There’s a story that in 1799 the German naturalist and explorer Alexander von Humboldt  (1769–1859) was exploring the Orinoco and Amazon rivers and documenting  the languages and cultures of the tribes he encountered there. While  spending time with one tribe of Carib people, he asked them about their  neighbours and rivals, the Maypure, who he was keen to visit. He was  told that the Maypure had all been killed recently by the Carib tribe he  was visiting, however they did have a couple of the Maypure’s pet  parrots who spoke some of their language. Von Humboldt took the parrots  back to Europe and transcribed their words – the only record we have of  the Maypure language, which is also written Maypure, Maipure, Maypore or  Maypore’. There seems to be some doubt whether this story is true:  there is no mention of the parrots in von Humboldt’s meticulous  journals, but there are phonetic transcriptions of the Maypure words he  heard on his travels.
An interesting anecdote from 
the Omniglot blog.  
 
 
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