Spaniards

Spaniards
Españoles[lower-alpha 1]
Total population

Spain Nationals 41,539,400[1]
(for a total population of 47,059,533)

Hundreds of millions with Spanish ancestry in former colonies

Nationals Abroad : 2,183,043[2]

Total abroad: 2,183,043,[3] which of them:
733,387 are born in Spain
1,303,043 are born in the country of residence
137,391 others[3]
Regions with significant populations
Argentina Argentina 404,111 (92,610 born in Spain)[2][4][4]
France France 215,183 (124,153 born in Spain)[2][4]
Venezuela Venezuela 188,585 (56,167 born in Spain)[2][4]
Germany Germany 146,846 (61,881 born in Spain)[4][5][6]
 Brazil 117,523 (29,848 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Cuba 108,858 (2,114 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Mexico 108,314 (17,485 born in Spain)[2][4]
United States United States
(including Puerto Rico)
103,474 (48,546 born in Spain)[2][4]
Switzerland Switzerland 103,247 (48,546 born in Spain)[2][4]
 United Kingdom 81,519 (54,418 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Uruguay 63,827 (12,023 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Chile 56,104 (9,669 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Belgium 53,212 (26,616 born in Spain)[7]
 Colombia 30,683 (8,057 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Andorra 24,485 (17,771 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Netherlands 21,974 (12,406 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Italy 20,898 (11,734 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Peru 19,668 (4,028 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Dominican Republic 18,928 (3,622 born in Spain)[4][7]
 Australia 18,353 (10,506 born in Spain)[2][4]
 Costa Rica 16,482[8]
 Sweden 15,390[9]
 Peru 15,214[10]
 Panama 12,375[8]
 Guatemala 9,311[11]
Morocco Morocco 8,003[4]
 Ireland 6,794[12]
 Philippines 3,110[13]
 Qatar 2,500[14]
 El Salvador 2,450[8]
 Russia 2,118 - 45,935[4][15]
 Nicaragua 1,826[16]
 Greece 1,489[4]
 Poland 1,283[4]
 Czech Republic 1,007[4]
Languages
Languages of Spain
(Spanish, Basque, Catalan, Galician and others)
Religion
Related ethnic groups
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Spaniards
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Spaniards[lower-alpha 1] are a nation and ethnic group indigenous to Spain that share a common Spanish culture and speak one of the national languages of Spain, including most numerously Spanish, as a primary language. Within Spain, there are a number of nationalisms and regionalisms, reflecting the country's complex history and diverse culture. Although the official language of Spain is commonly known as "Spanish", it is only one of the national languages of Spain, and is less ambiguously known as Castilian, a standard language based on the medieval romance speech of the early Kingdom of Castile in north-central Spain and the Mozarabic dialect of the Taifa of Toledo which was incorporated by the former in the 11th century. There are several commonly spoken regional languages, most notably Basque (a Paleohispanic language), Catalan and Galician (both Romance languages like Castilian). There are many populations outside Spain with ancestors who emigrated from Spain and who share a Hispanic culture; most notably in Hispanic America.

The Roman Republic conquered Iberia during the 2nd and 1st centuries BC. As a result of Roman colonization, the majority of local languages, with the exception of Basque, stem from the Vulgar Latin. The Germanic Vandals and Suebi, with part of the Iranian Alans under King Respendial conquered the peninsula in 409 AD.[19] The Iberian Peninsula was conquered and brought under the rule of the Arab Umayyads in 711 and by the Berber North African dynasties the Almohads and the Almoravids in the 11th and 12th centuries. Following the eight century Reconquista, the modern Spanish state was formed with the union of the Kingdoms of Castille and Aragon, the conquest of the last Muslim kingdom of Granada and the Canary Islands in the late 15th century. In the early 16th century the Kingdom of Navarre was also conquered. As Spain expanded its empire in the America's, religious minorities in Spain were either converted or expelled and the Catholic church fiercely persecuted heresy during a period known as the Spanish inquisition. In parallel, a wave of emigration began to the Americas began with over 16 million people emigrating to the Americas during the colonial period (1492-1832).[20] In the post-colonial period (1850–1950), a further 3.5 million Spanish left for the Americas, particularly Argentina, Uruguay, Mexico,[21] Brazil, Chile, Venezuela, Puerto Rico and Cuba.[22] As a result, Spanish-descendants in Latin America number in the hundreds of millions.

