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Mestizos
Porfirio Diaz civilian.jpgEl Inca Garcilaso de la Vega.gif
Notable Mestizos:
Porfirio Díaz · Inca Garcilaso de la Vega Ricardo Rojas Barillos
Total population
Official population numbers are unknown.
Regions with significant populations
Latin America
 Paraguay 95% [1]
 El Salvador 90% [1]
 Honduras 90% [1]
 Panama 70% [1]
 Mexico 70% [2]
 Nicaragua 60% [3]
 Venezuela 50% [4]
 Ecuador 65% [1]
 Guatemala 59% [1]
 Colombia 58% [1]
 Brazil 42.3%
 Peru 35% [1]
 Belize 33%
 Bolivia 30%
Languages

Predominantly Spanish, (with a minority of other languages), while Mestiço speaks Portuguese, and Métis speak French; English in the United States, Kriol and English in Belize; and English.

Religion

Christianity (Predominantly Roman Catholic, with a minority of Protestant); and other religions.

Related ethnic groups

European (mostly Spaniards, Portuguese, French and Italian), and Amerindian people.

Mestizo is a Spanish and Portuguese (Mestiço) term that was used in the Spanish Empire and Portuguese Empire to refer to Latin people of mixed European and Amerindian ancestry in the Americas.

It is also used, somewhat incorrectly, in some parts of Asia-Pacific to refer to people of mixed European and other indigenous ancestry.[5]

The term is mostly used specifically for those people of the particular racial mixture of European and American Indian who inhabit and comprise much of the population of Latin America.[6]

Contents

[edit] Etymology

The word mestizo originated from the Romance / Latin word mixticius, meaning mixed. In the Portuguese and French languages, the words caboclo and métis were also used in the Portuguese and French Empires to identify individuals of mixed European and Native ancestry.

[edit] Americas

[edit] Spanish-speaking Latin America

Under the casta system of Spanish America and Spain, the term originally applied to the children resulting from the union of one European and one Amerindian parent or the children of two mestizo parents. During this era, a myriad of other terms including castizo (three-quarters European and one-quarter Amerindian), cuarterón de indio, and cholo (one-quarter European and three-quarters Amerindian), were in use to denote other individuals of European-Amerindian ancestry in ratios smaller or greater than the 50:50 of mestizos.

Mestizos form the majority of the population in most of Latin America; however, it would be difficult to know with any reasonable "biological" precision how extensive the mestizo population is, except through genetic studies. Various censuses since colonial times have tracked the race of inhabitants of the Spanish American countries, but these statistics are only generally indicative of what could be considered biological race, since they really captured the "social" race of a person. A person's legal racial classification in colonial Spanish America was closely tied to social status, wealth, culture and language use. Wealthy people paid to change or obscure their actual ancestry. Many indigenous people left their traditional villages and sought to be counted as mestizos to avoid tribute payments to the Spanish[7]. Many indigenous people, and sometimes those with partial African descent, were classified as mestizo if they spoke Spanish and lived as mestizos.

In general, the countries believed to have a majority mestizo population today are Mexico, with the largest population [8], Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras,Nicaragua, Panama, Guatemala, Paraguay, and Venezuela. In Bolivia and Peru, mestizos form the second largest group.

In some countries like Costa Rica and Chile, sources such as the CIA classify the population into a single "White and mestizo" or "White and 'white-Amerindian'" group respectively, leading to a combined figure of over 95% in each country, as whites and mestizos are not tallied separately. In Argentina and Uruguay, the official mestizo population form a small minority of 3% to 8% of the population.

In Mexico, the degree of admixture varies with region, although population mobility in recent decades has changed this somewhat. Generally, the degree of indigenous Amerindian ancestry among Mexican mestizos increases as one goes south, and conversely, decreases the more one goes north. This pattern reflects both the preferential trend of Spanish settlement (actual settlers, not concentration of cities founded by Spaniards) in central and northern regions during the colony and also the greater concentration of Amerindians that inhabited the central to southern regions.

A representation of a Mestizo, in a Pintura de Castas from Mexico during the Spanish colonial period. The painting illustrates "A Spaniard and Amerindian, produce a Mestizo".

[edit] Noted mestizos migrating to Europe

Martín Cortés, son of the Spanish Conquistador Hernán Cortés and of the Nahuatl-Maya indigenous Mexican interpreter Malinche, was the first mestizo to arrive in Spain,[citation needed] though he did so against his will after being exiled in punishment for leading a rebellion with his younger brother to form a new government in Mexico.

