Mestizo

Mestizo
A casta painting of a Spanish man and an Indigenous woman with a Mestizo child
Regions with significant populations
Latin America, United States, Spain, Philippines, Micronesia
Languages
Religion
Predominantly Roman Catholic; religious minorities include Protestants and syncretism with Indigenous beliefs
Related ethnic groups
Spaniards
Indigenous peoples of the Americas
Métis[1][2][3][4]
An image from colonial South America shows that mestizos are the children of Spanish people and Indigenous people.

Mestizo (meh-STEE-tzo) is a Spanish term for a person who is of mixed Spanish and Native American ancestry.

Mestizos have existed since Spain controlled much of what is now Latin America. A mestizo was usually the son or daughter of a Spanish father and a Native American mother, and sometimes vice versa. Mestizos form the largest part of the population in some Latin American nations. A large minority of mestizos makes up most of the population in Mexico, the Spanish-speaking nation with the largest population in the world.

During the colonial era, many Native Americans converted to Roman Catholicism and began using Spanish instead of their traditional language. That was because of the racial hierarchy that existed in the Spanish colonies, which gave Spaniards a higher social class than Native Americans and free or enslaved Africans. That has made many Native Americans gain a better social status by calling themselves "mestizos" instead of "Indios."

  1. "Mestizos - Atlantic History". Oxford Bibliographies. Retrieved 2022-05-01.
  2. "Métis, Mestizo, and Mixed-Blood - Jesuit Online Bibliography". Jesuitonlinebibliography.bc.edu. Retrieved 2022-05-01.
  3. Hill, Samantha (2001). Race and nation building : a comparison of Canadian Métis and Mexican Mestizos - UBC Library Open Collections (Thesis). Open.library.ubc.ca. doi:10.14288/1.0099597. Retrieved 2022-05-01.
  4. "Métis, Mestizo, and Mixed‐Blood | Request PDF". Retrieved 2022-05-01.

Developed by StudentB