a monstrous offspring of an evil spirit. Teju Jagua was said to be a massive lizard beast with seven dog heads and was horrifically ferocious, with eyes that shot fire. Most myths claim he was a protector of fruit and caves with a limited ability to move at all. However the truth to the myth goes into a bizarre spin as a recent exploration mere months ago discovered a Hollow Earth temple near Titanus Renenutet's lair showing a map with many known Titans and several known Hollow Earth points, and a few others. One such point was under Curaçao, under Fort Beekenburg in the Caracas Bay. Monarch set up a investigation team to inspect the entry only to find a massive underground root system that after an accidental seal breach from an unknown party came to life, and the world witnessed the terrifying site of a beast from some forgotten evolutionary fluke. A truly immense creature that defies the basis of logic, it is not actually fully an animal but rather a horrifying reverse of the Skull Island Florafauna, a Faunaflora, a species of pitcher plant that integrated a distant relative of the Dakosaurus into it's genetic coding creating a massive winged three-headed monster that seeks the dead to raise in a macabre display.

For Titanus Bune the merger has benef

... keep reading on reddit ➡

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📅︎ May 15 2021
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Smite 16 Pantheons World Map + 4 Potential Mythologies!

https://preview.redd.it/xq9eokvu6e061.png?width=5700&format=png&auto=webp&s=084ccc62d9248c0f80b600ae10928714e8ccf29f

This is a world map with the approximate geographical locations of each pantheon including the upcoming Mesopotamian, whose icon is a temporary placeholder. Good looking so far, however there is still potential. According to the community's voting polls the next most wanted thing is Native American, which is an extremely broad and all encompassing term that also includes the already present Mayans in the game. I have marked the locations of 4 unique and aesthetically different potential mythologies that should be included, however please remember these words:

1.There will be no characters from monotheistic religions- Jewish, Christian, Islamic, Buddhist and Zoroastrian/Persian in the game ever so don't mention those here.

2.There will be no fictional and joke religions of the modern age like Scientology, Pastafanarianism and so on. Though some of those could appear as skins, like FSM for Cthulhu.

3.There will be no fictional worlds made by modern people- Tolkien's Legendarium, Warhammer 40K, etc. The only exception is Lovecraft and even that is pushing it, however like the above these could appear as skins via battlepasses assuming Hi-Rez ever earns the copyrights to include these.

4.The 4 pantheons I have included are culturally different and unique compared to each other and everything included so far in the game. True, some of these cultures do have some simularities and overlaps (Greek-Roman, Egyptian-Mesopotamian, Arthurian-Celtic-Norse-Slavic and Chinese-Japanese) however they are made to be separate and aesthetically variable in the game (Chinese don't have samurai/ninja, Celts don't have vikings and so on). This is why I haven't included: Korean, Canaanite, Tupi-Guarani, Filippino, Aztec, Inca, Finnish, Baltic and other simular pantheons. That and the fact this game can't possibly include every mythology ever created (e.g. people want every Sub-Saharan African tribe alongside Yoruba and all the North American tribes under a single pantheon), it should stop at 20 different pantheons after which it can focus on fillling them up with characters instead.

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Here are the four pantheons that I selected. Would also give information by posting some drawings.

17.Lakota (light brown question mark)- would represent the USA. The currently most wanted pantheon is this alongside Inuit. This tribe deserves to

... keep reading on reddit ➡

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📅︎ Nov 20 2020
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Distribution of Tupi-speaking indigenous groups on the Brazilian coast in the 16th century
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📅︎ Jan 03 2021
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Are The Minority Languages of Spain Spoken in Your Country?

Are languages such as Basque, Catalan, and Galician spoken to any degree in your country?

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👤︎ u/Nancupel
📅︎ Nov 10 2020
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Achei que tivesse postado a uns meses, mas acho que esqueci. Fiz uma lista com todos os times BRs que já ganharam torneios nacionais, continentais, intercontinentais e mundiais (incluindo divisões inferiores e torneios obscuros/inúteis) está em ordem alfabética.

