Spanish language. Latin language Where do Latinos live?

A review on the seemingly paradoxical topic of whether Brazilians are Latin Americans. And what does the term “Latin American” or “latinas” mean in Brazil (in Russian the spelling “latinos” is also found) and the term “Brazilian”.

We tried to find out all this by translating statements on this topic from Brazilian English-language blogs.

“Brazil was the last country in the Americas to abolish slavery (1888), there has never been a widespread black movement for human rights, as there was in the United States, and there is no racial debate,” noted one Brazilian user, discussing the topic rights of black Brazilians.

Let us note that Brazil is a multicultural vibrant society, and the word “Brazilian” is consistently associated with people of different races all over the world. With. At the same time, some Brazilians also don’t really like being collectively classified as Latinos.

Here, for example, is an excerpt on this topic from a post by a Brazilian woman named Amandha on one of the Brazilian blogs, published in December 2009:

“I’m Brazilian, and we definitely don’t call ourselves Latinas, because here it’s not the right term to define the population of the entire country. Take examples from Brazilian history and you will see that we had many people who came from very different countries. My friend's parents are from Japan, he is Brazilian, but I'm sure he is not Latin. I am a mixture of German (my grandmother came from Germany) and Spanish (from my dad's father) blood, and I am white skinned. And this is the family history of at least half the population (by my count). There are many people in our country who come mostly from African countries, Italy and Japan.

In the south of Brazil, where I live, there are many white-skinned people with entire cities where people speak Polish, German and Italian as well as Portuguese.

In short, Brazilians, as far as one can tell, do not call themselves Latino because most Brazilians do not look Latino. And the word “Latino” is not perceived very well here. It's a cultural thing and we don't like to be defined as Latinos. Especially because we simply have no such thing as Latin America. We teach in school that there are South, Central and North America. But there is no Latin America.”

At the same time, user Eduardo commented on Amandha’s statement:

“When they (in the outside world) call us “Latinos,” they no longer mean the color of our skin. “Latinas” are all people who speak languages ​​derived from Latin, such as Portuguese, Spanish, etc. People who were born in Spain are Hispanic too. So I think they (those who call us “Latinos”) are right.”

Brazilians have a southern, Latin American temperament.

Ill. from the archive: a capoeirist at a carnival procession.

This was echoed by user: Leigh:

“In fact, the term “Latino” is supposed to be used to define any person from Latin America, regardless of their race or ethnicity. In the US, the term is incorrectly used for non-white people of Spanish or Portuguese descent..

Although it is correct to call all Latin Americans this way. The term "Latino" was originally intended for people from Latin America, who actually officially exist - look in the encyclopedia. So people from Spain and Portugal are not Hispanic. Of course, part of this question contains prejudices, because... many white Latinos do not want to be classified as non-white. In Latin America, where racial discrimination once began, it is difficult to get rid of it. And it is not true that the majority of people in Brazil are of European race. About 40 percent of the population, maybe even 40% or more, is said to be black or mulatto."

But the RAL user appealed to encyclopedias, trying to find the answer to what Latin America is:

“For your information, what is considered Latin America, geographically speaking?

Any part of the Americas where a Latin (Romance) language, in the form of Spanish or Portuguese, is the dominant language is considered Latin America. This term also essentially includes the southern United States.

In other words, from Mexico to La Tierra del Fuego (Argentina), this is all Latin America.”

At the end of our review, a very informative message on the topic under consideration from user jack21k:

“By the way, in Brazil people speak Portuguese, but not Spanish. Thus, Brazilians are not Hispanics.

Also, Brazilian is not a race or ethnicity. This is citizenship. If you don't think there is an American race, why do you say there is a Brazilian race? Brazil, Australia, Canada and the USA are all countries founded by immigrants. . Thus, to say that there is a Brazilian race (nationality) does not make sense...

Information on the topic:

Latin Americans and Latin America: definitions in encyclopedias

English-language encyclopedias define Latin Americans (Spanish "latinoamericano", Portuguese "latino-americano") as citizens from Latin American countries and dependent territories. English-language Wikipedia notes that “Latin American countries are multinational”. This source notes that due to multi-ethnicity Some Latinos have problems with national identification.

This means that it is difficult for Latinos to choose what to focus on in terms of ethnicity: country, parental origin, race or skin color. For example, in Brazil, a mulatto may have ancestors of a white Portuguese colonist and a black slave brought from Africa, but still feel like a Brazilian.

Latin American countries are divided into states with a predominantly Caucasian population - Argentina and Uruguay (80% of the population belongs to the European race), countries with strong Indian influence (Peru, Ecuador, Guatemala, Bolivia. Mexico) and countries with a majority of mulattoes and blacks (like Brazil And, where mulattoes predominate, or Haiti. But in the Haitian case it is predominantly the black population that dominates).

In turn, the countries of Latin America usually mean states and territories where Romance (in other words, Latin languages) dominate, namely Spanish and Portuguese. At the same time, the Romanesque French minority of Canada and the United States, as well as the southern United States with its Spanish-speaking population in general, are not included in Latin America, since these territories are considered to belong to the Anglo-Saxon world.

For more information about the origins of Latin American countries, see our website;

(Prepared by Monitoring website)

Americans in the United States are the greatest patriots, but at the same time they place incredible importance on heritage. People in the US know and keep track of race, nationality, etc. their ancestors...

This is why we have the terms "German-Mexican Americans". This doesn't happen in Brazil. Children of German immigrants born in Brazil consider themselves Brazilians, but not Germans or German Brazilians. They will say that my father is German, but they will never say that I am German or that I am a Brazilian of German descent.

