Shuar
The Shuar are an indigenous people of the Amazon Basin in Ecuador and Peru. They belong to the Jivaroan language family and speak the Shuar language, typically with bilingual fluency in Spanish. The Shuar are historically known for their practice of creating tsantsa, or shrunk heads, a ritual trophy associated with warfare. The practice attracted wide attention in the 19th and early 20th centuries and has since largely ceased, though it remains a notable part of their history.
Traditionally, the Shuar inhabited the upper Amazon, with communities along rivers such as the Morona and Pastaza
Lifestyle and culture center on subsistence agriculture, including manioc, plantains, maize, and other crops, supplemented by
History and contemporary status: contact with Europeans began in the colonial era, and missionary activity, state