Peninsulares

Peninsulares

:"Peninsular" redirects here. For the geographical formation, see peninsula.

Infobox Ethnic group
group = Peninsulares

caption = Notable Peninsulares: Juan Ponce de León·Junípero Serra
Bartolomé de las Casas·Pedro de Valdivia
poptime = Peninsulares-Spanish Born 115,000,000 Descendants 28% of Hispanic American population

Hispanics in the Spanish Empire
popplace = Throughout Hispanic America
langs = Spanish
rels = Predominantly Roman Catholic; also Protestant
related = Spaniards·Italian·Portuguese·French
In the colonial caste system of Spanish America, a "peninsular" was a Spanish-born Spaniard or mainland Spaniard residing in the New World, as opposed to a person of full Spanish descent born in the Americas (known as "creoles").

Most of the higher offices in the government of the Americas, where held by Peninsulares. Apart from the distinction of peninsulares from criollos, the "castas" system distinguished also "mestizos" (of mixed Spanish and Amerindian ancestry), mulattos (of mixed Spanish and black ancestry), Amerindians, zambos (mixed Amerindian and black ancestry) and finally Blacks. In some places and times, such as during the wars of independence, they were called depreciatively "godos" (for the "Visigoths," who had ruled Spain), or in Mexico, "gachupines".

Almost all viceroys, "audiencia" presidents and many "audiencia" judges, as well as captains general, were peninsulares, since they were more likely to have the connections to, and the required record of service to, the crown. Many other Peninsulares came to the New World as merchants, clerics and even indentured servants. Criollos held high positions in government and in the church, and owned almost all of the land. Mestizos could enter the priesthood, but were usually small farmers, craftsmen and artisans. Land ownership restrictions loosened up later in the Empire.

Colonial officials at the highest levels arrived from Spain or Portugal to fulfill their duty to govern Iberian colonies in Latin America. Often, the Peninsulares had large quantities of land. They defended Cádiz's monopoly on trade, upsetting the criollos, who truned to contraband with British and French colonies, especially in areas away from the main ports of call for the "Flota de Indias". They worked to preserve Spanish or Portuguese power and acted as agents of patrol, in certain cases.

In colonial social hierarchy, the peninsulares were nominally at the top, followed by criollos, who developed a fully-entrenched powerful local aristocracy during the seventeenth and eighteenth century. In the French Revolution, the peninsulares were generally conservative.

Twentieth Century use of the term

In the twentieth century, "peninsular" was a euphemism for white in Spanish Guinea.It is also used in the Canary Islands for a non-Canarian Spaniard.

The descendants of peninsulares and criollos in the Philippines, later extended to anyone in the Anglophone upper-class, came to collectively be known as "s" after their frequent use of the Spanish swearword "coño". Their variant of English with Tagalog words is characteristic.

Other use

"Peninsulares" was also a Spanish brand of cigarettes.

ee also

*Californio
*White Latin American
*Isleños. Some regions distinguished between Peninsular Spanish immigrants and those from the Canary Islands, the "isleños".


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