Latino/Latin Americans is an interesting example. In the US, when people hear this word, they immediately associate it with race or ethnicity. In Brazil, the term "Latino" only means that a person was born in Latin America. In Brazil there is no connection between this word and race or ethnicity. If you ask peopleon the street in Brazil, if they are Latino, then they will answer: “no”. Or maybe they will even say that they don't know what it means. By the way, we don't use this name "Hispanic" as often as people in the US or other countries. We usually say South, Central and North America. It's a little jarring that Latin America isn't a continent, it's only a geographic region that originally denotes Mexico when viewed from North America.

To understand the differences in racial attitudes across countries, let's look at history. Immigrants came to the United States with their families, and interracial marriage was almost a crime here for some time. On the other hand, in Brazil many immigrants were single men, because... Brazil was not considered a place where people expected to build a new life, but only a place to try to earn money and return to Europe.

Thus, at the beginning of the period of colonization by European immigrants, “marriages” took place between them and non-white wives, mainly black slaves, but also girls from Indian tribes. In this context, interracial marriages were tolerated due to the insufficient number of single (European) women in the colony. All of the above factors contributed to the fact that society in the United States became more divided along national and racial lines, while in Brazil, race was not a huge issue and national origin was not very important. Supporting this argument is that people in Brazil will determine someone's race based on the person's appearance rather than on their ancestors.

Finally, the biggest lesson I learned is that racial and ethnic definitions and classifications change from country to country, and in the end they are not important. Race is a concept not even (fully) recognized by science. In general, these racial-ethnic discussions, or otherwise debates, only divide people,” the blogger noted.

What conclusions can be drawn from the above statements:

1. Brazilians do not like to be called Latin Americans, because outside the country this word includes belonging to a certain dark-skinned Caucasian type. While in Brazil there are blacks, white-skinned people of German blood, and Indians.

2. For Brazilians, the term "Latino" is simply a person who lives in Latin America, i.e. in the area south of the United States. At the same time, Brazilians often use the name “South America” instead of “Latin America”.

3. Brazilians like to think that there is a nation of “Brazilians”. While abroad I still don’t fully accept this T. At the same time, this fact is supported by the huge percentage of mixed marriages in the country. Moreover, from the very moment of the beginning of its colonization by Europeans, due to the fact that many European immigrants during the development of the country were single men without families and without the opportunity to find a wife from Europe. Brazil at the time of exploration was not considered a place where people expected to build a new life, but only a place to try to earn money and return to Europe. That's why European girls didn't go there. They went to the USA with their families and their traditional national way of life. Therefore, the United States remembers more about its national roots, but at the same time, the long-standing principles of democracy have led to equal rights among nations. At the same time, in Brazil there is national unity, but people are divided along social lines, which was facilitated by the long-existing hierarchical system of Brazilian society, introduced, including for Europeans, during the time of Portuguese colonization. In contrast to the principles of democracy of the first settlers in the future USA.

Hispanics are citizens of Latin American countries; they should not be confused with Hispanics in the USA or Hispanic Americans and Latino Americans or disparagingly Latinos, the largest national-linguistic minority in the United States. Latinos often include all residents of Latin America, with the exception of countries where English, German and Dutch are dominant. In contrast, residents of the French colonies are equated with Latin Americans, including those from Haiti, Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, the Dominican Republic and Grenada. Latin Americans are united by a common past, historical origin, kinship to the Spanish and Portuguese empire of the 16-18 centuries; Latin Americans today are the descendants of the Spanish and Portuguese conquistadors.

Latino religion

The majority of Latin Americans are ardent Catholics, this is their difference from the Anglo-Saxon population of the USA and Canada, which are Protestants. It is worth noting that in religious Latin America today the percentage of atheists, agnostics or representatives of other religions and sects is growing. Islam is growing in particular, which came here with the inhabitants of India and the Arabs. There are quite a lot of Muslims in Mexico, as well as in the US territories of Texas and California.

Races and Ethnicities in Latin America

The Spanish and Portuguese conquistadors turned out to be friendlier people compared to the British, the Anglo-Saxons almost completely slaughtered the indigenous population in the territory of the modern USA and Canada, but where the Spaniards and the Portuguese ruled, the local tribes slowly became related to the Europeans, resulting in the Latin Americans, the result of racial cultural mixing. Today, the racial and genetic composition in Latin America varies significantly across countries with combinations of European, African, Native American and even Asian genes. After all, not only the Spaniards and Portuguese arrived in Latin America, but also Jews, Arabs, gypsies, black slaves from Africa; in the 19th and 20th centuries, people from other European countries appeared here, including Germany, the Netherlands, France, Italy, Croatia.

About 80% of Latin Americans are mestizos, the result of a mixture of Indians and white Europeans. The indigenous people of Latin America today represent the majority of the population, only in Peru and Bolivia, in Guatemala the Indians are two-fifths of the population, in Mexico 14%, but in absolute numbers this is the largest part of the Indians in the Western Hemisphere. The Indian population remains in every country in Latin America, but with the exception of the countries listed above, they do not exceed 10% of the total population.

There are many Asians in Latin America, the first Asians to appear were natives of the Philippines, but most of the modern descendants are former Japanese and Chinese, and mainly live in Brazil and Peru, and the Chinese minority is also actively growing in Panama today. According to some estimates, about 2 million Chinese and their descendants live in Brazil.

