Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

MESTIZO


'Mestizo' (''Portuguese'', 'Mestiço'; ''French'', 'Métis': from Late Latin ''mixticius'', from Latin ''mixtus'', past participle of ''miscere'', "to mix") is a term of Spanish origin used to designate people of mixed European and indigenous non-European ancestry. The term has traditionally been applied mostly to those of mixed European and indigenous Amerindian ancestry who inhabit the region spanning Latin America. In other regions and countries previously under Spanish, Portuguese or French colonial rule, variants of the term may also be in usage for people of other mixtures. In the Philippines, the term 'Mestizo' originally bore the connotation of mixed Spanish and Filipino, whereas nowadays the term is used to identify individuals who are mixed indigenous Austronesian and European or any other Foreign ancestry.

Contents
Americas
Latin America and Brazil
The Mestizo/Mestiço
Mestizos from Hispanic America in Europe
Canada
The Métis
The United States
"Mixed-Bloods" and Mestizos
Asia-Pacific
The Philippines
Mestiços in East Timor, Macau and Goa
Africa
Equatorial Guinea
Portuguese-speaking Africa
São Tomé & Príncipe and Cape Verde
Angola and Mozambique
French-speaking Africa
Famous mestizos
See also
References
Footnotes
External links

Americas


Latin America and Brazil

The Mestizo/Mestiço

Under the caste system of colonial Latin America and Spain, the term originally applied only to the children resulting from the union of one European and one Amerindian parent, or the children of two mestizo parents. During this era myriad other terms (castizo, cuarterón de indio, cholo, etc.) were in use to denote other individuals of European/Amerindian ancestry in ratios smaller or greater than the 50:50 of mestizos. Today, mestizo refers to all people with discernible amounts of both European and Amerindian ancestry.
Mestizos are estimated to make up the majority of the populations of Latin America; Mexico (60%), Colombia (58%), Guatemala (45%-50%), Puerto Rico (61%), Venezuela (49%), Ecuador (65%), El Salvador (90%), Honduras (90%), Nicaragua (69%), Panama (70%), Paraguay (95%).
In other American countries where mestizos do not constitute a majority, they nonetheless represent a significant portion of their populations; Belize (48.7%), Bolivia (30%), Peru (37%), and Uruguay (8%). In Argentina the number of mestizo is subject to controversy, with estimates varying between 3% and 15%. In Brazil, the word "mestiço" is used to describe individuals born from any mixture of different ethnicities, not only Amerindians and European; individuals that fit this specific case are commonly known as ''caboclos'' or, more commonly in the past, mamelucos. In the Brazilian State of Amazon, in the North of the country, there is the "Dia do Mestiço" (Day of the Mestizo), on June 27. In Costa Rica mestizos are combined with whites and accounted for as a single figure, although, historically there were less advanced and a few number Amerindians in that region of Central America, so mestizos are a small percentage of the population.
A representation of a 'Mestizo', in a "Pintura de Castas" in the Colonial era. "A Spanish and Amerindian, produce a Mestizo"

In Mexico and Peru, mestizo has also come to be used as a cultural label. In a cultural context, people are considered ''indígena'' (Amerindian) if they live following their traditional ways of life (clothing, customs and indigenous languages), otherwise they are also deemed ''mestizo'', or what in Central America would be called a ''ladino'', not directly related to the Ladino people of Europe. Additionally in the Mexican case, most of the Afro-Mexican minority would also simply identify as ''mestizo'' by virtue of their cultural traits, rather than as black, mulatto or zambo by their ancestry. These cultural implications of "mestizo" can result in an over count of the population - in the Mexican case, as high as 42% according to some sources - which would otherwise be mestizo on a racial level. Also, race is not recorded by the Mexican or Peruvian census, so that any calculations performed by government bodies or independent agencies are always estimates.
Mestizos from Hispanic America in Europe

Martín Cortés, son of the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés and of the Náhuatl-Maya indigenous Mexican interpreter Malinche, was the first mestizo to arrive in Spain, though he did so against his will after being exiled in punishment for leading a rebellion.
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 counts 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 known as "the Inca" Garcilaso de la Vega, son of conquistador Sebastián Garcilaso de la Vega and of the Inca princess Isabel Chimpo Oclloun. He lived in the town of Montilla, in 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 mestizos and whites, 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.
Canada

The Métis

Main articles: Métis people

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 French Canadian and British employees of the Hudson's Bay Company. Their history dates to the mid 17th century, and they have been recognized as a people since the early eighteenth.
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.
Estimates of the number of Métis vary from 300,000 to 700,000 or more. 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 Métis Nation citizens in Canada , although many Métis classify anyone as Métis that can prove that an ancestor applied for money scrip or land scrip as part of nineteenth-century treaties with the Canadian government.
The Métis are not recognized as a First Nation by the Canadian government and do not receive the benefits granted to First Nation peoples (see Indian Act). However, the new Canadian constitution of 1982 recognizes the Métis as an Aboriginal people and has 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.
The United States

"Mixed-Bloods" and Mestizos

The infant Jean Baptiste Charbonneau depicted on the U.S. dollar coin with his mother, Sacagawea.

