RACE & SOCIAL CLASSES IN COLOMBIA Luis Angel Madrid April 2010 Niagara University.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Latin American Independence Movements
Advertisements

Latin Americans Win Independence
Latin American Peoples Win Independence Chapter 24, Section 1
Latin American Peoples Win Independence
Essential Question: What were the main causes & effects of Latin American revolutions ?
LATIN AMERICAN PEOPLES WIN INDEPENDENCE
South America History and Present Day
Land & Water  Land: 1,038,700 sq km  Water: 100,210 sq km.
Chapter 24-Section 1 Latin American Peoples Win Independence Spurned by discontent and Enlightenment ideas, peoples in Latin America fight colonial rule.
Warm-Up November 12, 2013 Which of the following are true about Mayan people? They built their huge structures without beasts of burden. They built their.
Ch. 10-3: Spanish Speaking South America
SS6G4 The student will describe the cultural characteristics of people who live in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Latin American Revolutions
Latin American Independence Movements
Revolutions in Latin America Between 1803 and 1825 as series of revolutions would sweep through Latin America. These revolutions would cause.
AMAZON RIVER TOP TEN 1.NO BRIDGES CROSS IT! WIDEST POINT OVER 30 MILES ACROSS 2.PIRANHAS (OVER 5600 SPECIES OF FISH) 3.LARGEST DISCHARGE RATE OF.
The Lasting Impact of Europeans: Religion, Language and Slavery
 Argentina  Bolivia  Brazil  Chile  Colombia  Costa Rica  Cuba  Dominican Republic  Ecuador  El Salvador  Guatemala  Honduras  Mexico  Nicaragua.
Latin American Independence: Early 1800s I. Review.
Revolts in Latin America
Latin American Revolutions
Test 2/9.  Late 1700’s -American Revolution & French Revolution  Early 1800’s -Colonists in Latin America were tired of watching Spain and Portugal.
Latin American Revolutions
Latin American Independence
Revolution in Latin America. Independence of Latin America O Abuses of the Colonial System O Spain and Portugal had a vast colonial empire in Latin America.
Chapter 1.3 The Diversity of Americans. A Nation of Immigrants All of today’s more than 300 million Americans are descended from immigrants. Many scholars.
: An Age of Revolutions Latin American Independence Movements.
European Conquests By the late 1400s Spanish explorers arrived in the Americas.
The Diversity of Americans Chapter 1.3 Pages
Latin America’s Independence Movement
New Empires in the Americas 3.2 Spanish America. The Spanish Empire COUNCIL OF THE INDIES- Spanish governing body of the Americas Spanish governing body.
Revolutionary Ideas Spread to Latin America
Colombian Drug Trafficking By Shaun Millerick. General Information Formerly known as the Republic of Colombia, the country is located in Northwestern.
{ Changes in Latin America Ch 25.  Central and South America sought to break from colonial rule  Same as every other colony in this time period  Spanish.
Social Unrest: Peninsulares Creoles Mestizos Mulatottoes Political Discontent: Educated creoles bring the ideas of the Enlightenment to Latin.
From 1500 to 1800, Latin America was colonized by Europe, especially Spain European nations used mercantilism to gain wealth from their American colonies.
AP World History Mr. Charnley Latin American Revolutions.
Latin American Revolution
Latin America: THE FIGHT FOR INDEPENDENCE. Standard SS6H2: The Student will explain the development of Latin America and the Caribbean from European Colonies.
4 th Largest country in the world Made up of 50 states Richest country in the world Leading country in world affairs.
UNIT 13/14 American, French, and Latin American Revolutions.
NATIONALISM: REVOLUTIONS IN LATIN AMERICA Why were nationalist revolutions occurring in Latin America? Spanish South America Mexico.
Latin American Revolutions of the Nineteenth Century.
7-3.3 Latin American Revolutions Vocabulary
Latin American Revolutions. From 1500 to 1800, Latin America was colonized by Europe, especially Spain European nations gained wealth from their American.
Independence Movements in Latin America
Haitian and Latin American Revolutions
Bellringer  Using the map you completed for homework, answer the following questions (you don’t have to write the questions down) on a piece of paper.
Latin American Revolutions AP World History Latin America – Problems/Causes  Geography  Colonial heritage  Rigid Social Order  Peninsulares – Europeans.
COLOMBIA SOUTH AMERICA.
Independence in Latin America 1800–1830
Changes in Latin America
Latin American Revolution
3/2 Aim: How did Spain rule it’s empire in the Americas ?
You have one minute to write a sentence summarizing our learning of the Haitian Revolution. 1 Minute Sentence.
Revolts in Latin America
LATIN AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE
Latin American Independence
South American Colonial Societies
AIM: How did “blood” define social class hierarchy in the Spanish colonies? Do-Now: Who sits on the top of the social class pyramid in Latin America?
Political Transformations: Empires and Encounters
Latin American Peoples Win Independence
Four Political Revolutions
Nationalism Latin America.
Latin American Revolutions
Revolts in Latin America
Revolutions Around the World
The political situation in Colombia
LATIN AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE
Haitian and Latin American Independence Movements
Presentation transcript:

