may-por-é
In 1799, the German naturalist Alexander Von Humboldt, embarked on a journey through Venezuela to trace the Orinoco River to its source. During his travels Von Humboldt was said to have acquired a parrot from an indigenous tribe which, some days before his arrival, had attacked and eliminated a neighboring tribe, the Maypuré. During the attack, the victors had taken parrots which the Maypuré had kept as pets. Von Humboldt noted that the parrots were speaking words, not in the language of the people he was visiting, but in the language of the recently destroyed Maypuré: thus the parrots were the only living ‘speakers’ of the Maypuré language. They were, in fact the sole conduit through which an entire tribe’s existence could be traced. Von Humboldt phonetically recorded the bird’s vocabulary; these notes constitute the only trace of the lost tribe...