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NATIVE CULTURE IN GRAN CANARIA
The original inhabitants of
Gran Canaria based their economy on agriculture more than on cattle,
harvesting, gathering of seafood or fishing.
Natives stayed mainly in big settlements of semi-urban structure. The highest concentration of the population
was centred in Gáldar, Telde or Arguineguín.
Hierarchy was crucial in the social structure of the native communities in Gran Canaria. Firstly, there
were the nobles, with hereditary titles and power of decision in political administration and economy, on top
of being the land and cattle owners, and the villains, to whom the class directly above gave plots of land and
good cattle in exchange for their payment in kinds and services.
Gran Canaria boasts the greatest repository of native art and culture of all the islands in the archipelago.
Some of the most outstanding archaeological finds consist of cave paintings, such as the ones in the painted
cave 'cueva pintada') of Gáldar, which is decorated with geometric motifs that are made up of squares,
triangles and circles, all painted in red, ocher and white.
The natives had a great reputation as artisans, whose techniques and means reach our days.
Mud was one of their main raw materials. Apart from domestic utensils and icons,
such as the ídolo de Tara, the natives made the
so-called pintadera canaria, which they decorated with geometric drawings.
The island territory has a wealth of stone quarries, which the people of
Gran Canaria have used for a host
of applications, including the building of roads, bridges, benches, mills, troughs and fountains. |


