- Andalusian people
ethnic group
group=Andalusian
"Andaluz"
caption = Some notable Andalusians: 'Pablo Picasso ' 'Juan Ramón Jiménez ' 'Diego Velázquez '
poptime=Andalusian
8.5 million (est)
popplace=flag|Spain:
*flag|Andalusia: 6,832,933 (2006) [Source: Instituto Andaluz de Estadística (IAE), excluding anyone born outside Andalusia]
*Catalonia : 754,174 (2006) [http://www.diariocordoba.com/noticias/noticia.asp?pkid=270253 Source: Consejería de Gobernación, Junta de Andalucía (Andalusian Autonomous Government)]
*Madrid: 285,164 (2006) ["Ibid"]
*Valencia: 218,440 (2006) ["Ibid"]
*Basque Country: 46,441 (1991) [http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/economiayhacienda/economia/estudios/bea/descarga/TOMO_24/BEA24_119.pdf Recaño Valverde , Joaquín (1998): "La emigración andaluza en España" in "Boletín Económico de Andalucía", issue 24]
*Balearics : 71,940 (1991) [Recaño Valverde , Joaquín: "Ibid"]
*Murcia: 36,278 (1991) [Recaño Valverde , Joaquín: "Ibid"]
*Rest of Spain: 162,333 (1991) [Recaño Valverde , Joaquín: "Ibid"] flag|France: 31,516 (2006) [Consejería de Gobernación]
flag|Cuba: 23,185 (2006) [Consejería de Gobernación]
flag|Germany: 22,784 (2206) [Consejería de Gobernación]
flag|Argentina: 20,385 (2006) [Consejería de Gobernación]Rest of the world: 50,000 (est) [http://andaluciajunta.es/CCVV_FDComu_CAE/0,19057,5263732_17010963,00.html?fpChannel=17010963 Dirección General de Andaluces en el Exterior, Junta de Andalucía]
langs=Spanish language (Andalusian Spanish )
rels=PredominantlyRoman Catholic . The Andalusians are anethnic group ornation inSpain centered inAndalusia . They are generally not considered anethnically distinct people because they lack two of the most important markers of distinctiveness: their own language and an awareness of a presumed common origin, although the latter is debatable. Nonetheless, Andalusians do have a distinct Andalusian dialect. Andalusians have a rich culture which includes the famousflamenco style ofmusic anddance . Andalusia's own statute of autonomy identifies the region as an "historic nationality" grants it a high level of devolved political power.Geographical location and population
Andalusian people live mainly in Spain's eight southernmost
provinces :Almería ,Cádiz , Cordoba,Granada ,Huelva ,Jaén ,Málaga , andSeville , which all are part of the region and modern Autonomous Community of Andalusia. In January 2006 the total population of this region stood at 7,849,799. [http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/iea/dtbas/dtb06/dtb2006.pdf INSTITUTO DE ESTADISTICA DE ANDALUCÍA (2006): "Andalucía. Datos básicos 2006". Consejería de Economía y Hacienda, Junta de Andalucía. Page 13] In comparison with the rest of Spain, Andalusia population growth has been slower and it continues to be sparsely populated in some rural areas (averaging just 84 inh. per km²). Since 1960, the region's share of total population has declined, despite birth rates being about 40 percent higher than the Spanish average during past decades (currently it is only a 13% higher ["Ibid"] ).Between 1951 to 1975, over 1.7 million Andalusian people emigrated out of Andalusia to other areas of Spain. [Recaño Valverde, Joaquín: "Ibid"] This figure was approximately a 24% of the population of Andalusia as a whole, mostly hitting the countryside areas. The main receivers of this migration were
Catalonia (989,256 people of Andalusian origin in 1975), Madrid (330,479) and Valencia (217,636), and to a lesser level, the Basque Country andBalearics .During 1962 to 1974, around 700,000 Andalusians —almost all of them male, aged 15 to 44— moved abroad for economic reasons, mainly originating from the provinces of Granada, Jaén and Córdoba. Their preferred destination were countries as
France ,West Germany andSwitzerland , followed by theUnited Kingdom ,Netherlands andBelgium . There are no official recorded figures for previous decades. [http://www.ahimsav.com/149-nov_archivos/page0006.htm "El boom migratorio exterior"]Previously Andalusia has also experienced similar migratory trends: During the 17th century a sizeable (
Morisco ) Muslim Andalusian community moved to Tunisia after being forcibly expelled, mainly around the Northern shores of the country and the old city ofCarthage today a suburb of the Tunis. Today these communities still claim Andalusian heritage and bear Andalusian surnames. [Rivers, Susan T.: [http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/199104/exiles.from.andalusia.htm "Exiles From Andalusia"] , 'Saudi Aramco World'. Volume 42, Number 4, pp. 10-17.]In South America in the last twenty years of 19th century, over 150,000 Andalusians emigrated to the Americas as a result of crop failures caused by the
Phylloxera plague. [De Mateo Aviles, Elias (1993): "La Emigración Andaluza a América (1850-1936)". Editorial Arguval. Málaga, Spain] Many Andalusian peasants moved to Brazil to work in the coffee plantations, mainly in rural areas ofSão Paulo State .Rationale
Most descriptions of Andalusia begin with the
landownership system, as the most powerful forces in the region have for centuries been the owners of the large estates, called "latifundios ". These wide expanses of land have their origins in landowning patterns that stretch back to Roman times; in grants of land made to thenobility , to the military orders, and to the church during the Reconquest ("Reconquista "); and in laws of the nineteenth century by which church and common lands were sold in large tracts to the urbanmiddle class . The workers of this land, called "jornaleros " (peasants without land) , were themselves landless.This economic and cultural system produced a distinctive perspective, involving
class consciousness andclass conflict s as well as significantemigration . In contrast to the much smaller farm towns and villages of northern Spain, where the land was worked by its owners, class distinctions in the agro-towns of Andalusia stood out. The families of the landless farmers lived at, or near, thepoverty level, and their relations with the landed gentry were marked by conflict, aggression, andhostility . The two main forces that kept Andalusia's rural society from flying apart were external. The first was thecoercive power of thestate , as exemplified by Spain's ruralconstabulary , the Civil Guard ("Guardia Civil "). The second was the opportunities to migrate to other parts of Spain, or to other countries inWestern Europe . Some of this migration was seasonal; in 1972, for example, 80,000 farmers, mostly Andalusians, migrated toFrance for thewine harvest . Part of the migration consisted of entire families who intended to remain in their new home for longer periods, once the head of the family group had settled down.ee also
*
Andalusian cuisine
*Andalusian nationalism
*List of Andalusians
*Music of Andalusia
*Nationalities in Spain
*Spanish people References
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