Popayán Province was first a Spanish jurisdiction under the Royal Audience of Quito and the Royal Audience of Santafé , and after the independence one of the provinces of the Cauca Department (Gran Colombia), later becoming the Republic of New Granada.

Watercolors of Popayán Province painted in 1853 by Manuel María Paz show indigenous peoples wearing the ruana in the village of Pancitará (or Pansitará), [1] and women called Llapangas known for "embroidery, dressmaking, or shop work," who wore embroidered cotton blouses, flannel skirts, and "neat, well-groomed bare feet."[2]

References

  1. Paz, Manuel María. "Indians of Pansitará, Popayán Province". World Digital Library. Retrieved 2014-05-21.
  2. Paz, Manuel María. "Llapangas, Popayán Province". World Digital Library. Retrieved 2014-05-21.

2°27′N 76°37′W / 2.450°N 76.617°W / 2.450; -76.617

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