Lista de Campeões Brasileiros

•Obs: -Alguns torneios não foram colocado na lista, e estão após o fim dela, com seu(s) vencedor(es) e anos de disputa

-Os títulos estão em ordem decrescente de abrangência (Mundial>Intercontinental>Continental>Nacional) e por ordem de conquista

-Talvez a flair esteja errada, fiquei em dúvida entre conteúdo original e história, botei a primeira, qualquer coisa eu troco depois

Legenda: *: Campeão invicto

Times por ordem alfabética:

ABC [RN] (1 título) •Nacionais -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série C (2010)

AMERICA [RJ] (1 título) •Nacionais: -1 Torneio dos Campeões (1982*)

AMERICANO [RJ] (1 título) •Nacionais: -1 Troféu Heleno Nunes [Módulo Azul do Campeonato Brasileiro] (1987)

AMÉRICA [MG] (3 títulos) •Nacionais: -2 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série B (1997 e 2017) -1 Campeonato Brasileieo - Série C (2009)

ATHLETICO PARANAENSE [PR] (6 títulos) •Intercontinentais: -1 J.League YBC Levain Cup/CONMEBOL Sudamericana Final (2019*)

•Continentais: -1 Copa Sul-Americana (2018)

•Nacionais: -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série B (1995) -1 Seletiva para a Libertadores (1999) -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série A (2001) -1 Copa do Brasil (2019)

ATLÉTICO GOIANIENSE [GO] (4 títulos) •Nacionais: -Torneio de Integração Nacional (1971) -2 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série C (1990 e 2008) -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série B (2016)

ATLÉTICO MINEIRO [MG] (9 títulos) •Continentais: -2 Copa CONMEBOL (1992 e 1997*) -1 Copa Libertadores da América (2013) -1 Recopa Sul-Americana (2014*)

•Nacionais: -1 Copa dos Campeões Estaduais (1937) -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série A (1971) -1 Copa dos Campeões da Copa Brasil (1978*) -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série B (2006) -1 Copa do Brasil (2014)

AVAÍ [SC] (1 título) •Nacionais: -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série C (1998)

BAHIA [BA] (2 títulos) •Nacionais: -1 Taça Brasil [Campeonato Brasileiro] (1959) -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série A (1988)

BOA ESPORTE [MG] (1 título) •Nacionais: -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série C (2016)

BOTAFOGO [PB] (1 título) •Nacionais: -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série D (2013)

BOTAFOGO [RJ] (4 títulos) •Continentais: -1 Copa CONMEBOL (1993)

•Nacionais: -1 Taça Brasil [Campeonato Brasileiro] (1968) -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série A (1995) -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série B (2015)

BOTAFOGO [SP] (1 título) •Nacionais: -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série D (2015)

BRASILIENSE [DF] (2 títulos) •Nacionais: -1 Campeonato Brasileiro - Série C (2002) -1 Campe

... keep reading on reddit ➡

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👤︎ u/Mr_Arapuga
📅︎ Dec 15 2020
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Planned Potential Playable Pantheon Pictures

Greetings everybody, I am planning on drawing ideas of possible civilizations that could appear in the AOM game (regardless if it's a sequel, expansion pack, reboot/remake or even a fan-created mod). However I won't make drawings of everything (sadly the possible naval, siege and military units will be left without drawings) and I would be using existing images from the Internet for the major and minor deities. This is because those things are the most difficult to research and/or draw plus my resorces are limited (paper, pencils, etc) to the point I am dividing each paper in pieces to draw separate things on them. Would like to mention that I don't know when this project would be completed given its large scope and my real life priorities, but as soon as it's done I will glady post the drawings ASAP here on reddit for everybody to see.

That said, I had originally planned to draw all these cultures with 16/20 being fully playable.

1.Base Game: Greek, Norse, Egyptian, Roman (would be replacing the Atlanteans)

2.Expansion Pack 1: Slavic, Celtic, Mesopotamian, Yoruba

3.Expansion Pack 2: Chinese, Japanese, Hindu, Mongolian

4.Expansion Pack 3: Mayan, Aztec, Inca, Polynesian

5.Unplayable NPC: Tribal American, Inuit, Tupi-Guarani, Aboriginal Australian

Granted, because I lack the resources to draw all this as well as knowledge about some aspects (e.g. Mongolian, Polynesian, Inca and Mayan myth units are either generic, there isn't enough information about them, are personally hard to draw or are creatures that are already used by other cultures) tragically I am forced to cut my grand ambitions short and only draw these civilizations instead.