Latin America is home to the largest Japanese community of 1.5 million people, with about 100 thousand ethnic Koreans in Argentina and Mexico. About 1.47 million Asians live in Peru, for example, this country had a Japanese president. The main population of Martinique is of Afro-White-Indian origin. Guadeloupe has a 14% East Indian population.

Blacks were brought to Latin America as slaves starting in the 16th century, most of them were sent to the Caribbean and Brazil, so in Brazil today more than 10 million people are black, in Haiti more than 7 million, many blacks in Puerto Rico, on Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Panama and Colombia. The mixed black and white population was called mulattoes; there were significantly more of them than pure blacks.

Population of Latin American countries

The most populated country in the Latin American region is Brazil 192272890 people, followed by Mexico 112322757, Colombia 48219645, Argentina 40134425, Venezuela 33221865, Peru 29461933, Chile 17063000, Ecuador 13625000.

Mestizo Hispanics

In Ecuador, 78% of the population is mestizo, in Peru 72%, Nicaragua 66%, El Salvador 64%, Mexico 60%, Bolivia 60%, Honduras 56%, Panama 55%. The fewest mestizos are in Uruguay 6%, Brazil 18%, Argentina 20%, Chile 26%.

White Hispanics

The whitest country in Latin America is Uruguay, where 78% of the population identifies as white without any other admixture. Next comes Argentina 68%, Chile 60%, Costa Rica 46%, Brazil 45%, Paraguay 35%, Venezuela 30%, Colombia 29%, Guatemala 17%, Panama 15%, Honduras 14%, Dominican Republic 12%, El Salvador 10%, Mexico 10%, Nicaragua 8%, Peru 7%, Ecuador 6%, Bolivia 4%.

Black Latinos

The majority of blacks are in the Dominican Republic 27%, Brazil 15%, Panama 11%, Venezuela 7%. There are practically no blacks in Bolivia, Mexico, Chile, at least the percentage is very low, the distribution is exactly the same among mulattoes.

Asians Latinos

The Asian population is most represented in Panama with 4%, with 2% each in Honduras and the Dominican Republic.

Indians Latin Americans

In Guatemala 44% of the population are Indians, in Bolivia 27%, Mexico 15%, Honduras 12%. There are practically no Indians in Argentina and Uruguay, here they are only about 1%.

Latin American languages

Latin Americans speak well Romance languages, and indeed all languages ​​that originate from Latin, including Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, and French. Again, there is no need to confuse Latinos in the United States and Latinos living in Latin American countries; the difference is that naturalized Latinos already speak English, especially since the first generation born in the United States does not fully speak Romance languages.

Most countries in Latin America are Spanish-speaking, with Portuguese spoken by the largest country in the region - . They speak Dutch, French in , English in Guyana, Belize, Bahamas, Barbados, Jamaica.

60% of the population of Latin America considers Spanish their first language, 34% Portuguese, 6% of the population speak other languages ​​such as Quechua, Mayan, Guarani, Aymara, Nahuatl, English, French, Dutch and Italian. Portuguese is spoken only in Brazil (Brazilian Portuguese). Spanish is the official language of most of the rest of Latin America, as well as Cuba, Puerto Rico (where it has equal rights with English), and the Dominican Republic. French is spoken in Haiti and in the French overseas departments of Guiana, the French overseas community, and French is also spoken in. Dutch is the official language in , and . Dutch is a related language to Germanic, so these areas are not necessarily considered part of Latin America. Mexico is the only country that boasts a wider variety of indigenous languages ​​than any other Latin American country, the most widely spoken Amerindian language in Mexico being Nahuatl.

In Peru, the Quechua Indian language is the official language. There is no official language in Ecuador. In Bolivia, the Indian languages ​​Aymara, Quechua and Guarani have official status along with Spanish. Guarani, along with Spanish, is the official language of Paraguay. In , Spanish is the official language. Colombia recognizes all indigenous languages ​​spoken by local residents.

Other European languages ​​that are common in Latin America are English, spoken by some groups in Puerto Rico, and in neighboring countries that are not considered Latin America, such as Belize and Guyana. German in southern Brazil, southern Chile, parts of Argentina, Venezuela and Paraguay. Italian in Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela and Uruguay. Ukrainian and Polish in southern Brazil, southern Argentina. Yiddish and Hebrew in the vicinity of Buenos Aires and Sao Paulo. Japanese in Brazil and Peru, Korean in Brazil, Arabic in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia and Venezuela, Chinese throughout South America. Creole is the most common language in the Caribbean.

Manuel Galic::: History of Pre-Columbian Civilizations

CHAPTER I.

"Our problems are extremely confusing and unusual" ( Simon Bolivar)

The ancestors of today's Latin Americans should first of all be considered Indians, since only they have inhabited a continent unknown to the Old World since time immemorial. In addition, the predecessors of those who live there today were Europeans and even Africans. Europeans arrived as conquerors and colonizers - in the era of emerging capitalist relations, they needed more and more wealth. Africans were brought there as slaves to produce this wealth - they were brought to a place where, as a rule, there were no longer any Indians left who had fled oppression or were exterminated by invaders. Thus, as a result of the mixing of these three ethnic components during the 16th-18th centuries. and the Latin Americans emerged.

