Diablada (Turkish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Diablada" in Turkish language version.

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atlasdeladiversidad.net

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harvard.edu

drclas.harvard.edu

  • Rubio Zapata, Miguel (Sonbahar 2007). "Diablos Danzantes en Puno, Perú" [Dancing devils in Puno, Peru]. ReVista, Harvard Review of Latin America (İspanyolca). VII (1). ss. 66-67. 1 Nisan 2009 tarihinde kaynağından arşivlendi. Erişim tarihi: 24 Ekim 2009. 

rae.es

buscon.rae.es

unesco.org

  • "Bolivia (Plurinational State of) - Information related to Intangible Cultural Heritage". UNESCO. 2001. 3 Temmuz 2016 tarihinde kaynağından arşivlendi. Erişim tarihi: 3 Ekim 2009. The town of Oruro, situated at an altitude of 3,700 metres in the mountains of western Bolivia and once a pre-Columbian ceremonial site, was an important mining area in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Resettled by the Spanish in 1606, it continued to be a sacred site for the Uru people, who would often travel long distances to perform their rituals, especially for the principal Ito festival. The Spanish banned these ceremonies in the seventeenth century, but they continued under the guise of Christian liturgy: the Andean gods were concealed behind Christian icons and the Andean divinities became the Saints. The Ito festival was transformed into a Christian ritual, celebrated on Candlemas (2 February). The traditional llama llama or diablada in worship of the Uru god Tiw became the main dance at the Carnival of Oruro. 

web.archive.org

  • Real Academia Española (2001). "Diccionario de la Lengua Española – Vigésima segunda edición" [Spanish Language Dictionary - 22nd edition] (İspanyolca). Madrid, Spain. 18 Ekim 2017 tarihinde kaynağından arşivlendi. Erişim tarihi: 30 Kasım 2009. Danza típica de la región de Oruro, en Bolivia, llamada así por la careta y el traje de diablo que usan los bailarines (Typical dance from the region of Oruro, in Bolivya, called that way by the mask and devil suit worn by the dancers). 
  • "Bolivia (Plurinational State of) - Information related to Intangible Cultural Heritage". UNESCO. 2001. 3 Temmuz 2016 tarihinde kaynağından arşivlendi. Erişim tarihi: 3 Ekim 2009. The town of Oruro, situated at an altitude of 3,700 metres in the mountains of western Bolivia and once a pre-Columbian ceremonial site, was an important mining area in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Resettled by the Spanish in 1606, it continued to be a sacred site for the Uru people, who would often travel long distances to perform their rituals, especially for the principal Ito festival. The Spanish banned these ceremonies in the seventeenth century, but they continued under the guise of Christian liturgy: the Andean gods were concealed behind Christian icons and the Andean divinities became the Saints. The Ito festival was transformed into a Christian ritual, celebrated on Candlemas (2 February). The traditional llama llama or diablada in worship of the Uru god Tiw became the main dance at the Carnival of Oruro. 
  • Rubio Zapata, Miguel (Sonbahar 2007). "Diablos Danzantes en Puno, Perú" [Dancing devils in Puno, Peru]. ReVista, Harvard Review of Latin America (İspanyolca). VII (1). ss. 66-67. 1 Nisan 2009 tarihinde kaynağından arşivlendi. Erişim tarihi: 24 Ekim 2009. 
  • Fortún, Julia Elena (1961). "Actual coreografía del baile de los diablos" [Current choreography of the devils dance]. La danza de los diablos [The dance of the devils] (DOC). Autores bolivianos contemporáneos (İspanyolca). 5. La Paz, Bolivia: Ministerio de Educación y Bellas Artes, Oficialía Mayor de Cultura Nacional. OCLC 3346627. 18 Ekim 2017 tarihinde kaynağından arşivlendi. Erişim tarihi: 17 Ekim 2017. 

worldcat.org