1.Base Game: Greek, Norse, Egyptian, Roman (would be replacing the Atlanteans)

2.Expansion Pack 1: Slavic, Celtic, Mesopotamian, Yoruba

3.Expansion Pack 2: Chinese, Japanese, Hindu, Aztec

4.Unplayable NPC: Tribal American, Inuit, Tupi-Guarani, Mongolian, Inca, Mayan

Playable Polynesians with unplayable Aboriginal Australians won't be sadly getting any drawings whatsoever despite the former having a very underrated as well as radical culture and mythology.

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📅︎ Jan 26 2021
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The new content from CA makes me believe that a TW: Americas is totally possible.

well when I say "Americas", I mean pre-Columbian americas, around 1300 AD.

While WH2 shows that it is totally possible, to have a campaign in a scenario not based on the European and Mediterranean continent, with a very interesting map of the Americas.

Troy shows that a total war with reduced cavalry is possible, focused only on infantry and artillery units, with details regarding the weight and quality between the units. In addition to creating a mix between realism and mythology that would be necessary to guarantee a certain diversity of units.

And finally, with the recently announced 3K DLC, it shows that it is totally plausible to create diplomacy interesting of tribes, add animal units or focus on a particular natural element for a tribe (in the case of 3K, the Fire). Creating unique factions, and a very different style of play.

The factions would be quite varied, the Aztecs in this period would have the same playthroug of Rome in Rome II TW. having to expand on the peninsula with very similar neighbors.

Incas would have to find a way to expand into the Atacama deserts and Amazon rainforest, even though they did not dominate these environments. and fighting the Guarani, Mapuche and Tupis.

Mayans is the most complicated, I don't remember military campaigns of this people. they could be like Teclis collecting artifacts across the continent.

I would add people from North America like the Cree, Dakota and Inuits. and some of South America like the Carib and Tupi as more barbaric and with tribe diplomacy and animal masters.

The most interesting thing in the Americas would be the amazing scenery. from Patagonia, Atacama desert, salar de uyuni, amazon forest, pampas, caribbean, andes, great canyons, desert of death, northern lights and more.

Europeans would arrive at the end of the campaign, something like 100 years later, selling weapons and horses, but lessening the order. It would be the Spanish and Portuguese and the order of Christ (which are the rest of the Templars).

So, do you think a TW SAGA Americas would be possible?

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📅︎ Aug 19 2020
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This beautiful map of pre-contact Brazil
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👤︎ u/Brabeusa
📅︎ May 20 2020
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Exploring Amerindian Cultures from the territory of Brazil

Hello guys, I always fall in love with the dedication Civ players have to create mods that add Native American civs to the Civ series games, but it always seems boring to me that almost all of them are from North American nations, and obviously disregarding the Mesoamerica and the Andes, the spotlight of native nations always seems to be there. Of course, I am not saying that representing the nations there without having is that of other places is "wrong", far from it they deserve to appear, they have their own trajectories and dramas like any other nation in the world, and I also do not blame not having these unrepresented South American (non-Andean) peoples, the way Civ needs leadership to have a civ leaves any inclusion of a native South American nation difficult to be "historically true".

But... in Humankind things are different, and faction creation does not depend on having a strong leader figure, this greater flexibility allows adding them without any problem.

Anyway, as you will see in the thread title, my intention here is to explore what types of cultures from the Brazilian territory could be implemented in the game, I just do not extend the area to the rest of South America because in relation to the cultures I will comment on here, I am not a person who is an expert on the subject, how much more I would say about that of other countries that I do not know the history perfectly. Well, I could end up talking nonsense but I will leave my opinions of what could be done to include them, because I want to know your opinion on this subject, so let's start:

TUPIS: Medieval Agrarian or Militarist - EU: Ubirajaras (Archer-Lancer) - EQ: Malocas (Commons Quarter or Hamlet)

The Tupis together with the Guarani (which I will talk about next) are probably the most well-known Amerindian cultures in Brazil, having part of their vocabulary and names still existing in Brazilian Portuguese today, they existed throughout the Brazilian coast at the time of discovery from Brazil, in a curious way even with all this geographic area, they all spoke the same language (the "Lingua Geral" which was a lingua franca in Brazil even with the Portuguese colonizing for a long time), it is credited that they dominated the region traveling from the north coast to the south in different sequences of migration generating some curious situations in which Tupi tribes tens of kilometers away used the same word with the same meaning to refer to themselves (as the name Tupina

... keep reading on reddit ➡

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👤︎ u/Rac98
📅︎ Sep 03 2020
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Hi! What is the most famous national painting in your country?