At that time, the dominant position in society was occupied by a minority consisting exclusively of Europeans and their descendants born in America. The latter were called Creoles. Numerous mestizo variants of Europeans and Creoles with Indians and black women found themselves in an unequal, oppressed position. The new ethnic formations were called “crossed” and “dim-colored.” They were given the most mocking and contemptuous nicknames. This “art” was especially successful in New Spain and Peru, where nicknames were invented depending on origin (from Indians, Spaniards, blacks, mestizos, mulattoes, sambo) or in accordance with the proportion of constituent racial characteristics. There are many examples of this: “Moriscos”, “albino”, “Moor”, “turn back”, “sambaigo” (from sambo), “black” (descendant of a Chinese and an Indian), “leper” (or “red-black mestizo"), "white-piebald", "coyote" (i.e. gray-brown), "firebrand", "neither this nor that", "quinteron", "perequinteron", "white man", " civilized" (i.e. the son of a European and an Indian), "Chinese" (anyone from Asia). This repulsive sociology nevertheless reveals the complex ethno-social essence of the continent, inherited from colonialism.

Bolivar's insightful gaze deeply comprehended the entire essence of the new man formed in the colonies of Spain and Portugal. Life itself became the source of his apt social and political assessments. Therefore, his warning, sounded from the rostrum of the Angostura Congress on February 15, 1819, has lasting significance not only for South America, but for the entire region that is today called Latin America. “It is impossible to indicate with precision to which human family we belong. Most of the Indian population was destroyed, Europeans mixed with Americans and Africans, and the latter with Indians and Europeans. Born in the womb of the same mother, but different in blood and origin, our fathers are foreigners, people of different skin colors.” In the same speech, but somewhat earlier, the Liberator said:

“Our problems are thus extremely confusing and unusual.”

In the 19th and 20th centuries. “our problems” have become even more complex. This was greatly facilitated by the arrival of those who should be called “new Europeans”, as well as immigrants from the Middle East - Arabs, Jews, Indians, Chinese and Japanese. Of course, their descendants also became “Hispanics,” just like the descendants of Indians, “old Europeans,” and blacks. Statistics show that European immigrants to Argentina, Uruguay, southern Brazil and southern Chile, who arrived in the middle of the last century, settled over vast territories. Not a single one of the former or new American colonies was left without replenishment. The number of Spaniards, Portuguese, Italians, Germans, English, French, Jews and other ethnic groups was constantly increasing. This immigration, which took place from 1850 to 1930, amounted to 12 million people. Especially many Italians settled in Rio de la Plata. But not everyone knows about the drama that befell them and other Europeans in the south of Brazil, where white slaves began to be mercilessly exploited on coffee plantations instead of black labor.

From the very beginning, Asians suffered the same fate as the Italians who moved to Brazil. Black slaves were often replaced by Chinese. So, in 1849-1874. 80 thousand people were taken to Peru to collect cane and mine guano on the Chincha Islands. For similar work, the Chinese were brought to Cuba, where many of them joined the struggle for independence. In Mexico, the memory of the 1911 massacre in Torreon, during which 300 Chinese were killed, is still preserved.

Most Latin American governments have at one time passed discriminatory laws against the Chinese and the so-called Syrian-Lebanese. However, fate spared the former more than the latter. The Japanese, for their part, preferred to settle in Brazil and Peru. These countries are home to 190 thousand and 29 thousand Japanese, respectively. In Brazil, a new type of Latino has even emerged - Nisei, or Japanese-Brazilian.

As for the Indians, they were brought to America by the British colonialists, under whose yoke the inhabitants of India, the Antilles and Guyana languished. The Swedish researcher M. Mörner, who collected extensive material on this issue in the book “Mixing of Races in the History of Latin America,” described this process as follows:

“No part of the world has seen such a gigantic mixing of races as Latin America and the Caribbean after 1492.”

In other words, this means that the most complex world called Latin America turned out to be a world in which all or almost all ethnic groups of humanity mixed, either directly or through the mediation of intermediate carriers. The Indian and African origins came directly from the Indians and Africans. Latin came indirectly, through the Spaniards, Portuguese and French, through the Roman seizure of Gaul and Spain. Therefore, in the veins of Latin Americans there is a share of the blood of Celts, Arabs, Goths and Gauls. The influence of the East and Asia manifests itself differently in different countries, depending on the number of immigrants and their area of ​​​​origin.

Bolivar's statement remains true today. The ethnocultural heritage of Latin Americans can be considered much less Latin than indigenous. In addition, there are other components to this heritage. The Liberator said "South America" ​​and Marty said "Our America". These words most fully reflect the complexity of Latin American reality, since both of them are truly comprehensive. When the inhabitants of the continent say about themselves: “We are Latin Americans,” they do not even think about the accuracy of this term, they do not fully sense the meaning hidden in it.

It is known that the culture of North America, which includes the United States and Canada, does not include a component that is commonly called Latin American. However, in both countries the Latin population is fairly well represented. Moreover, the border between the two Americas is neither racial, nor linguistic, nor religious. The political structure cannot serve as a sign of it either. Nor does it coincide with the boundaries established in the process of clashes between rival European colonialists and the later changed new type of conquistadors - the Yankees in Mexico, Puerto Rico, Canada and the USA.

This border follows a contour outlined by economic differences caused by the Conquest and European colonization. They determined the subsequent development of new American societies. “North America began with the plow, and Spanish America began with the hunting dog,” Marty noted. He was able to surprisingly accurately and succinctly characterize the essence of European rivalry in the 16th and 17th centuries, as a result of which British colonies were formed in the north of America, and Portuguese-Spanish ones in the south.

A bourgeois and Protestant farmer arrived to the north. This was a representative of Europe, which had already embarked on the path of capitalist development. And in the south an adventurer appeared, emerging from the romances of chivalry and carried away by endless internecine wars - a typical representative of Europe, mired in chivalry and inquisitorial persecution. The plow and the hunting dog are two different ways of colonization. They identified the starting points from which the border between North America and South America originates.