Spain is home to one of the largest communities of Romani people (commonly known by the English exonym "gypsies", Spanish: gitanos). The Spanish Roma, which belong to the Iberian Kale subgroup (calé), are a formerly-nomadic community, which spread across Western Asia, North Africa, and Europe, first reaching Spain in the 15th century. The population of Spain is becoming increasingly diverse due to recent immigration. From 2000 to 2010, Spain had among the highest per capita immigration rates in the world and the second highest absolute net migration in the World (after the USA)[23] and immigrants now make up about 10% of the population. Nevertheless, the prolonged economic crisis between 2008 and 2015 significantly reduced both immigration rates and the total number of foreigners in the country, Spain becoming once more a net emigrant country.

Historical background

Early populations

Lady of Elche, a piece of Iberian sculpture from the 4th century BC
A young Hispano-Roman nobleman from the 1st century BC
Marble bust of Roman Emperor Trajan, born in Roman Hispania, modern-day Seville.

The earliest modern humans inhabiting Spain are believed to have been Neolithic peoples who may have arrived in the Iberian Peninsula as early as 35,000–40,000 years ago. In more recent times the Iberians are believed to have arrived or developed in the region between the 4th millennium BC and the 3rd millennium BC, initially settling along the Mediterranean coast. Celts settled in Spain during the Iron Age. Some of those tribes in North-central Spain, which had cultural contact with the Iberians, are called Celtiberians. In addition, a group known as the Tartessians and later Turdetanians inhabited southwestern Spain and who are believed to have developed a separate civilization of Phoenician influence. The seafaring Phoenicians, Greeks, and Carthaginians successively founded trading colonies along the Mediterranean coast over a period of several centuries. The Second Punic War between the Carthaginians and Romans was fought mainly in what is now Spain and Portugal.[24]

The Roman Republic conquered Iberia during the 2nd and 1st centuries BC transformed most of the region into a series of Latin-speaking provinces. As a result of Roman colonization, the majority of local languages, with the exception of Basque, stem from the Vulgar Latin that was spoken in Hispania (Roman Iberia), which evolved into the modern languages of the Iberian Peninsula, including Castilian, which became the main lingua franca of Spain, and is now known in most countries as Spanish. Hispania emerged as an important part of the Roman Empire and produced notable historical figures such as Trajan, Hadrian, Seneca and Quintilian.

The Germanic Vandals and Suebi, with part of the Iranian Alans under King Respendial, arrived in the peninsula in 409 AD. Part of the Vandals with the remaining Alans, now under Geiseric in personal union removed themselves to North Africa after a few conflicts with another Germanic tribe, the Visigoths, who established in Toulouse supported Roman campaigns against the Vandals and Alans in 415–19 AD and became the dominant power in Iberia for three centuries. The Visigoths were highly romanized in the eastern Empire and already Christians, so their integration within the late Iberian-Roman culture was full; they accepted the laws and structures of the late Roman World with little change, more than any other successor barbarian state in the West after the Ostrogoths, and all the more so after converting away from Arianism. The other Germanic tribe remaining in the peninsula, the Suebi (including the Buri), became established according to sources as federates of the Roman Empire in the old North western Roman province of Gallaecia, but in fact largely independent and predatory on neighboring provinces to stretch their political control over ever-larger portions of the southwest after the Vandals and Alans left, creating a totally independent Suebic Kingdom. After being checked and reduced in 456 AD by the Visigoths moving to settle in the peninsula, it survived until 585 AD, when it was annihilated as an independent political unit by the Visigoths, after involvement in the internal affairs of the kingdom, supporting Catholic rebellions and sedition within the Royal family. The Suebi became the first Germanic kingdom to convert officially to Roman Catholicism in 447 AD. under king Rechiar.

