Louisiana Creole refers to people of various racial backgrounds who are descended from the colonial white French/Spanish settlers, African Americans, and Native Americans from the time before the Louisiana territory became a possession of the United States through the Louisiana Purchase (1803). Historically, the term Creole was documented by Garcilaso de la Vega. In the "The Inca", writing in the early 1600s, he said: "The name was invented by the Negroes...
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- Louisiana Creole refers to people of various racial backgrounds who are descended from the colonial white French/Spanish settlers, African Americans, and Native Americans from the time before the Louisiana territory became a possession of the United States through the Louisiana Purchase (1803). Historically, the term Creole was documented by Garcilaso de la Vega. In the "The Inca", writing in the early 1600s, he said: "The name was invented by the Negroes... They use it to mean a Negro born in the Indies, and they devised it to distinguish those who come from this side and were born in Guinea from those born in the New World.... Another version states that the term Creole (Spanish -- Criollo) was introduced in 1590. It derived from the Latin word “crear”, which meant, “create. ” In 1590, Father J. de Acosta decided that the mixed breeds born in the New World were neither Spanish, African, Indian, but various mixtures of all three, thus a created race. So he identified them as "Criollos". The Spanish copied them by introducing this word to describe those born in the New World, and in this way both Spaniards and Guinea Negroes are called criollo if they were born in the New World. " In Louisiana, créole was first used to refer to colonists of white French/Spanish descent who had been born there and were thus native to the territory, as opposed to new immigrants from the US, the West Indies, or from parts of Europe other than the colonial powers, France and Spain. In its early connotations, the word créole was applied exclusively to white people of European descent. Later, the term was also applied to enslaved blacks who were born in Louisiana in order to distinguish them from the West African blacks who had been transported to the American south. French Creole was then the new term reserved exclusively for white people of French/Spanish descent, who usually spoke French as their primary language and practiced Catholicism. In present Louisiana, Créole generally means a person or people of mixed white French, African American, Spanish, and Native American ancestry. Some may not have every ethnic heritage and some have additional ancestries. However, Haiti and the Dominican Republic are really the only two countries/republics with true Creoles. By the nineteenth century, Creoles and enslaved blacks had developed a Créole French language influenced by French and African languages. It was a patois used by slaves and planters alike. It continues to be used to some extent.
- ルイジアナ州におけるクレオールとは、1803年のルイジアナ買収によって米国の一部になる前の、フランス領ルイジアナ時代の移住者を先祖に持つ全ての人種及び異人種間の混血の人々、またはこれらの人々の独自の文化とクレオール料理を指す。
- O termo crioulo da Luisiana designa o habitante francófono da região do atual estado norte-americano da Luisiana e áreas adjacentes. Também designa o crioulo francês da Luisiana, língua forjada da mescla do francês com outros idiomas e a cultura local.
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- Louisiana Creole refers to people of various racial backgrounds who are descended from the colonial white French/Spanish settlers, African Americans, and Native Americans from the time before the Louisiana territory became a possession of the United States through the Louisiana Purchase (1803). Historically, the term Creole was documented by Garcilaso de la Vega. In the "The Inca", writing in the early 1600s, he said: "The name was invented by the Negroes...
- ルイジアナ州におけるクレオールとは、1803年のルイジアナ買収によって米国の一部になる前の、フランス領ルイジアナ時代の移住者を先祖に持つ全ての人種及び異人種間の混血の人々、またはこれらの人々の独自の文化とクレオール料理を指す。
- O termo crioulo da Luisiana designa o habitante francófono da região do atual estado norte-americano da Luisiana e áreas adjacentes. Também designa o crioulo francês da Luisiana, língua forjada da mescla do francês com outros idiomas e a cultura local.
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- Louisiana Creole people
- クレオール (ルイジアナ)
- Crioulo da Luisiana
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