Hence the gap between the two Americas - the exploitative and the exploited, to be more specific. The “continental unity” and “western hemisphere” that American political scientists talk about are nothing more than a colossal absurdity, invented, repeated and spread about a century ago by the North American imperialists and taken up by their loyal classes and their respective governments. Therefore, while both still exist, it is necessary to recall again and again the clear, prescient warnings made by Marty at Wallington in the troubled days of the first Pan-American Conference of 1889-1890 about the “difference of origin and interests between the two continental factors” and about "the relationship between the two nationalities of America in its past and present." One can endlessly quote this vivid, pain-filled speech by Marty.

The question of the border between the two Americas, born of European colonization, is closely related to another important problem - the territories that were or continue to be Anglo-Franco-Dutch colonies in the Caribbean and Guyana. Narrow ethnic criteria increasingly alienate their residents from Latin Americans. But the events and processes going through the modern world, and in particular the American continent - from open war to colonialism, neo-colonialism, imperialism and backwardness, which are ultimately the same thing - oblige us to think again about the fate of the peoples inhabiting these territories. Nothing other than their different colonial origins distinguishes them from the rest of Latin America. The reality of our world urgently and inevitably leads to the close unity of all who are fighting for the liberation of the continent from common disasters: colonialism, neo-colonialism, imperialism and backwardness. To win this difficult battle, it is first necessary to overcome the disunity generated by various reasons.

This is the “intricacy and extraordinary complexity of our problems.” The peoples and cultures that represent the heritage and, at the same time, the present and future wealth of the continent are diverse and numerous. It is impossible to forget about someone or underestimate someone without distorting or falsifying the “birth certificate” common to Latin Americans. Thanks to this complexity and diversity, “our problems” cannot be contained in one palm. We must try to embrace them with both hands in order to embrace almost the entire earth and the entire history of mankind. And so we will take our journey into the most distant past of the American continent. As the myth of Quetzalcoatl says, let us turn to the search for “our first parents and ancestors who gave birth to people in ancient times.” We are talking about Indians.

Tribes of Israel, Atlantis and the Seven-Headed Hydra

The origins of the ancestors of Latin Americans still remain largely a mystery, despite the fact that science has made significant advances in this area in recent decades. At the same time, the absurd fantasies of some chroniclers of the early colonial period have finally been archived. So, according to one of them, the continent was inhabited by Jews - the descendants of Noah, or by the ten tribes of Israel, who disappeared in the 8th century. BC e. after the Assyrian conquest. According to another, the first settlers to America were the Phoenicians, Canaanites, or some other immigrants from Asia Minor. According to one version, they were allowed to move to another continent by their exceptional seaworthiness. Others believed that these tribes were forced to flee under the onslaught of a powerful enemy, such as Alexander the Great.

Exactly the same, devoid of any hint of plausibility, is the extremely seductive myth according to which the distant ancestors of Latin Americans passed to the territory of the modern continent through land that existed about ten and a half thousand years ago. This is the myth of Atlantis, heard by Solon from some Egyptian priests. Plato later retold it in Timaeus and Critias. Particularly impressive is the guess about the continent located on the other side of the huge sea that once swallowed Atlantis. This thought never occurred to the great Admiral, despite the fact that he managed to discover the lands mentioned in the myth. He had no idea about the significance of his discovery until his death.

Geological data suggest the likelihood of the existence of a once ancient land connection between Europe and Africa, on the one hand, and the American continent, on the other. According to one theory, it is likely that the large island of Atlantis existed in very ancient times, which subsequently disappeared as a result of a cataclysm. Supporters of the other believe that we could be talking about the existence of a huge continent that united the lands of Europe, Asia and America. This hypothesis is based on the similarity of the profiles of both hemispheres, the coastal contours of which perfectly match if you mentally remove the Atlantic Ocean and combine the American east and Euro-African west. With the help of a map and scissors, anyone can connect and separate the continents in the same way that the powerful forces of nature actually did in time immemorial.

However, none of the theories mentioned can explain the origin of the first inhabitants of America. After all, both the cataclysm and the “spreading apart” of the two worlds called the Old and New Worlds, and the formation of the Atlantic Ocean could only have taken place at the latest - as far as imagination allows - in the Tertiary period, which ended more than a million years ago. However, in those ancient times, it was not man who existed on earth, but only his ancestor - ramapite k, which anthropologists identify as the first great ape. She was the most ancient predecessor of a human being, living about 14 million years ago. About 5 million years ago, different species of higher human primates appeared that walked on two legs - Australopithecus, and only about 1 million years ago the oldest fossil man, the creator of Early Paleolithic cultures, arose - Pithecanthropus.

Thus, from the point of view of Earth science, the theory of an intercontinental Atlantic bridge that existed in ancient times looks quite plausible. However, the assumption about the wanderings of people from one continent to another during that period is without any basis. Such people did not yet exist on our planet at that time.

The relatively recently emerging science called American Studies has achieved very significant success in a short time. She rejected not only such fantastic theories as the biblical version or Plato's myth, but also the hypotheses of those who until recently were considered classics of American studies.

So, let’s continue our review of scientific achievements in the field of studying the origins of the “American” person. Naturally, all proposed constructions are based on data from archaeological finds, chronological research, comparisons, deduction and hypotheses, proven or formulated in accordance with established research methods and annually updated dating. Nevertheless, I would like to warn: each new discovery - and they occur almost daily in American studies - forces one to reconsider existing assessments, and therefore many of the conclusions made for the time being are preferably considered conditional. Everyone understands that new studies often clarify, but sometimes also refute previous conclusions that were considered true for the time being. At the same time, thanks to this process, the treasury of our knowledge about the American continent is constantly enriched.