RACE & SOCIAL CLASSES IN COLOMBIA Luis Angel Madrid April 2010 Niagara University

Main facts Population 43 million (the third largest country in Latin America after Brazil and Mexico) 4 million living abroad (US, Spain & Venezuela) No. 79 in the Global Index of Human Development Perhaps the most isolated nation in LA after Independence: la “hispanidad”

Capital: Bogota

Racial composition: 3 races 58%: “mestizo” 20% white (not a distinctive ethnic group, mainly from Spanish origins) 10%-18% Afro-Colombian & mulatto (the third largest community after US and Brazil) 4%: Amerindian People from diverse origins (Arabs, Jew)

In Antioquia: the whitest Confirms the fact: few Spanish women came to Colombia, conquistadores consorted with Indian females DNA testing reveals: male lineage 94% white; 60% female lineage Amerindian The scantest European & Asian immigration in LA in the post-Independence period

AFRO COLOMBIA

Brought as slaves from Africa (to the gold mines & sugar plantations) Department of Choco (Pacific Coast) Archipelago of San Andres & Old Providence (Caribbean) Valle del Cauca (Buenaventura, Pacific Coast) Department of Bolivar (Caribbean): San Basilio de Palenque

King Benkos Bioho (hanged & quartered in 1621)

Palenque de San Basilio The foremost palenque of free black Americans during the Colonial period Recognized by the Spanish Crown as the first free town of America (1713) Largely unchanged until 1970 Declared part of the World Heritage by UNESCO

ADMIRAL JOSE PRUDENCIO PADILLA

Hero of the Colombian Independence The “Colombian Horatio Nelson” Executed under accusation of conspiring against Bolivar

But, who is the real one?

FIRST AFRO-AMERICAN PRESIDENT EVER

President Juan Jose Nieto (January- July 1861)

THE MANUEL SATURIO VALENCIA CASE: LYNCHING BY LAW IN COLOMBIA

“First street” Quibdó (Chocó)

First African lawyer in Latin America and the first who could walk in Quibdó First Street Officer in the Army & judge at the criminal bench Committed the “usual crime” Framed & accused of arson & sentenced to execution by shooting at a kangaroo court (the last man executed in Colombia) Rehabilitated by Law 1042 of 2006.

Afro Colombians today Complete emancipation in 1851 (1820 free at birth) The highest fertility rate in the country: 2.7% Forced internal migration: major victims of the Colombian conflict and drug trafficking 10% of displaced people (on the whole 1.5 million-3.5 million)

COLOMBIAN AMERINDIANS

Two views

Main Amerindian communities

“We were gods and they transformed us into slaves” A colonial genocide? 90% eliminated The New Laws (Leyes Nuevas) of million people in Colombia: 90 ethnic community 30% of Colombian territory in reservations (“resguardos”) Under permanent threat (murder % displacement) from many quarters (Indian leaders target of violence)

AMNISTY INTERNATIONAL “….. indígenas colombianos corren riesgo de desaparecer” El Tiempo, 22 Feb

Social classes: tougher than race Constitution of 1991: major boost to equality in all fronts, but … The criollo elite: political & economic power Mestizo: assimilating by education and wealth Amerindians Afro Colombian: an open question … the Obama factor: ministers and generals

MANY THANKS