| The Family of Chumash Languages |
| Chumash Territory | Purisimeño | |
| Ventureño | Obispeño | |
| Barbareño | Island Chumash | |
| Samala | Interior Chumash |
| Chumash Territory |
|
| Chumash territory extended along the southern California
coast from Malibu to some point north of San Luis Obispo, with the densest
population along the coast south of Point Conception. This area included
the Santa Barbara channel islands and stretched inland to present-day Castaic
(Chumash |
| Five missions were founded in Chumash territory, at Ventura, Santa Barbara, La Purisima, Santa Ynez, and San Luis Obispo. The inhabitants of many outlying areas were gathered into these centers. The original distribution of Chumash speech very likely showed a more or less continuous gradation from one local dialect into another, but the five missions were linguistic focal points. The idioms spoken in their vicinity are distinct languages rather than merely dialects of a single language. |
| The languages spoken around the missions at Ventura, Santa Barbara, Santa Ynez and La Purisima comprise the most cohesive subgrouping of the Chumash languages, with Ventureño somewhat less closely related to the other three. Scholars refer to these four as the Central Chumash languages. They are about as different from one another as Spanish and Portuguese: obviously related but with noticeable differences. |
| The various Chumash peoples didn't use the term Chumash
as an overarching term for themselves. The name "Chumash" was
coined by anthropologists. It is based on the the word |
| Ventureño |
| Ventureño territory extended along the coast from as far
southeast as Malibu (humaliwo) to approximately
El Rincon in the north. Ventureño speech extended inland from these points,
into Simi Valley |
| Barbareño |
| Barbareño territory extended along the coastal plain from Point Conception in the west to some point east of Carpinteria. It was bounded by the Santa Ynez Mountains on the inland side. |
| Where the coastal plain is wider, this area supported the highest population density due to the favorable combination of easy access to resources from the mountains, plains and coast well protected by the offshore islands.. |
| Samala — formerly known as Inezeño |
| Samala territory extended along the middle and upper reaches of the Santa Ynez River. Downstream, the Samala language shaded into Purisimeño, while further upstream and across the Santa Ynez range to the southwest, Samala shaded more noticeably into Barbareño. |
| In most of the linguistic and anthropological literature, the Samala language and people are called "Inezeño" (usage fluctuates between the spellings "Inezeño" and "Ineseño" and even Ynezeño), after the Mission Santa Ines which was founded in the heart of Samala territory.. |
| The Samala called themselves s |
| Purisimeño |
| Purisimeño territory extended some 15 miles along the
coast from Point Conception, near Jalama (xalam),
to some point north of Nipomo |
| The Purisimeño speech area probably shaded gradually into Samala further up the valley of the Santa Ynez River, as well as gradually into Obispeño further north. Information is sparse. |
| Obispeño |
| The Obispeño occupied the northwestern corner of Chumash
territory. This area stretched from south of Pismo |
| Island Chumash |
| Three of the Santa Barbara Channel Islands were permanently
occupied: Santa Cruz (limuw or |
| Interior Chumash |
| Territory called "Interior Chumash" stretched inland from
Purisimeño and Obispeño territory and included the basins of the Sisquoc
|
In 1905 C. Hart Merriam collected some information on
interior languages. According to Merriam's consultants, the speech of the
people of lipun |
| The San Emigdio area is quite remote from Santa Barbara, separated by areas occupied by speakers of Samala and the Cuyama dialect or language. The population of San Emigdio may well have included descendants of people who left the coastal area to avoid being forced into the mission system. |