Abaporu: [ https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn%3AANd9GcQRIuMaxL9tGI2tWl76jYlQ6kyNZI6rmxNw5Q&usqp=CAU ]

In Brazi is hands down the Abaporu by tarsila de amaral. Every brazian person had to paint this or make a reread in elementary school. Here my favorite [ https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn%3AANd9GcT3Wn6VzOUUgUGjyP-k7Q5Mrovmih8hLeRw0A&usqp=CAU ]

The brief meaning: the name Abaporu means “man that eats” in tupi guarani. The tiny head and the big foots and hands remits the manual work and the lack of critical thinking. And other point is The man has a sad posture, with the head down, its about the him personality. The cacto and sun is about the clime and vegetation of him region, the northeast.

And there others famous paints: “Os operários” by Tarsila do Amaral too: [ https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn%3AANd9GcRW6ZEtfCRu6yEDR8_yeA-WqyUvf7FPg2IWLA&usqp=CAU ]

And the “Independência ou Morte” by Pedro Américo [ https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn%3AANd9GcR_FI6lWPrcKPvYxlNHvUCl4wtN5xd2MI8zVA&usqp=CAU ]

Here is some rereads of Abaporu: [ https://www.google.com.br/search?q=abapuru+releitura&tbm=isch&ved=2ahUKEwiKsP79oevrAhWgMLkGHSrPCDYQ2-cCegQIABAC&oq=abapuru+rele&gs_lcp=ChJtb2JpbGUtZ3dzLXdpei1pbWcQARgAMgIIADIGCAAQCBAeMgYIABAKEBg6AggpOgQIKRBDOgQIABBDOgUIABCxAzoHCAAQsQMQQ1Do7ANY34IEYLiHBGgAcAB4AIAByAGIAZkQkgEGMC4xMS4xmAEAoAEBsAEFwAEB&sclient=mobile-gws-wiz-img&ei=csFgX4qvB6Dh5OUPqp6jsAM&bih=454&biw=320&client=safari&prmd=isnv&hl=pt-br ]

And what is the most famous national painting in your country?

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📅︎ Sep 15 2020
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Nigerian Heritage in Bahia, Brazil

Hey y'all!

I'm an afro-brazilian man who lives in Salvador, Bahia. Salvador is often regarded as the most african place outside of Africa itself and on proportional numbers, has the highest black population of Brazil, the following being São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, respectively. But why is that? A little of background:

DISCLAIMER: I'm not an expert nor an historian. I'm just a curious guy interesting in relearn his heritage and ancestry. If you see something that conflicts with your previous knowledge, please add as source material to others.

The transatlantic slave trade moved around 12 millions africans to the Americas, of which around 5 to 7 millions alone came to Brazil. From those, 70% came from nowadays Congo/Angola. The rest was composed of a mix of etnicities from the so-called at the time "slave bay", that went from the Gana to Nigeria. It is important to notice that the transport of enslaved africans had 4 "cycles": The Guinea Cycle (XVI Century), Angola cycle (XVII century), the Mina Coast cycle, also called the Slave bay cycle or the Benim/Dahomey cycle (XVIII - 1815) and the Illegal cycle (1815 - 1851), when slavery was abolished by the british and they tried to enforce its abolition on other nations, so portuguese would try some other routes, as going all the way to Mozambique (it was already a colony at the time).

Bear in mind that although those cycles did existed, europeans traded slaves with locals in west africa for a long time, even in the Angola cycle. The portuguese built the São Jorge del Mina fortress in Gana in 1482 for exemple, during the "guinea" cycle. The fortress served as defense position and warehouse of "goods", mostly the enslaved people that were stored there waiting for the ships.

A Slave Ship, Rugendas, 1830

Depiction of a slave ship

So the first people to come here from west africa, apart from people of nowadays guinea, were the Fon, those from Dahomey, Allada, Ouidah and innards of nowadays Benim, around 1780, with the end of the Angola cycle. Yorùbá was also present, but in a minor scale. They started to come here after the fall of the Oyo Empire, circa 1800. That's when the yoruba presence really shines. When they arrived here, they met a "pool"

... keep reading on reddit ➡

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👤︎ u/Hidros
📅︎ Sep 09 2020
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What was the language of locals before Spain colonization in Latin America? Especially Venezuela, Colombia and Brazil?

