Pipil-Nahua Erotic

Homeland

El Salvador (western departments)

Region

Central America

About Pipil-Nahua People

The Pipil-Nahua are the principal Indigenous people of El Salvador — approximately 12,000 self-identified per the 2007 DIGESTYC census, concentrated in the western departments of Sonsonate (especially Nahuizalco, Izalco, Santo Domingo de Guzmán, Cuisnahuat) and Ahuachapán. The Pipil-Nahua are descended from Nahua-speaking populations who migrated from central Mexico to Central America between approximately 800 and 1200 CE and established the Pipil polities (Cuzcatlán, Nonualco) that the Spanish conquered in the 1520s-1530s. The Náhuat language (the Salvadoran variant of Nahuatl, also called Pipil) is critically endangered with approximately 200 elderly first-language speakers remaining as of the 2010s, though revitalization efforts in Santo Domingo de Guzmán and Cuisnahuat are producing a small new generation of speakers. The 1932 La Matanza massacre disproportionately targeted Pipil-Nahua communities and accelerated the abandonment of Indigenous self-identification across the western departments — the contemporary self-identifying Pipil-Nahua population is substantially smaller than the genealogical-descendant population.

Typical Pipil-Nahua Phenotypes

Reference for AI generation — hair, eyes, skin, facial structure, build

Skin tone is predominantly Fitzpatrick III-IV with copper-bronze undertone characteristic of Mesoamerican Indigenous populations. Hair is uniformly straight (Andre Walker 1A-1B), uniformly black to very dark brown. Facial features include moderately broad nasal bases, full lips, and prominent cheekbones; epicanthic-fold variants present at moderate frequency. Stature is typically below the Salvadoran national average. Phenotype distribution is broadly similar to neighboring Maya and Mexican-Nahua populations, reflecting the central-Mexican migration origin and subsequent admixture with Lenca and other Central American Indigenous source populations.

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