The first mestizos of whom there is verified evidence of willingly having set foot on European soil are the grandchildren of Moctezuma II, Aztec emperor of Mexico, whose royal descent the Spanish crown acknowledged. Of this family, the most publicized descendants are the Acosta family and the Spanish Count Miravalle, in Andalucía, Spain, who in 2003 demanded that Mexico recommence payment of the so called 'Moctezuma pensions' the government cancelled in 1934. The interest alone of such pensions is said to be enough for every single one of Moctezuma's modern descendants to live comfortable lives.

From Peru also arrived the mestizo historian Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, son of Spanish Conquistador Sebastián Garcilaso de la Vega and of the Inca princess Isabel Chimpo Oclloun. He lived in the town of Montilla, Andalucía, where he died in 1616.

Starting from the early 1970s and throughout all of the 1980s, Europe saw the arrival of thousands of Chileans, both whites and mestizos, seeking political refuge during the dictatorial government of Augusto Pinochet. Today, there is a growing number of mestizo immigrants in Western Europe, primarily from Ecuador and Colombia.

[edit] Brazil

In Brazil, the word mestiço is used to describe individuals born from any mixture of different ethnicities. Individuals that fit the specific case of having Portuguese and Amerindian parents are commonly known as caboclo or, more commonly in the past, mameluco. Individuals of European and African ancestry are described as mulato. Cafuzos (known as zambo in the English language) are the production of Amerindian and African ancestors.

[edit] Canada

Louis Riel, Canadian Métis.

In Canada, the Métis are regarded as an independent ethnic group. This community of descent consists of individuals descended from marriages of First Nation women, specifically Cree, Ojibway, and Saulteaux with Europeans, usually French, English, and Scottish laborers or merchants employed in the North American Fur Trade. Their history dates to the mid 17th century, and they have been recognized as a people since the early 18th century.

Their territory roughly includes the three Prairie Provinces (Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan), parts of Ontario, British Columbia and the Northwest Territories, as well as parts of the northern United States (including North Dakota and Montana).

Traditionally, the Métis spoke a mixed language called Michif (with various regional dialects). Michif (a phonetic spelling of the Métis pronunciation of "Métif", a variant of Métis) is also used as the name of the Métis people. The name is most commonly applied to descendants of communities in what is now southern Manitoba. The name is also applied to the descendants of similar communities in what are now Ontario, Quebec, Labrador, and the Northwest Territories, although these groups' histories are different from that of the western Métis. In Northern Manitoba some communities spoke Bungee, a combination of Gaelic, Cree, and Ojibwe. Bungee is now extinct.

Estimates of the number of Métis vary from 300,000 to 700,000 or more.[citation needed] In September 2002, the Métis people adopted a national definition of Métis for citizenship within the "Métis Nation." Based on this definition, it is estimated that there are 350,000 to 400,000[citation needed] Métis Nation citizens in Canada, although many Métis classify anyone as Métis who can prove that an ancestor applied for money scrip or land scrip as part of nineteenth-century treaties with the Canadian government. However, Labrador, Quebec, and even some Acadian Metis communities are not accepted by the Metis National Council and are represented nationally by the "Congress of Aboriginal Peoples."

The Métis are not recognized as a First Nation by the Canadian government and do not receive the benefits granted to First Nation peoples. However, the 1982 amendments to the Canadian constitution recognize the Métis as an Aboriginal people and have enabled individual Métis to sue successfully for recognition of their traditional rights such as rights to hunt and trap. In 2003, a court ruling in Ontario found that the Métis deserve the same rights as other aboriginal communities in Canada.

[edit] The United States

In the United States, the term "Multiracial" is used to indentify individuals of mixed racial heritages. "Mixed-blood" is the most common term for Native Americans mixed with any other race.

Nearly half (48%) of the 35 million Hispanic and Latino Americans counted in the Federal 2000 Census self-identified as "White", and another 3/7 (42%) as "Other". Multiracials came in at 6%.[9] There are many multiracial people of different ethnicities living in the United States. An explorer by the name of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau was perhaps the most notable person of mixed ancestry in the region. His father, Toussaint Charbonneau, was a French Canadian interpreter, and his mother Sacagawea was a Native American Shoshone guide of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Jean Baptiste can be found depicted on the United States dollar coin along with his mother, Sacagawea. Prior to 1848 it was unclear where the Canada-US border lay, and later still before it was enforced. Many Metis lived in Montana and North Dakota.

