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  1. There are six or seven Chumashan languages, depending in part on how one interprets the status of the poorly attested Interior Chumash (Cuyama) as a distinct language. Post-contact. The languages are named after the local Franciscan Spanish missions in California where Chumashan speakers were relocated and aggregated between the ...

    • Chumash people

      Languages; English • Spanish • formerly Chumashan languages:...

  2. Chumashan, Yukian, and southern Baja languages are spoken in areas with long-established populations of a distinct physical type. The population in the core Chumashan area has been stable for the past 10,000 years. However, the attested range of Chumashan is recent (within a couple thousand years). There is internal evidence that Obispeño ...

  3. The Obispeño occupied the northwestern corner of Chumash territory. This area stretched from south of Pismo ( pismu ) west for some 30 miles and north into the upper watershed of the Salinas River . To the north and northeast, Obispeño territory bordered on land which the Salinans occupied. The Obispeño language shows some influences from ...

  4. Chumashan was a family of languages that were spoken on the southern California coast by Native American Chumash people, from the Coastal plains and valleys of San Luis Obispo to Malibu, neighboring inland and Transverse Ranges valleys and canyons east to bordering the San Joaquin Valley, to three adjacent Channel Islands: San Miguel, Santa ...

  5. 23. Aug. 2022 · The various Chumashan languages are generally divided into three subfamilies: Northern Chumash (Obispeño), Island Chumash (Cruzeño, also known as Ysleño), and Central Chumash (Ventureño, Purisimeño, Barbareño, and Ineseño).

  6. There were once at least three distinct Chumashan languages--Northern Chumash (Obispeño), Island Chumash (Ysleño or Cruzeño), and Central Chumash, (with four dialects, Barbareño, Ineseño, Purisimeño, and Ventureño, some of which may also have been distinct languages of their own).