what do taino symbols mean

What Do Taino Symbols Mean?

Ancient inhabitants of Puerto Rico were known as Taíno Indians. They left behind a lot of their stories in the form of symbols. But what do Taíno symbols mean? What stories were they trying to tell us? These questions have puzzled the minds of many anthropologists over decades.

Atabeyra
Atabeyra was the Goddess who protected women in labor. She was the supreme creator of everything.
Baby
The Taíno's carried their babies on their backs. Many images often had babies being carried with ropes tied around them.
Bird
Birds like cranes and herons were often given human characteristics, and they usually were interpreted as symbols of being masculine.
Boinayel or Cemi Boinayel
Cemi Boinayel was considered as a Rain God. The Taínos believed that when the Boinayel cried, his tears transformed into rain.
Cohoba
Cohoba was the main deity of the Taínos. The plate of his head was used in the ceremony to inhale hallucinogen in ceremonial rituals.
Conchs and Snails
The snail and conch played an integral role in the Taínos' lives. They ate snails and also used them as a hallucinogen in rituals. They even used their conchs to adorn their bodies as beads. Large conchs were used for the sound that they made, as a communication device during hunting.
Dancers
Folk tales, songs, and rituals were passed down from generation to generation, through ceremonial dances and songs.
Duho
This was a ceremonial throne used by superiors to preside over ritualistic ceremonies.
Eternal Lovers
The Taíno society did not believe in private property. Whatever was grown or killed was for the whole tribe. The scene in images may mean solidarity, equality, and fertility. Eternal lovers were figures of birds either beak-to-beak or in a possible love scenes.
Masks
Masks depicted their gods, mythical creatures and animals.
Maquetaurie Guava
These were intoxicating inhalers that were used in spiritual ceremonies that induced hallucination and helped connect to god or spirits.
Shamans
Shamans were witch doctors. They cured by using plants and herbs. They were considered as priests and led all rituals.
Sun
The Taínos believed that the sun rose from the cave Cacique Mautiatibuel at dawn, and returned when the moon rose.
Toa
Legend has it that God Guahoyona abducted all women from the island, leaving the men to take care of the children, who out of hunger began to cry 'toa toa' or mother-mother. When the children could not be consoled by the men, they turned into frogs.
Turtle or Tortoise
Turtles were considered as the mother of fertility, mankind, and origin of life. Dimivan Caracaracol (Mother Earth) had developed a tumor; on the removal of the tumor, it turned out to be a live turtle.
Twins or Siamese Twins
Twins were born in the same cave as the sun and the moon. They represented forces of nature, having both positive and negative elements, such as rain and drought.
Water
The Taínos often depicted a spiral symbol, which represented cosmic energy and sweet water.
War, famine, and diseases have wiped out villages after villages, leaving behind only petrographs as proof of their mere mortal and humble existence. What we can gather from these engravings are only a part of their rich history, religious beliefs, life, and culture. Deciding the meaning behind these inscriptions is only but a fragment of their actual civilization.

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