The word "Mestizo" is a term used in regard to mixed–race Hispanic or Latino individuals. The word is not used among the mixed–race descendants of the North American Indian tribes, or in the United States cultural environment. The old English language cognate of mestizo is "Mestee", a word originating from the Middle French term "Mestis", which is translated to Métis in the modern French language. It was widely used by people of mixed White and Native American ancestry before the American Civil War in the 19th century. After the Civil War, the One-drop rule started to include Black people, and the word fell into disuse — except for members of the old tri–racial ethnic groups such as Melungeons, Brass Ankles, Chestnut Ridge people (or Mayles), and Redbones. Mestizo is a term used in regard to mixed race.

[edit] Other Uses

[edit] Philippines

Filipino mestizo is a term used in the Philippines to denote Filipinos of mixed indigenous Filipino (Austronesian people/Malay/Malayo-Polynesian), and European or Chinese ancestry.

The official percentage of Filipinos with European ancestry, although thought to be small, is still unknown and the Philippine Government does not honor any surveys or studies done by various institutions since most of them are only considered as "guestimates". Racial intermixture occurred, on a small scale, during the Spanish colonial era, as well as in the 20th century with Americans. Before and during these periods, significant Chinese admixtures have also been introduced to the Filipino people.

There are also a number of Filipino mestizos in the Philippines who have ancestries from various European countries as well as the Middle East. Because most Filipinos were given Spanish surnames (see:Alphabetical Catalog of Surnames), Eurasians of non-Spanish descent with Spanish surnames may be mistaken as Filipinos of Spanish descent.

[edit] Sri Lanka

Mestiços are known collectively as Burghers and are the descendents of mixed Sri Lankan and Portuguese/Dutch/British colonists, Sri Lanka Indo-Portuguese language and Dutch Creole are still spoken on the island.

[edit] Guam and Northern Mariana Islands

In the former Spanish colonies of Guam and Northern Mariana Islands, the term "Mestizo" was formerly used to identify people of mixed Pacific Islander and Spanish ancestry; however, as the United States gained control of these islands after the Spanish American War in 1898, the term "Multiracial" became the contemporary term used to designate individuals of mixed indigenous and American or European descent. They currently form a small minority of the population.

[edit] Publication

  • Wang S, Ray N, Rojas W, Parra MV, Bedoya G, et al. (2008) Geographic Patterns of Genome Admixture in Latin American Mestizos. PLoS Genet 4(3): e1000037. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1000037
  • "Genetic Study Of Latin Americans Sheds Light On A Troubled History" - Science Daily
  • Duno Gottberg, Luis, Solventando las diferencias: la ideología del mestizaje en Cuba. Madrid, Iberoamericana – Frankfurt am Main, Vervuert, 2003

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Field Listing – Ethnic Groups". The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2075.html. Retrieved 2008-09-26. 
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ [2]
  4. ^ "Demografía y Sociedad" (in Spanish). Red de Oficinas Económicas y Comerciales de España en el Exterior. http://www.oficinascomerciales.es/icex/cma/contentTypes/common/records/viewDocument/0,,,00.bin?doc=486600. Retrieved 2008-09-26. "el 67% mestiza o mulata entre blanco-indionegro" 
  5. ^ "Mestizo" in the American Heritage Dictionary
  6. ^ "mestizo". Merriam-Webster’s Online Dictionary. Merriam-Webster, Incorporated. 2008. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/mestizo. "a person of mixed blood; specifically: a person of mixed European and American Indian ancestry" 
  7. ^ Peter N. Stearns and William L. Langer (2001). Enclyclopedia of World History:Ancient, Medieval, and Modern, Chronologically Arranged. http://books.google.ca/books?id=MziRd4ddZz4C&pg=RA1-PA401&lpg=RA1-PA401&dq=mestizo+cuba&source=web&ots=Y56IhdydqF&sig=M-fyBVaukGHuIreqE4A11R9JwU0&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result. 
  8. ^ [3]
  9. ^ "Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin — Census 2000 Brief". United States Census Bureau. http://www.census.gov/prod/2001pubs/cenbr01-1.pdf. Retrieved 2008-06-18. 

[edit] External links

Miscegenation in Spanish colonies
African
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Spaniard
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Spaniard
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Amerindian
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African
Mulatto Criollo Mestizo Zambo



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