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| Criollo Criollos in Latin America |
|---|
| Notable Criollos: Juan Ponce de León II · Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz · Simón Bolívar · Luisa Cáceres de Arismendi · Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla · José Martí |
| Total population |
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Criollo |
| Regions with significant populations |
| Throughout Hispanic America |
| Languages |
| Spanish |
| Religion |
| Predominantly Roman Catholic · Protestant · Christian Latinos · Jewish minority |
| Related ethnic groups |
| Spaniards · Italian · Portuguese · French · White Cuban · White Brazilian · White Argentine · White Mexican · White Latin American |
Criollo is a term that dates back to the Spanish colonial casta system (caste system) of Latin America. It referred to a person born in the Spanish colonies deemed to have limpieza de sangre (literally, "cleanliness of blood") in respect of an individual's purity of European (Iberian) ancestry.
The term criollo is often translated into English as Creole, but this word has a much broader meaning. See Creole peoples.
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Limpieza de sangre or cleanliness of blood was a legal conception derived from the Spanish Reconquista, and later introduced to the Spanish colonies in the Americas. In Spain, the concept was used to distinguish old Christians of "pure" unmixed Iberian Christian ancestry (either Southern Spanish Mozarabs or Christians from the Northern Kingdoms of Spain) from new Christians descending from baptized Moriscos (Iberian Muslims) and Sephardim (Iberian Jews), together known as conversos (converts), whose real faith was institutionally suspected.
In the Americas the concept was adapted into a context of racial hierarchy based on racial "purity", in an environment which had become largely repopulated by persons of mixed race as a result of the arrival of Europeans and their miscegenation with indigenous Amerindians as well as with imported African slaves. A "pure" person able to be deemed a criollo would be one of proven unmixed Spanish ancestry, that is, the Americas-born child of two Spanish-born Spaniards, of two criollos, or a Spaniard and a criollo.
Cleanliness of blood, and thus the classification as criollo, could also be legally and automatically attained by people of mixed origin with 1/8th or less of Amerindian ancestry, that is, the offspring of one castizo parent and one Spaniard or criollo parent. The same 1/8th or less reclassification did not legally or automatically exist for those with any African admixture, although it was often subversively purchased with relevant probanzas de sangre (bloodline records) altered.
While the casta system was in force, the local-born criollos ranked lower than the governing peninsulares, that is, Spaniards born on the Iberian Peninsula, despite the fact that both were of legally pure Spanish blood. Peninsulares were appointed by the crown to the top ecclesiastical, military and administrative positions, and they favoured the Cádiz monopoly, while most of the criollo land-owning elite would have preferred free trade and in many places resorted to smuggling with British America (although often with the tacit approval of the local, peninsular, government official).
By the 19th century, this perceived discrimination and the examples of the American Revolution and the anti-white Haitian Revolution eventually led the criollo to rebel against peninsulare rule. Eventually earning the support of other castes— castizos, mestizos, cholos, mulatos, indios, zambos, among many others, and ultimately blacks, they engaged Spain in the Mexican War of Independence (1810–1821) and the South American Wars of Independence (1810–1826), which ended with the break-up of the former Spanish Empire in America into a number of independent republics.
During the Spanish colonial era of the Philippines, the Spanish term criollo was used with the same sense as in Latin America, namely, a person born in the Philippines with wholly Spanish ancestry. However, the term was not widely used, and instead insulares ("from the islands") was more commonly applied to contrast them with the higher-ranking peninsulares. However, the most common term for those people was Filipinos ("from the Philippines"), distinct from the modern definition of that word.
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Miscegenation in Spanish colonies
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