Italian immigration to Mexico

Italian Mexican
italo-mexicano
italo-messicano
Total population
4,964 Italian nationals residing in the country (2010)[1]
est. 30,000 Mexican descendants of the original Italian colonies (1995)[2]
Regions with significant populations
Puebla · Mexico City · Veracruz · San Luis Potosi
Languages
Mexican Spanish · Italian · Chipileño
Religion
Roman Catholicism
Related ethnic groups
Italian diaspora

An Italian-Mexican or Italo-Mexican (Spanish: italo-mexicano, Italian: italo-messicano) is a Mexican citizen of Italian descent or origin. Most people of Italian ancestry living in Mexico arrived in the late 19th century, and have become generally assimilated into mainstream society.

History

Italo-Mexican identity rests on the common experience of migration from Italy in the late 19th century, a period characterized by a more general Italian diaspora to the Americas (under the pressures of economic transformation and the process of unification into a nation-state in 1871), and the establishment of communities, primarily in central and eastern Mexico. Only about 13,000 Italians emigrated to Mexico during this period,[3] and at least half of them subsequently returned to Italy or went on to the United States.[4] Most Italians coming to Mexico were farmers or farm workers from the northern districts. Most of these immigrants were from northern Italy, especially from the regions of Veneto, Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol, and Lombardy. Others arriving in the early 19th century included many from Southern Italy. Significant numbers of Italian settlers arriving in the late 19th and early 20th centuries received land grants from the Mexican government. When Benito Mussolini came to power, thousands of Italian families left Italy for Mexico.

Italian community of Monterrey in 1905.

Today, many Italo-Mexicans continue to reside in towns founded by their ancestors. Among these is Chipilo, in the state of Puebla, where a derivative of the Venetian dialect is still spoken by its residents. Other towns founded by Italian immigrants lie in the states of Veracruz (Huatusco), San Luis Potosí, and the Mexican Federal District. In the state of Aguascalientes there is a large population of Mexicans of Italian descent - the result of the invasion of the French and the creation of the Second Mexican Empire. Smaller, but also notable, numbers of Italo-Mexicans can be found in Guanajuato, Estado de Mexico, and in the towns of Nueva Italia and Lombardia in the state of Michoacán, which were founded by wealthy Italians who immigrated to Mexico after the 1880 diaspora and established large agricultural estates known as haciendas. Playa del Carmen in the state of Quintana Roo has also received a notable number of immigrants from Italy.

At present, the regions with the highest concentration of Mexican Italians are Mexico City, Monterrey, Puebla, and Veracruz.

Society

Entrance to the Italian section of the Panteón de Dolores in Mexico City.

Although many Italo-Mexicans now live in urban centers such as Mexico City and Monterrey, many others live in, and strongly identify with, one of the original or spin-off communities that are almost entirely of Italian origin. These individuals still stridently claim an Italian ethnic identity (at least to a non-Mexican outsider), but generally note that they are Mexican as well. In the late 20th century, there were an estimated 30,000 Italian Mexicans in the original eight Italian communities.[4] The total population, however, is uncertain due to the national census not gathering information on any specific ethnicity, as it is done in other countries. Despite this, Italian surnames are not uncommon in parts of Mexico.

The majority of Italian Mexicans speak Spanish, but in Italian communities derived Italian languages (usually mixed with Spanish) are used to communicate among themselves.

Italian Community

The Italian Feast of Befana in Chipilo, Puebla.

Today, many Italian-Mexicans continue to live in the cities founded by their ancestors. Other cities founded by Italian immigrants in the states of Veracruz (Huatusco), San Luis Potosí.

If you get to travel to the state of Aguascalientes, it can be noted that there exists a large portion of Italian descent, the result of the time of the emigration of French and Italian. Smaller, but notable, the number of Italian-Mexicans who are in Guanajuato, [[State Mexico]], and the Ex-Hacienda (now cities) of Nueva Italia, Michoacán and Lombardia, Michoacán were both founded by Don Dante Cusi originating Gambar, Brescia, and subsequently inhabited by followers of Don Dante who emigrated from Italy (who helped with the farm work and highly specialized advanced at the time, along with the locals).