Guys, you all know that Latin America speaks generally Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese. I wonder the old native language of locals before assimilation. What were used to be spoken before Spanish and Portuguese.

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👤︎ u/ihmuin
📅︎ Mar 26 2020
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Americas, Oceania, Pacific

Greenland, Alaska, Canadian Territories

Amaguq - Inuit black metal (France/Canada)

Pukuut - Greenlandic alt-metal

Northern Haze - Inuit hard rock

A.TAXET.A - Alaskan experimental black metal

Mulozhi - Alaskan trap/raw black metal (also from Nukshean, the artist behind A.TAXET.A)

Tanya Tagaq - Inuit industrial (not metal, but still pretty fucking metal)

USA, Canada

Pan-Amerikan Native Front - Native black metal (USA)

Ifernach - Mi'kmaq/Irish black metal

Arcticcircle - Native metal (Canada)

Warpath - Native thrash metal (USA)

ŭkcheănsălâwit - Native DSBM (Canada)

Ushangvagush - Mi'kmaq raw/atmospheric black metal

Niboowin - Ojibwe black/punk/screamo

Mi'gauss - Algonquin death metal

'Iisnááhí - Diné black metal

Morbithory - Diné black metal

Mutilated Tyrant - Diné black metal

Tomahawk - Native folk/alt-rock (USA)

Vital Spirit - Native/Country-Western black metal (Canada)

Nechochwen - Native folk metal (USA)

Dzö-nga - Iroquois-themed folk/atmoblack (USA)

Gyibaaw - Tsimshian death/black metal

Damage OverDose - Navajo death metal

Dying Tribe - Navajo groove/thrash metal

Testify - Navajo thrash

I Dont Konform - Navajo thrash/nu me

... keep reading on reddit ➡

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📅︎ Sep 27 2020
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Principais línguas faladas na América do Sul!
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📅︎ Nov 12 2019
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A place that only exists in Brazil
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👤︎ u/vitor01000
📅︎ May 17 2019
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Which unconfirmed / deconfirmed cultures would you like to see in Humankind?

Gute nacht,

Hey, it me, I came back after a week of eating delicious orange cookies to bring a juicy question you guys' way.

basically the title, which cultures that are either a. deconfirmed because they'd belong to the first 3 eras or b. unconfirmed because they'd appear on the last 3 eras would you guys like to see?

Personally you guys know I like my Pre-columbian Americans so I'll go over a little list of cultures from North, Meso and South America that I think it'd be nice to see

Ancient Era

-Adenans: This is the earliest culture from North America there's a lot of info about, I don't know much about the indigenous people of the US and Canada, so I'd really like some suggestions if you guys come from any of those countries

-Norte Chicans: In my first post I explained why they'd be nice in more detail, basically it's that they're Norte Chico, they're just neat.

-Valdivians: I don't know much about these guys, but they're more ancient pre-columbian representation and that's cool

Classical Era

Apparently there's this Hopewell tradition that was going on in the US and Canada around this time, I think it's too broad to be a single culture, and there isn't much info on the individual cultures that made up the tradition, but I still wanna mention them as a whole

-Nazca: Funny Peruvians made some big lines on the ground

-Moche: These guys are just cool, important and they made nice pottery, those are the only standards you need to enter this list

-Teotihuacanians: These guys left behind some pretty ruins, I'm honestly running out of interesting things to say so just search them up on wikipedia, I'm not the right good for in depth analysis of ancient peoples

-Zapotecs: These guys could go here or in ancient or medieval, I'm just putting them here because their most impressive period was during what would later fall under "Classical"

Medieval Era

-Mississippians: Apart from being my favorite thing to come out of Mississippi they're also one of the most well known and famous indigenous cultures of the US, these guys should 100% be in eventually.

-Puebloans: I like the Puebloans, their name literally means "town" in spanish, that's how I decide what things I like

-Purepechans: These guys were the main rivals of the Aztecs before smallpox, and their emblem contains a fish, they'll surely be a hit with all of our fish fans out there

-Incas: They're the Inca

... keep reading on reddit ➡

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📅︎ Jul 29 2020
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