Middle Ages

After two centuries of domination by the Visigothic Kingdom, the Iberian Peninsula was invaded by a Muslim force under Tariq Bin Ziyad in 711. This army consisted mainly ethnic Berbers from the Ghomara tribe, which were reinforced by Arabs from Syria once the conquest was complete. The Visigothic Kingdom which to that point controlled the entire peninsula totally collapsed and the entire peninsula was conquered except for a remote mountainous area in the far north which would eventually become the Christian Kingdom of Asturias. Muslim Iberia became part of the Umayyad Caliphate and would be known as Al-Andalus. The Berbers of Al Andalus revolted as early as 740 AD, halting Arab expansion across the Pyrenees into France. Upon the collapse of the Umayyad in Damascus, Spain was seized by Yusuf al Fihri, until the arrival of exiled Umayyad Prince Abd al-Rahman I, who seized power, establishing himself as Emir of Cordoba. Abd al Rahman III, his grandson, proclaimed a Caliphate in 929, marking the beginning of the Golden Age of Al Andalus, a polity which was the effective power of the peninsula and even Western North Africa, competing with the Shiite rulers of Tunis and constantly raiding the small Christian Kingdoms in the North.

The Córdoba Caliphate effectively collapsed during a ruinous civil war between 1009 and 1013, although it was not finally abolished until 1031 when al-Andalus broke up into a number of mostly independent mini-states and principalities called taifas. These were generally too weak to defend themselves against repeated raids and demands for tribute from the Christian states to the north and west, which were known to the Muslims as "the Galician nations",[16] and which had spread from their initial strongholds in Galicia, Asturias, Cantabria, the Basque country, and the Carolingian Marca Hispanica to become the Kingdoms of Navarre, León, Portugal, Castile and Aragon, and the County of Barcelona. Eventually raids turned into conquests, and in response the Taifa kings were forced to request help from the Almoravids, Muslim Berber rulers of the Maghreb. Their desperate maneuver would eventually fall to their disadvantage, however, as the Almoravids they had summoned from the south went on to conquer and annex all the Taifa kingdoms.

In 1086 the Almoravid ruler of Morocco, Yusuf ibn Tashfin, was invited by the Muslim princes in Iberia to defend them against Alfonso VI, King of Castile and León. In that year, Tashfin crossed the straits to Algeciras and inflicted a severe defeat on the Christians at the Battle of Sagrajas. By 1094, Yusuf ibn Tashfin had removed all Muslim princes in Iberia and had annexed their states, except for the one at Zaragoza. He also regained Valencia from the Christians. About this time a massive process of conversion to Islam took place, Muslims comprising the majority of the population Spain the 11th century. The Almoravids were succeeded by the Almohads, another Berber dynasty, after the victory of Abu Yusuf Ya'qub al-Mansur over the Castilian Alfonso VIII at the Battle of Alarcos in 1195. In 1212 a coalition of Christian kings under the leadership of the Castilian Alfonso VIII defeated the Almohads at the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa. The Almohads continued to rule Al-Andalus for another decade, though with much reduced power and prestige. The civil wars following the death of Abu Ya'qub Yusuf II rapidly led to the re-establishment of taifas. The taifas, newly independent but now weakened, were quickly conquered by Portugal, Castile, and Aragon. After the fall of Murcia (1243) and the Algarve (1249), only the Emirate of Granada survived as a Muslim state, and only as a tributary of Castile until 1492.

In 1469 the marriage of Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile signaled the launch of the final assault on the Emirate of Granada. The King and Queen convinced the Pope to declare their war a crusade. The Christians crushed one center of resistance after another and finally, in January 1492, after a long siege, the Moorish sultan Muhammad XII surrendered the fortress palace, the renowned Alhambra.

The Canary Islands were conquered between 1402 and 1496 and their indigenous Berber populations, the Guanches, were gradually absorbed by Spanish settlers.

Spanish conquest of the Iberian part of Navarre was commenced by Ferdinand II of Aragon and completed by Charles V in a series of military campaigns extending from 1512 to 1524, while the war lasted until 1528 in the Navarre to the north of the Pyrenees. Between 1568-1571, Charles V armies fought and defeated a general insurrection of the Muslims of the mountains of Granada, after which he ordered the dispersal of up to 80,000 Granadans throughout Spain.