Today the management of Michoacán by Cusi remains the object of study in English universities. Playa del Carmen Mahahual and Cancun in the state of Quintana Roo has also received a significant number of immigrants from Italy. Several families of Italian-Mexican descent were granted citizenship in the United States during the Bracero Program (which lasted from 1947 to 1964) to make up for a shortage of labor. One notable family of this emigration include the Juan Donato Family, who settled in the city of Santa Cruz in Central California from the state of Guanajuato.

It is estimated that some 300,000 Mexicans have Italian descent although almost all have forgotten the Italian language, while mostly in the capital is a community of nearly 13,000 Italians (passport Italian) in 2008, who speak the Italian language. It should be noted that the Antonio Peconi student says they are over half a million descendants of Italians in Mexico today, because you have to add all children illegitimate since colonial times (especially with Indian women and mestizo, not officially reported paternity).

The vast majority of Italian-Mexicans have achieved a high social status in the Mexican society today. One of the best known is Daniel Mastretta, creator of the first sports car made and designed in Mexico industrially: the Mastretta MXT.

lotería, board game originated in Italy during the 15th century, and was brought to New Spain (Mexico) in 1769.

Recent Italian investment and business ventures in Mexico have developed, primarily in tourism and hospitality, sometimes resulting in settlement primarily in the resort locations of the Riviera Maya, Baja California, Puerto Vallarta and Cancun. They have acquired and generated sources of employment, restaurants, hotels and entertainment centers; however, most have not become permanent residents of Mexico and live primarily as ex-pats.

Derived Italian languages

Since most Italian immigration occurred by way of the establishment of colonies, derivatives of Italian languages exist in Mexico. Besides the best known Chipilo Venetian dialect, derivatives of the Venetian language may also exist in Huatusco and Colonia Gonzalez, Veracruz.

To this we can also add other Italian immigrant languages and dialects:

Notable Italo-Mexicans

Athletics

Artist

Entertainment

  • Manuel Balbi - Mexican actor of Italian descent.
  • Ennio Ricciardi - Italian-born Mexican actor and model.
  • Saby Kamalich - Peruvian-born Mexican film and television actress to Italian father and Croatian mother.
  • Christian Bach - Argentine-born Mexican actress and producer of telenovelas of German and Italian descent.
  • Sebastián Zurita - Mexican actor, son of Christian Bach of German and Italian descent.
  • Maite Perroni, Mexican actress and singer.
  • Alejandro Ciangherotti, Mexican actor
  • Betty Zanolli Fabila, pianist
  • Felipe Colombo, Mexican actor, more popular in Argentina but also participates in Mexican films. Started out in 1991 as a child actor along fellow Mexican actors Gael García Bernal and Ludwika Paleta.
  • Alejandro Tommasi, actor.
  • Carina Ricco, Mexican actress, singer, musician, and composer.
  • Itatí Cantoral, Mexican-Argentine actress to Argentine mother of Italian descent and Mexican father.
  • Nicky Mondellini, Italian-born Mexican Actress.
  • Fernando Ciangherotti, Mexican television soap opera actor.
  • Manuel Valdés, Mexican actor and comedian.
  • Oscar Morelli, Mexican actor.
  • Mónica Dossetti, Mexican actress.
  • Alfonso de Nigris, Mexican actor and model.
  • Germán Valdés, actor, singer and comedian.
  • Fernando Balzaretti, Mexican actor.
  • Victoria Ruffo, Mexican Actress.
  • Itatí Zucchi, Argentine-born Mexican actress of Italian descent and mother of Itatí Cantoral.
  • Montserrat Olivier, Mexican actress, television presenter and former fashion model.
  • Riccardo Dalmacci, Italian-born Mexican actor of film and telenovelas.
  • Luz María Zetina, Mexican Actress and former Miss Mexico Universe.
  • Alberto Agnesi, Mexican Actor.
  • Katie Barberi, Mexican actress.
  • Luis Miguel, pop singer
  • Ramón Valdés, Mexican actor.
  • Tito Guízar, Mexican singer and actor.
  • Ana Bárbara, Singer, Songwriter, and Actress.
  • Michelle Arvizu, television and film actress.
  • Salvador Toscano, was Mexico's first filmmaker of director, producer and distributor of early Mexican cinema films.
  • Rafael Velasco, Mexican film/television actor of Italian descent.
  • Xavier Massimi, Mexican actor.
  • Gabriel Retes, Mexican film actor and director.
  • Rafael Mercadante, Mexican Actor, television host, singer.
  • Julio Mannino, Mexican actor.
  • Sebastián Rulli, Argentine-Mexican actor and model of Italian descent.
  • Samuel Castelán Marini, participated in the Mexican reality show La Academia and got fifth place in his season. Originally from Zentla in Veracruz.
  • Jessica García Formenti, Mexican beauty pageant titleholder who obtained the 2012 Nuestra Belleza Internacional México title.
  • Rosángela Balbó, Italian-born Mexican actress.
  • Óscar Bonfiglio Ríos, Mexican actor of Italian descent.
  • Maritere Alessandri, Mexican model.
  • Pierre Angelo, Mexican actor, director and humorist of Italian descent.
  • Francisco Angelini, Mexican actor of Italian descent.
  • César Bono, Mexican comedian and actor.
  • Lilí Brillanti, Mexican actress and TV host.
  • Reynaldo Rossano, Mexican actor and comedian.
  • Martha Roth, Italian-born Mexican actress.
  • Patricio Borghetti, Argentine-born Mexican actor and singer of Italian and Spanish descent.
  • Michelle Ramaglia, Mexican actress of Italian descent.
  • David Silva Guglielmeti, Mexican-born actor of Italian, Swiss and French descent.
  • Miguel Ángel Biaggio, Mexican-born actor of Italian descent.
  • Gian Pietro Vanucci, Peruvian-born Mexican actor of Italian descent.
  • Toño Mauri, Mexican actor and singer of Italian descent.
  • Graciela Mauri, Mexican actress and signer.
  • Luigina Tuccio Fantoni, Peruvian-born Mexican actress of Italian descent.
  • Laura Bozzo, Peruvian-born Mexican talk show host and lawyer of Italian descent.
  • Eugenio Bartilotti, Mexican actor and puppeteer of Italian descent.
  • Óscar Ferretti, Mexican actor of Italian descent.
  • Sergio DeFassio, Mexican comedian, actor and writer of Italian descent.
  • Mariana Karr, Argentine-born Mexican actress of Italian and Spanish descent.
  • Olivia Buccio, Mexican actress of Italian descent.
  • Joaquín Cosío, Mexican actor and poet of Italian descent.
  • Rosa María Bianchi, Argentinean-born Mexican actress of Italian descent.
  • Pablo Perroni, Mexican actor of Italian descent.
  • Salvador Zerboni, Mexican actor.
  • Horacio Pancheri, Argentine-born Mexican actor of Italian descent.
  • Alejandro Lukini, Mexican actor and TV host of Italian descent.
  • Axel Ricco, Mexican actor and composer of Italian descent.
  • Gabriela Ruffo, Mexican actress and radio host of Italian descent.
  • Marcela Ruffo, Mexican producer telenovelas of Italian descent.

Literature

Politics

Science

Miscellaneous

See also

References

  1. "Conociendo...nos todos" (PDF). INEGI. Retrieved January 5, 2015.
  2. "Italian-Mexicans". Encyclopedia of World Cultures, Volume 8: Mesoamerican and the Caribbean. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  3. Italian stadistics 2009
  4. 4.0 4.1 http://www.everyculture.com/Middle-America-Caribbean/Italian-Mexicans-Orientation.html Italian Mexicans Orientation