Written in the 16th century. in Spain, his work “Decades of the New World” P. Martyr de Angleria extremely lamented this issue:

“Like Hydra, whose severed heads grow back, so I, at the end of one story, others come to mind. I wanted to close the door to Mexican problems, but a new messenger has arrived, and I am forced to open it again.”

We are experiencing the same problems while working on our book, with the only difference that everything is happening even more abruptly and rapidly than in the time of P. de Angleria. After all, Hydra constantly feeds itself with data from new methods - such as radiocarbon. And this allows you to increase the number of her heads not seven, but hundreds of times!

The radiocarbon dating method (carbon-14, or C-14) is based on the phenomenon that every organism - animal or plant - accumulates in its tissues a certain amount of radioactive carbon, which is constantly contained in the earth's atmosphere. When the organism dies, the accumulated radioactivity begins to decrease through random self-emission of constant intensity: in 5720 years half of the radioactivity is lost, and in 11,440 years - 3/4 of it. Thus, with a sufficient degree of accuracy it is possible to determine the date of the cessation of the existence of a living organism or the antiquity of organic remains.

French researcher P. Rivet wrote in 1957 in his work “The Origin of Man in America”:

“The only drawback of the new prehistoric chronometer is its limited time. The older the object under study, the less radioactive coal it contains. Therefore, calculations become less accurate, especially given the imperfections of current technology. In this regard, it is impossible to date materials whose antiquity exceeds 35 thousand years. One could even say that starting from 15 thousand years ago, age determination involves a large amount of inaccuracy.”

This dating method, developed by North American scientists J. R. Arnold, E. C. Anderson, W. F. Libby, relies on auxiliary data from another system of establishing absolute chronology, known as the dendrochronological method. It is based on counting the growth rings of certain tree species, such as redwoods or California pine. Today, these trees - or rather, the rings on the sections of their trunks - make it possible to clarify the dates of the radiocarbon method. When the latter disagreed with dendrochronological data, it was proven that starting from 700 AD. e. The radiocarbon method can be off by up to 70 years. At the same time, it makes it possible to date objects whose age reaches up to 50 thousand years. This is one of the clear examples of how one of the heads of Hydra, discovered by Martyr de Angleria, appeared before Professor Rivet and North American scientists. Another one of her heads may seem to be information from Kluckhohn’s book “Indians of the United States of America” prepared by Kluckhohn for republication:

“There is another method of estimating age, based on the time required for the complete divergence of once related languages. Through careful and detailed research, it is possible to identify connections that once existed between now completely dissimilar languages."

And here we are again forced to turn to the problem of the origin of the “American” person. Let us consider the state of this issue, although the available data are constantly becoming outdated and are each time being pushed into the past by newer information.

Center for the Fusion of Races and Peoples

For almost half a century - from the last quarter of the past to the first quarter of the present - theories of the autochthonous origin of the American population, which had two main directions: polygenistic and monogenistic, were at the center of heated discussion among experts. According to the first, the human race could have arisen simultaneously or in different eras, both on one and on several continents at once. According to the second, humanity originated in America and from there spread throughout the planet. The father and creator of this theory was the Argentine scientist F. Amerino, who decided that the cradle of all humanity should be sought in the Argentine pampa. But since modern science has already refuted these hypotheses, we will not engage the reader with their detailed presentation and analysis.

However, I think it would be wrong to finally close this topic without first making the following remark: one of the most compelling arguments against the point of view of supporters of the theory of the autochthonous origin of “American” man is the absence of large anthropoids in the archaic fauna of the continent. Jokers could reject this argument by presenting specimens of large anthropoids specific to Latin America - the notorious "gorillas". True, with the only caveat that they do not belong to the Quaternary period, but to our century and represent an extremely dangerous and peculiar fauna, very far from the classifications of evolutionists.

“It is not entirely clear, however, how they crossed the sea: they crossed it on this side, as if there was no sea there; they crossed it on stones placed in rows on the sand. For this reason, in the memory they were called "stones in a row", "sand under sea water" - names given [to the area where] they (the tribes) crossed the sea; The waters were divided as they passed through."

Kaqchikeli also preserved poetic tales in the famous “Annals”, telling about the fate of their main characters - Gagavitsa And Saktekauha:

“So they said: from the east they came to Tula (Tulan), from the other shore of the sea; and came to Tulane to be conceived and born by our mothers and our fathers.”

And the entire passage through Beringia must have been very similar to the mythical wanderings of the Kaqchikels:

“Then we came to the seashore. All the tribes and warriors on the sea coast gathered there. When they saw him, their hearts sank. There is no way to cross it; “No one has ever crossed the seas,” all the warriors from the seven tribes said among themselves... And the ancestors of Gagavits and Saktekauh told us:

“We are telling you! Let's get to work, our brothers! We did not come to languish on the shore and not be able to contemplate our homeland, which, as they said, we would see, we warriors, our seven tribes. Let’s decide to move now.”

So they were told, and immediately everyone was filled with joy... So they walked along the sands, stretched out in ridges, when the depth of the sea and the surface of the sea had already opened up... Then they rushed and crossed over the sand; those who walked at the end entered the sea when we came out on the other side.”