The union of the Christian kingdoms of Castile and Aragon as well as the conquest of Granada, Navarre and the Canary Islands led to the formation of the Spanish state as known today. This allowed for the development of a Spanish identity based on the Spanish language and a local form of Catholicism, which slowly took hold in a territory which remained culturally, linguistically and religiously very diverse.

A majority of Jews were forcibly converted to Catholicism during the 14th and 15th centuries and those remaining were expelled from Spain in 1492. The open practice of Islam was by Spain's sizeable Mudejar population was similarly outlawed. Furthermore, between 1609 and 1614, a significant number of Moriscos— (Muslims who had been baptized Catholic) were expelled by royal decree.[25] Although initial estimates of the number of Moriscos expelled such as those of Henri Lapeyre reach 300,000 moriscos (or 4% of the total Spanish population), the extent and severity of the expulsion has been increasingly challenged by modern historians. Nevertheless, the eastern region of Valencia, where ethnic tensions were highest, was particularly affected by the expulsion, suffering economic collapse and depopulation of much of its territory.

People of Granada

Colonialism and emigration

In the 16th century, following the military conquest of most of the new continent, perhaps 240,000 Spaniards entered American ports. They were joined by 450,000 in the next century.[26] Since the conquest of Mexico and Peru these two regions became the principal destinations of Spanish colonial settlers in the 16th century.[27] In the period 1850–1950, 3.5 million Spanish left for the Americas, particularly Argentina, Uruguay, Mexico,[21] Brazil, Chile, Venezuela, and Cuba.[22] From 1840 to 1890, as many as 40,000 Canary Islanders emigrated to Venezuela.[28] 94,000 Spaniards chose to go to Algeria in the last years of the 19th century, and 250,000 Spaniards lived in Morocco at the beginning of the 20th century.[22]

By the end of the Spanish Civil War, some 500,000 Spanish Republican refugees had crossed the border into France.[29] From 1961 to 1974, at the height of the guest worker in Western Europe, about 100,000 Spaniards emigrated each year.[22]

Peoples of Spain

Nationalisms and regionalisms

Within Spain, there are various regional populations including the Andalusians, Castilians, the Catalans, Valencians and Balearics (who speak Catalan, a distinct Romance language in eastern Spain), the Basques (who live in the Basque country and speak Basque, a non-Indo-European language), and the Galicians (who speak Galician, a descendant of old Galician-Portuguese).

Respect to the existing cultural pluralism is important to many Spaniards. In many regions there exist strong regional identities such as Asturias, Aragon, the Canary Islands, León, and Andalusia, while in others (like Catalonia, Basque Country or Galicia) there are stronger national sentiments. Some of them refuse to identify themselves with the Spanish ethnic group and prefer some of the following:

Regional ethnic groups

Gitanos

Spain is home to one of the largest communities of Romani people (commonly known by the English exonym "gypsies", Spanish: gitanos). The Spanish Roma, which belong to the Iberian Kale subgroup (calé), are a formerly-nomadic community, which spread across Western Asia, North Africa, and Europe, first reaching Spain in the 15th century.

Data on ethnicity is not collected in Spain, although the Government's statistical agency CIS estimated in 2007 that the number of Gitanos present in Spain is probably around one million.[30] Most Spanish Roma live in the autonomous community of Andalusia, where they have traditionally enjoyed a higher degree of integration than in the rest of the country. A number of Spanish Calé also live in Southern France, especially in the region of Perpignan.

