An illustrated account of linguistic and ethnological research among the Um?ua people of Northern Brazil in 19031905.Die Hian?koto-Um?ua, first published in 1908, is Theodor Koch-Gr?nbergs illustrated account of his scientific expedition to Northern Brazil in the years 19031905. He describes his encounters with the Um?ua tribe of the Rio Negro region and provides an extensive vocabulary of the Um?ua language.Die Hian?koto-Um?ua, first published in 1908, is Theodor Koch-Gr?nbergs illustrated account of his scientific expedition to Northern Brazil in the years 19031905. He describes his encounters with the Um?ua tribe of the Rio Negro region and provides an extensive vocabulary of the Um?ua language.Die Hian?koto-Um?ua, first published in 1908, is Theodor Koch-Gr?nberg's illustrated account of the expedition he made together with other scientists to Northern Brazil in the years 19031905. The German researcher, a pioneer in the field of South American ethnology, describes his encounters with the indigenous people who lived in the region of the Japur? River and the Rio Negro. The Omagua tribe had lived there before the Spanish conquest of South America in the sixteenth century. Koch-Gr?nberg explains that although the words Omagua and Um?ua are alike, the sixteenth-century Omagua tribe was culturally and linguistically quite distinct from the Um?ua tribe he himself met. The main focus of the book is a systematic record of the vocabulary of the Um?ua tribe based upon the author's own observations. He lists words relating to a variety of topics including body parts, medicine and religion.Die Hian?koto-Um?ua.