Hispanicity

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Hispanidad


The flag symbolizes the encounter between the three carabelas that took Christopher Columbus to America and the dazzling American Sun shining.

     Countries traditionally considered as the core of the Hispanidad.
NOTE: For a detailed list of the countries that appear in the map, see its description page

Members

Europe

Asia and Oceania

Africa

America

Hispanicity (Spanish: Hispanidad) is the community formed by all the people and countries that share a common hispanic-heritage and cultural pattern.

The 23 nations that are included are all Spanish-speaking, the community can be classified into four geographic areas: Hispanic Europe (Spain), Hispanic America (Spanish-speaking America), Hispanic Africa (Spanish-African territories, Western Sahara and Equatorial Guinea) and Hispanic Asia-Pacific (culturally and linguistically influenced nations of the Philippines, Guam and Northern Mariana Islands).

Every October 12 in Spain Día de la Hispanidad ("Day of Hispanicity" or "Hispanic Day") is celebrated as the national holiday. In the other nations of the community except the Philippines, the day is also celebrated as a commemoration of the date in 1492 when Christopher Columbus discovered America, marking the beginning of the diffusion of Spanish language and culture, its lasting impact on the world.

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[edit] History

Hispanidad or Spanish linguistic and cultural diffusion began its emergence on 12 October 1492 when Christopher Columbus sighted America and initiated its European colonization in the name of the Catholic Monarchs of Spain. The kingdom of Castile (Castilla) built a global empire, spreading its culture and language in the Americas and biologically and culturally mixing with the indigenous peoples, altering the composition of the hemisphere. The penetration and reach of Spain at this time also extended into other European nations.

With its immense empire created in the Americas, in 1713 the Real Academia Española was established to regulate and fix the use the Spanish language throughout the empire and to standardize the written language so as to be understood by all Hispanics. At the beginning of the 19th century, the dissatisfaction of the American colonies with the government, and the Napoleonic invasion of the homeland, created a propitious opportunity for revolution in America; all of the Spanish colonies obtained independence except Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Asian possession of the Philippines. These three countries obtained independence from Spain when the United States intervened in the Spanish-American War.

At the beginning of the 20th century, Hispanicity was moribund. Zacarías de Vizarra, Faustino Rodríguez-San Pedro and Ramiro de Maeztu caused a resurgence of the concept of Hispanicity in Spain and the Americas, resulting in a change of name to Dia de la Raza or "Day of the [New] Race" (already a national celebration in many Hispanic countries, and named so in recognition of the meeting of Europeans and Amerindians, their mixing and the emergence of the mestizo race as a result of this). Shortly thereafter, the first pan-Hispanic organizations such as the Asociación de Academias de la Lengua Española began to appear. With the restoration of democracy in Spain, a convergence between all the Hispanic nations began with, for example, the creation of the Cumbre Iberoamericana in 1991. Since then, the number of Hispano-American, Ibero-American, Pan-Latin American organizations has increased.

Currently, Hispanicity is a cooperative venture. Spain has created a base of support for Hispanic America and is the country that invests the most in this zone. Numerous Latino or Hispanic immigrants choose to immigrate to Spain due to its cultural and linguistic affinity.

[edit] The Hispanics in the world

Main article: Hispanic

The Spanish as mother tongue is spoken by more than 333 million people (located in second place after Chinese). The total population of Spanish-speakers reaches more than 395 million people.

Next, a list of places where Spanish language is spoken.

[edit] Europe

In Europe, Hispanics are mainly confined to Spain, with its native Hispanic population surpassing 44 million, plus a large immigrant Hispanic community from Hispanic America. There are also important minority communities of Hispanic immigrants both Spanish nationals and Hispanic Americans spread throughout the rest of Europe.

East side of El Castillo
East side of El Castillo

[edit] America

The great majority of Hispanics is concentrated in what is officially recognized as Hispanic America, coinciding with recognized international borders. The number surpasses 300 million. Countries like Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico and Venezuela are all countries of immense Hispanic majority.

The United States and Belize, while not officially counted as Hispanic nations, count with a great amount of Hispanics, either dating back from the colonial period or more recent immigrants. Over 50% of Belize is Hispanic and the United States harbours more than 40 million Hispanic, or over 13% of that nation's total population.

Military checkpiont at a suburb of El Aaiún
Military checkpiont at a suburb of El Aaiún

[edit] Africa

The people considered Hispanics in the African continent are concentrated in overseas territories of Spain (Canary Islands, Ceuta, Melilla and Plazas de Soberanía) and in the nation of Equatorial Guinea which has Spanish as its official government language although the people speak their respective native languages. In Morocco and Western Sahara some people maintain Hispanic characteristics, although these countries are more so influenced by Arab and/or Berber language and culture. Altogether in Africa two million speak Spanish.

[edit] Asia-Pacific

The Philippines is the only Asian country that conserves some identifiably Hispanic influences in its culture and Spanish loanwords in the native languages. Many attributes of Philippine culture and language have Hispanic origins. This is because Spain ruled the country through Mexico for more than 300 years.

Other countries in the Asia-Pacific region that maintain a similar degree of Hispanic influence as the Philippines are:

  • Easter Island, nowadays an overseas territory of Chile. Spanish is the official language of the island.

[edit] See also