Modern immigration

The population of Spain is becoming increasingly diverse due to recent immigration. From 2000 to 2010, Spain had among the highest per capita immigration rates in the world and the second highest absolute net migration in the World (after the USA)[23] and immigrants now make up about 10% of the population. Since 2000, Spain has absorbed more than 3 million immigrants, with thousands more arriving each year.[31] Immigrant population now tops over 4.5 million.[32] They come mainly from Europe, Latin America, China, the Philippines, North Africa, and West Africa.[33]

Languages

The vernacular languages of Spain (simplified)
  Spanish official; spoken all over the country
  Catalan/Valencian, co-official
  Basque, co-official
  Galician, co-official
  Aranese, co-official (dialect of Occitan)
  Asturian, recognised
  Aragonese, recognised
  Leonese, recognised
  Extremaduran, unofficial
  Fala, unofficial

Languages spoken in Spain include Spanish (castellano or español) (74%), Catalan (català, called valencià in the Valencian Community) (17%), Galician (galego) (7%), and Basque (euskara) (2%).[34] Other languages are Asturian (asturianu), Aranese Gascon (aranés), Aragonese (aragonés), and Leonese, each with their own various dialects. Spanish is the official state language, although the other languages are co-official in a number of autonomous communities.

Peninsular Spanish is largely considered to be divided into two main dialects: Castilian Spanish (spoken in the northern half of the country) and Andalusian Spanish (spoken mainly in Andalusia). However, a large part of Spain, including Madrid, Extremadura, Murcia, and Castile–La Mancha, speak local dialects known as "transitional dialects" between Andalusian and Castilian Spanish.[35] The Canary Islands also have a distinct dialect of Castilian Spanish which is very close to Caribbean Spanish. Linguistically, the Spanish language is a Romance language and is one of the aspects (including laws and general "ways of life") that causes Spaniards to be labelled a Latin people. The strong Arabic influence on the language (nearly 4,000 words are of Arabic origin, including nouns, verbs and adjectives.[36]) and the independent evolution of the language itself through history, most notably the Basque influence at the formative stage of Castilian Romance, partially explain its difference from other Romance languages. The Basque language left a strong imprint on Spanish both linguistically and phonetically. Other changes in Spanish have come from borrowings from English and French, although English influence is stronger in Latin America than in Spain.

The number of speakers of Spanish as a mother tongue is roughly 35.6 million, while the vast majority of other groups in Spain such as the Galicians, Catalans, and Basques also speak Spanish as a first or second language, which boosts the number of Spanish speakers to the overwhelming majority of Spain's population of 46 million.

Spanish was exported to the Americas due to over three centuries of Spanish colonial rule starting with the arrival of Christopher Columbus to Santo Domingo in 1492. Spanish is spoken natively by over 400 million people and spans across most countries of the Americas; from the Southwestern United States in North America down to Tierra del Fuego, the southernmost region of South America in Chile and Argentina. A variety of the language, known as Judaeo-Spanish or Ladino (or Haketia in Morocco), is still spoken by descendants of Sephardim (Spanish and Portuguese Jews) who fled Spain following a decree of expulsion of practising Jews in 1492. Also, a Spanish creole language known as Chabacano, which developed by the mixing of Spanish and native Tagalog and Cebuano languages during Spain's rule of the country through Mexico from 1565 to 1898, is spoken in the Philippines (by roughly 1 million people).[37]

Religion

Religious affiliation in Spain in (2013)
according to Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas.[38]
Religion Percent
Roman Catholic
 
71%
Non-religious
 
25%
Other religions
 
2%
Not stated
 
2%

Roman Catholicism is by far the largest denomination present in Spain. According to a study by the Spanish Centre for Sociological Research in 2013 about 71% of Spaniards self-identify as Catholics, 2% other faith, and about 25% identify as atheists or declare they have no religion.

Emigration from Spain

Outside of Europe, Latin America has the largest population of people with ancestors from Spain. These include people of full or partial Spanish ancestry.