Something like this should have happened in reality. The vanguard of immigrants from Asia was already in Alaska, while the rearguard had not yet left Chukotka. The similarity of the names of their points of departure and arrival also suggests certain thoughts: Whalen- on the old continent and Wales- on the new one. They almost touch each other - just like the noses of a bear and a jaguar colliding. And the peninsulas themselves - Asian and American - really look like two opposing heads.

It is possible that the distant ancestors of “American” man looked exactly like this, as described in the Popol Vuh:

“And their clothing was only the skins of animals; they did not have good fabrics to dress themselves with; animal skins were their only clothing. They were poor, they owned nothing, but they were people of wondrous nature.”

“They could no longer endure the cold or the hail; they trembled and their teeth chattered; they were completely numb and were barely alive; their arms and legs were shaking; and they could not hold anything in them when they came.”

“But the tribes did not die, they came, although they were dying from the cold. There was a lot of hail, black rain, there was fog and indescribable cold...

And they approached, each tribe trembling and shivering from the cold... Great was the emptiness of their hearts, their mouths were tightly clenched, and their gazes were downcast.”

Mammoths, big-horned bison, saber-toothed tigers, horses, camels, wolves and other living creatures also moved from Asia to America along with man, and perhaps fleeing from him. Indeed, paleontologists claim that of the 54 known representatives of the Quaternary fauna of America, 48 were of Asian origin.

When did it happen, or more precisely, when did the great migration “to the other shore” begin? Evidence from modern geology suggests that the last of the four ice ages is what Europeans call Würm, and North Americans - Wisconsin- lasted about 60 thousand years. During this time, sea level dropped several times. The first time this happened was 50-40 thousand years ago, when its level dropped by 115 m. The second time - 28-10 thousand years ago - this level dropped by 120 m. Thus, Bering Bridge was exposed at least twice, and then people could cross it “to the other side.”

This means that from a geological point of view, the possibility of such migrations is quite reasonable. Archeology and modern research methods allow us to recreate a picture of the period when all this happened. Already at the end of the 60s, scientists had no doubt that the American continent began to be settled 38-40 thousand years ago.

So, the ancient inhabitants of America ended up in Alaska, or more precisely, in the very place that one of the researchers dubbed the “sports field of the University of Alaska.” How did the first settlers move south? The geological and logical answer to this question is that they passed along a kind of corridor that actually existed between Alaska and the United States. 25-13 thousand years ago it was “closed” by huge glaciers, but was “opened” three times, which coincided with the retreat of glaciers that drained the Bering Land Bridge.

To be precise, it was possible to get from north to south between 50 and 40 thousand years ago, between 28 and 25 thousand years ago, and, finally, between 13 and 10 thousand years ago. One can imagine caravans of travelers struggling through gorges, making their way among icy walls, wandering in search of lands with a less harsh climate that would ensure their survival. Others, who fell behind for one reason or another, could find themselves locked in an ice trap. Those who did survive began to adapt to the harsh conditions - perhaps this is how they founded their settlements Eskimos And Aleuts. But most likely they were much later aliens.

The vanguard of the migration waves continued their difficult journey south, closer to the warm lands of the equator, in search of their “promised land”, where they could settle forever. The journey turned out to be extremely long - it captured many generations of immigrants. All this time, the languages ​​they spoke were divided into increasingly numerous branches, differing significantly from each other. This is well known to those who deal with glottochronology. Some authors write about the existence of linguistic similarities between the languages ​​of the population of both sides of the Bering Strait. The tribes sought to leave the cold lands as soon as possible and go towards the sun - where the climate was mild and warm.

Myths from the chronicles of the Guatemalan Indians have preserved for us a poetic image reminiscent of the situation just described:

“Each of the tribes continued to stay awake to see the star, which is the messenger of the sun. They carried this sign of the dawn in their hearts when they walked from the east, and with the same hope they left that place that was at a great distance from here. This is what they say now...

We soon scattered across the mountains; Then everyone left, each tribe on their own way (what follows is a long list of places that are difficult to determine in modern geography). Then these were the mountains and valleys where they walked, left and returned. We do not boast, but only remind and will never forget that in reality we have passed through numerous places - this is what our fathers and ancestors said in ancient times...

Then all the [other] peoples arrived: the people from Rabinal, the Cakchiquels, the people from Tsikinaja and the people who now bear the name Yaqui (meaning the Mexicans, the ancient Toltecs, the Nahua people, who, joining the southern Mayans, served to form the Indian peoples of Guatemala, as A. Resinos explains).

And there the speech of the peoples changed; their languages ​​became different. They could no longer clearly understand what they heard from each other after they arrived in Tulane. There they were divided: there were those who went to the east, but the majority came here.”

Glottochronology is an important support for theories about the settlement of the first inhabitants of America and the spread of their languages. They dispersed over a very wide region, which allows us to try to reconstruct the routes of initial migrations.

In the very heart of Canada there are territories of five tribes (Iroquois tribes Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk) of North American Indians. These clan-families now being studied once occupied a vast region stretching from Idaho to Mexico and Guatemala. At first these tribes were classified as different groups, but later linguistic studies made it possible to prove that they all belonged to the same family. The evidence we have allows us to classify sometimes seemingly dubious linguistic groups, uniting them under the general name Asteco-Tanoan, or, as is more commonly accepted, Uto-Astek, Uto-Nahua.