In the United States the term "mixed-blood" is more often employed for non-Hispanic individuals of mixed European and Native American ancestry, while ''mestizo'' is the term of choice for Hispanic individuals (whether U.S.-born or immigrant) of that same mixed ancestry.
Of the Hispanic Americans who have lived in the Southwestern United States for several generations prior to annexation and incorporation of that region into the United States, most have identified as racially white. Yet several others have classified themselves as mestizo, particularly those who also identify as Chicano. ''See also Tejanos''.
Of the over 35 million Hispanics counted in the Federal 2000 Census, the overwhelming majority of the 42.2% who identified as "some other race" ([15]) are believed to be mestizos. Of the 47.9% of Hispanics who identified as White Hispanic, many are thought to possess at least some Amerindian ancestry. Hispanics identifying as multiracial amounted to 6.3% (2.2 million) of all Hispanics and presumably included many mestizos.
Renowned ''mixed-blooded'' persons in United States' history are many. One such example is Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, who guided the Mormon Battalion from New Mexico to the city of San Diego in California in 1846, and then accepted an appointment there as alcalde of Mission San Luis Rey. His father, Toussaint Charbonneau, was a French Canadian interpreter, and his mother Sacagawea was the Shoshone guide of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. He can be found depicted on the United States dollar coin along with his mother, Sacagawea.
The group of Americans in the Appalachia region known as Melungeons are another mixed-race population.

Asia-Pacific


The Philippines

Main articles: Filipino mestizo

Manuel Luis Quezon, Filipino mestizo of part Spanish descent, President of the Philippines.

During the colonial period of the Philippines, the term "Mestizo" originally referred only to those of mixed Filipino and Spanish ancestry. However, the term soon became generic and synonymous for "mixed race".
The use of the term later extended to include all Filipinos of mixed indigenous and other ancestry. A recent genetic study by Stanford University, indicates that 3.6% of the population have European ancestries from Spanish and American colonization.
''See also Demographics of the Philippines and Ethnic groups of the Philippines''.
Modern day Filipino mestizos include Filipinos with Spanish, Mexican, American ancestry or Filipinos mixed with Chinese, Japanese (those of mixed Austronesian and Japanese descent). Although those Filipinos of Chinese, Japanese and other East Asian ancestry is also interchangeably referred to as "Chinito/a" (diminutive of ''Chino/a''; Chinese) to specify the type of racial Mestizo background, this would more correctly be applied only to those mestizos of Chinese descent. More correct terms denoting Filipino-Chinese mestizos include Sangley and the vernacular "Tsinoy". That of Spanish and Chinese would be Tornatras.
Mestiços in East Timor, Macau and Goa

In the former Portuguese colony of East Timor, Macau and Goa, the term "Mestiço" is applied to those of mixed indigenous Austronesian, Chinese, Asian Indian and Portuguese ancestry. They currently form less than 1% of the population in East Timor, Macau and Goa. Prominent mestiço in East Timor include the first President Xanana Gusmão as well as the second President José Ramos Horta.

Africa


Equatorial Guinea

In Equatorial Guinea the term "Mestizo" is used to indentify individuals of Spanish and African descent.
Portuguese-speaking Africa

São Tomé & Príncipe and Cape Verde

Prior to Portuguese exploration and settlement of both São Tomé and Príncipe and Cape Verde, these islands were all uninhabited.
In both countries, the great majority of their current populations descend from the mixing of the Portuguese that initially settled the islands from the 15th Century onwards and the black Africans brought from the African mainland to work as slaves - mostly from Benin, Gabon, and the Congo for São Tomé & Príncipe, and from Senegal to Sierra Leone for Cape Verde.
Of São Tomé & Prícipe's 193,413 inhabitants, the largest segment is defined as mestiço , and 71 % of the population of Cape Verde is also classified as such.
Currently, the most prominent and internationally known mestiço of São Tomé and Príncipe is president Fradique de Menezes.
Angola and Mozambique

In the other two Portuguese-speaking African countries including Angola and Mozambique, the term "Mestiço" is also used to describe people of mixed European and African ancestry.
In both countries they constitue small but important minorities; 2% in Angola and 0.2% in Mozambique.
French-speaking Africa

Métis (feminine ''Métisse'') in French-speaking Africa is used to describe people of mixed European and native African ancestry.
In any French-speaking Africa country in which métis may be found, they constitute (1%) of the population.

Famous mestizos


The following is a list of famous people who possess mestizo ancestry.

Paulino Alcántara

Benjamin Bratt

Andres Manuel López Obrador

Hugo Chávez

Charlie Cruz

Porfirio Díaz

America Ferrera

Inca Garcilaso de la Vega

Vicente Guerrero

José Ramos Horta

Xanana Gusmão

Enrique Iglesias

Julio Jaramillo

Q'Orianka Kilcher

Diego Maradona

Cheech Marin

Mario Moreno (Cantinflas)

Isabel Preysler

Selena Quintanilla Pérez

Manuel Luis Quezon

Carlos Santos

Mercedes Sosa

Danny Trejo

See also



Miscegenation

Amanye

Brown people

Casta

Colonial Mentality

Creole

Genízaro

List of terms for multiraciality

Mestiços (Sri Lanka)

Mischling

Mulatto

Zambo

References


Footnotes


#The ethnic composition of Chileans is marked by a socio-genetic gradient where Amerindian admixture typically correlates to social levels. Amerindian contribution tends to be strongest in the lower echelons of society, and in the upper class and middle class, tend to register the lowest degree of Amerindian contribution. Almost the entirety of the population, however, presents a racially mixed origin, but is not uncommon to encounter unmixed European or with more than 3/4 of European ancestry. Only a small minority can truly are unmixed Amerindian. ''See also Demographics of Chile''
#In Honduras, Panama, Costa Rica, Colombia, Ecuador, Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic and to a considerably smaller and less prominent degree in Mexico, Peru, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Venezuela, the mestizo population has absorbed some African ancestry, either in the form of Mulattos, Zambos, or directly via the African slaves who were taken there during the colonial era.
#American-mestizos in the Philippines may be of any race or ethnic origin which includes White American, Hispanic American, native American and African American.

External links



Brazilian Mestizo Movement

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.