People with Spanish ancestry

Country Population (% of country) Reference Criterion
Mexico Spanish Mexican 94,720,000 (>80%) [39] estimated: 20% as Whites
75-80% as Mestizos.
United States Spanish American 50,000,000 (16%) [40] 10,017,244 Americans who identify themselves with Spanish ancestry.[41]
26,735,713 (53.0%) (8.7% of total U.S. population) Hispanics in USA are white (also mixed with other European origins), others are different mixes or races but with Spaniard ancestry.
Venezuela Spanish Venezuelan 25,079,923 (90%)[42] 42% as white and 50% as mestizos.
Brazil Spanish Brazilian 15,000,000 (8%) [43]estimate by Bruno Ayllón.[44]
Colombia Spanish Colombian 39,000,000 (86%) Self-description as "Mestizo, white and mulatto"
Cuba Spanish Cuban 10,050,849 (89%) [45] Self-description as white, mulatto and mestizo
Puerto Rico Spanish Puerto Rican 3,064,862 (80.5%) [46][47]
[48][49]
Self-description as white
83,879 (2%) identified as Spanish citizens
Canada Spanish Canadian 325,730 (1%) [50] Self-description
Australia Spanish Australian 58,271 (0.3%) [51] Self-description

The listings above shows the ten countries with known collected data on people with ancestors from Spain, although the definitions of each of these are somewhat different and the numbers cannot really be compared. Spanish Chilean of Chile and Spanish Uruguayan of Uruguay could be included by percentage (each at above 40%) instead of numeral size.

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 Native names and pronunciation:
    • Asturian and Spanish: españoles [espaˈɲoles]
      • Dialectally also:
        • Castilian: [ɛspaˈɲɔlɛs] (emphatic speech), [es̥paˈɲoles̥] (normal speech with optional /s/ devoicing)
        • East Andalusian, Murcian: [ɛpːaˈɲɔlɛ]
        • West Andalusian, Extremaduran (Spanish): [ɛʰpːaˈɲɔlɛʰ]
        • Extremaduran (Astur-Leonese): [ɛʰpːaˈɲɔlɪʰ]
        • Leonese (Astur-Leonese): [espaˈɲoles -lɪs]
        • Manchego: [ɛˣpːaˈɲɔlɛˣ]
    • Basque: espainiarrak [espaɲiarak] or espainolak [espaɲiolak]
    • Aragonese and Catalan: espanyols
      • Aragonese: [espaˈɲols]
      • Eastern Catalan: [əspəˈɲɔlˠs, -ˈɲɒlˠs]
      • Western Catalan: [espaˈɲɔlˠs, -ˈɲɒlˠs]
    • Galician: españóis [espaˈɲɔjs, -ˈɲɔjʃ]
    • Occitan: espanhòls [espaˈɲɔls]