In due course, we will turn to both the outstanding and humble representatives of these tribes, who, according to the apt definition of one specialist, were divided into “poor and rich relatives.” For example, the poor were treated Shoshone, and to the rich of course asteki. Here I would like to add that the kinship between these tribes was noticed by the Spanish missionary P. de Ribas, who put forward in the 17th century. very original theories, which have only now been confirmed by linguistic research. Even earlier, in the 16th century, the Spanish Jesuit X. de Acosta wrote in his work “Natural and Moral History of India”:

“Quite recently a great land has been discovered called New Mexico, where it is said that there are many people who speak the Mexican language.”

Thus, modern science and ancient myths intersect and complement each other. We cannot agree with K. Wissler’s idea about the loss of memory of an American Indian:

“He did not know everything that related to his own past. Therefore, it was up to the white man to restore the forgotten Indian history.”

No, that's not true! It is quite obvious that the Indian's memory was by no means so bad.

white latino appearance, latinos
Total: 569 million

Language

Spanish, Portuguese

Religion

Mainly Catholicism, to a lesser extent Protestantism

Latin Americans(Spanish Latinoamericanos) is a generalized name for the Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking peoples inhabiting the territory of modern Latin America and also widely represented in the USA, Spain, Canada, Portugal, Italy, Great Britain and other countries due to economic and political emigration. Due to the fact that French is also a Romance language, Latin Americans also include the French-speaking peoples of the Caribbean (Haitians, Guianians, Martinicans, Guadeloupians, also Dominicans and Grenadians by origin), although they are French Canadians living in more northern latitudes, and also mostly assimilated into the English-speaking environment Louisiana Cajuns are not generally classified as Latinos.

  • 1. History
  • 2 Ethnogenesis
    • 2.1 Racial diversity
  • 3 Number
  • 4 See also
  • 5 Notes

Story

All Latin Americans are united primarily by their historical origin. The formation of Latin American peoples began during the period of great geographical discoveries in the Western Hemisphere and the development of two early European colonial empires - Spanish and Portuguese, and to a lesser extent also French. The defining period was the period between the 16th and 18th centuries, when European conquistadors conquered large areas of South America and entered into intensive contacts with the local autochthonous population.

Ethnogenesis

The dominant, although far from the only role in the process of ethnogenesis of Latin American peoples was played by the Romanesque peoples of the so-called Old Romania and/or Latin Europe, therefore modern Latin Americans are called neo-Romanesque peoples, and their area of ​​residence is called neo-Romanesque (New Romania). They consider or speak well Romance languages, which are derived from Latin (hence the name). The only exception is a certain part of US Latin Americans, natives of this country, who, while maintaining Latin American culture and identity, switched to English or became completely Americanized. Another distinctive feature is the adherence of the majority of Latin Americans to Catholicism, although recently the number of atheists, followers of Protestant churches, other religions and various sects has increased. Latin Americans are also distinguished by their concentration in regions with hot equatorial, tropical and subtropical climates.

Racial diversity

Unlike the North American colonies of Great Britain, where the autochthonous Indian population was subjected to almost complete genocide, in the Spanish and Portuguese colonies the places of mass concentration of the autochthonous population (Mexico, Peru) simultaneously became centers of Spanish culture, marking the beginning of the process of racial and cultural mixing. Therefore, modern Latin Americans are distinguished by a unique racial and genetic composition with a predominance of people of mixed origin with various combinations of European, African, Indian and even Asian genes. at the beginning of the 16th century, in addition to Spanish and Portuguese hidalgo men, gypsies, Jews, and Morisco Arabs exiled from Spain began to arrive here, then black slaves were brought from Africa; Later, European colonists from other, predominantly Catholic countries (the French, especially numerous Italians, Germans, Croats, etc.) appeared, and the influx of immigrants from Spain and Portugal increased again (late 19th - early 20th centuries)

Therefore, today the racial and genetic composition varies significantly across countries. Thus, conventionally designated white Latinos make up the majority of the population (over 80%) in Argentina and Uruguay, but only about half the population of Brazil (53.7%) and less than 10% of the population of Mexico. In Mexico and Chile, 2/3 of the population is mestizos: in Chile with a greater admixture of European blood, in Mexico with Indian blood, although the proportions vary greatly among cities and provinces within each country. For example, the average Mexican has 58% of European genes (mostly Spanish), 39% Indian and about 3% African. Moreover, unlike the United States, racial categories are flexible and transparent; the same person can classify himself into several categories and move from one to another throughout his life, depending on his social status, education, social circle, etc. Thus, a significant part of the conventionally white population of Argentina has a significant admixture of Indian (about 1/3) and even African blood. The same applies to conventionally white Brazilians. Although overt institutional racism and segregation have never existed in Latin American countries, more European (lighter) traits are perceived as more desirable compared to Indian and African ones.

On the other hand, mulattoes and blacks make up about 80% of the population of the Dominican Republic, and about 40% of the population of Brazil. Bolivia and Peru, Guatemala and Southern Mexico are still absolutely dominated by autochthonous Indians, a significant part of whom, however, have already converted to Catholicism and switched to the Spanish language.

Number

The total number of Latin Americans is about 600 million people. The largest Latin American peoples: Brazilians - about 190 million people (2008 estimate) and Mexicans - about 150 million people. (2008, evaluation). They are followed by Colombians (45 million) and Argentines (40 million). Particularly notable is the large emigrant group of Latin Americans in the United States, constituting over 15% of the country's population or 45 million people (2007).

see also

  • White Hispanics
  • Afro-Latinos
  • Aymara
  • Taino
  • Mexican Americans
  • Spanish pidgins
  • Spanglish
  • Brazilian diaspora
  • Hispanics in the USA

Notes

  1. CIA - The World Factbook -- Field Listing - Ethnic groups

white latinos, white latinos appearance, latinos

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