Footnotes

  1. "Official Population Figures of Spain. Population on the 1 January 2013". INE Instituto Nacional de Estadística.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 "Explotación estadística del Padrón de Españoles Residentes en el Extranjero a 1 de enero de 2015" (PDF). Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  3. 1 2 Españoles residentes en el extranjero 2015 (CERA) por país
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 "Padrón de Españoles Residentes en el Extranjero (PERE)" (PDF). Retrieved 5 December 2015.
  5. 31 Dec. 2014 German Statistical Office. Zensus 2014: Bevölkerung am 31. Dezember 2014
  6. "Ausländeranteil in Deutschland bis 2015 - Statistik".
  7. 1 2 "Explotación estadística del Padrón de Españoles Residentes en el Extranjero a 1 de enero de 2014" (PDF). Retrieved 19 June 2014.
  8. 1 2 3 Censo electoral de españoles residentes en el extranjero 2009
  9. "Födelseland Och Ursprungsland".
  10. Explotación estadística del Padrón de Españoles Residentes en el Extranjero a 1 de enero de 2012
  11. "Embassy of Spain in Guatemala City, Guatemala profile. Guatemala" (PDF). exteriores.gob.es (in Spanish). exteriores.gob.es. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
  12. "CSO Emigration" (PDF). Census Office Ireland. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  13. There are 3,110 immigrants from Spain according to INE, 2012-01-01
  14. Snoj, Jure (18 December 2013). "Population of Qatar by nationality".
  15. ФМС России
  16. "Embassy of Spain in Managua, Nicaragua profil e Nicaragua" (PDF). exteriores.gob.es (in Spanish). exteriores.gob.es. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
  17. "El 73,4% de los españoles se declara católico, según el CIS :: España :: Religión Digital". Periodistadigital.com. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  18. "Los ateos salen del armario | Noticias generales". elmundo.es. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  19. https://books.google.com/books?id=SnIOwbxnQskC&pg=PA89&lpg=PA89&dq=respendial+spain&source=bl&ots=F8b0I33tTx&sig=R0uTRNTHpnF5gozjUDYc85cDnVA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi0ioLV-snRAhWEWSYKHQsdAcgQ6AEILjAD#v=onepage&q=respendial spain&f=false
  20. Macías, Rosario Márquez (1 January 1995). "La emigración española a América, 1765-1824". Universidad de Oviedo via Google Books.
  21. 1 2 Patricia Rivas. "Reconocerán nacionalidad española a descendientes de exiliados :: YVKE Mundial". Radiomundial.com.ve. Retrieved 10 July 2010.
  22. 1 2 3 4 Nieves Ortega Pérez (1 February 2003). "Spain: Forging an Immigration Policy". Migrationinformation.org. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  23. 1 2 "Eurostat – Population in Europe in 2005" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 August 2008. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  24. "Ethnographic map of Pre-Roman Iberia". Luís Fraga da Silva – Associação Campo Arqueológico de Tavira, Tavira, Portugal. Archived from the original on 11 June 2004. Retrieved 25 April 2007.
  25. "Morisco – Britannica Online Encyclopedia". Britannica.com. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  26. Axtell, James (September–October 1991). "The Columbian Mosaic in Colonial America". Humanities. 12 (5): 12–18. Archived from the original on 17 May 2008. Retrieved 8 October 2008.
  27. "Migration to Latin America". Let.leidenuniv.nl. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  28. "The Spanish of the Canary Islands".
  29. Caistor, Nick (28 February 2003). "Spanish Civil War fighters look back". BBC News. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  30. http://www.msc.es/ssi/familiasInfancia/inclusionSocial/poblacionGitana/docs/diagnosticosocial_autores.pdf
  31. "Spain: Immigrants Welcome". Businessweek.com. 20 May 2007. Archived from the original on 6 October 2008. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  32. "National Institute of Statistics: Advance Municipal Register to January 1, 2006. provisional data" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2008. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  33. Tremlett, Giles (26 July 2006). "Spain attracts record levels of immigrants seeking jobs and sun". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 25 April 2007.
  34. "CIA – The World Factbook – Spain". Cia.gov. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  35. "Lenguas de España". Proel.org. Retrieved 25 April 2007.
  36. "The History of the Spanish Language" - The importance of this influence can be seen in words such as admiral (almirante), algebra, alchemy and alcohol, to note just a few obvious examples, which entered other European languages, like French, English, German, from Arabic via medieval Spanish. Modern Spanish has around 100,000 words.
  37. Fennig, Charles D., ed. (2016). Ethnologue: Languages of the World (Nineteenth ed.). Dallas, Texas: SIL International. Retrieved 26 January 2017.
  38. Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas (April 2013). "Barómetro abril 2013" (PDF). p. 33. Retrieved 6 April 2013.
  39. "Mexico – Britannica Online Encyclopedia". Britannica.com. Retrieved 10 July 2010.
  40. US Census Bureau 2014 American Community Survey B03001 1-Year Estimates HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN retrieved 18 October 2015. Number of people of Hispanic and Latino Origin by specific origin(except people of Brazilian origin).
  41. Szucs, Loretto Dennis; Luebking, Sandra Hargreaves (1 January 2006). "The Source: A Guidebook to American Genealogy". Ancestry Publishing via Google Books.
  42. Resultados Básicos Censo 2011 Archived 13 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
  43. "Brasil – España". www.hispanista.com.br. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
  44. Más de 15 millones de brasileños son descendientes directos de españoles.
  45. "Census of population and homes" (in Spanish). Government of Cuba. 16 September 2002. Retrieved 7 September 2009.
  46. "Profile of General Demographic Characteristics: 2000, Data Set: Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF 1) 100-Percent Data". Factfinder.census.gov. Archived from the original on 22 October 2010. Retrieved 14 May 2017.
  47. "Puerto Rico's History on race" (PDF). Retrieved 24 February 2014.
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References

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