翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Costa Rican People's Party
・ Costa Rican peso
・ Costa Rican presidential referendum, 1870
・ Costa Rican Primera División
・ Costa Rican pygmy owl
・ Costa Rican páramo
・ Costa Rican real
・ Costa Rican Renovation Party
・ Costa Rican Saddle Horse
・ Costa Rican Spanish
・ Costa Rican Summer
・ Costa Rican swift
・ Costa Rican Tourism Board
・ Costa Rican units of measurement
・ Costa Rican women's football championship
Costa Ricans
・ Costa Rica–Mexico relations
・ Costa Rica–Nicaragua border
・ Costa Rica–Nicaragua San Juan River border dispute
・ Costa Rica–Panama border
・ Costa Rica–Russia relations
・ Costa Rica–United States relations
・ Costa Rica–Uruguay relations
・ Costa Rita
・ Costa Ronin
・ Costa Salafis
・ Costa San Savino
・ Costa Serena
・ Costa Serina
・ Costa Smeralda


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Costa Ricans : ウィキペディア英語版
Costa Ricans

Costa Ricans (Spanish: ''Costarricenses''), also called Ticos, are from a multiethnic〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Lawmakers vote to define Costa Rica as a multiethnic, plurinational country )〕〔http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Costa-Rica-Declared-Pluricultural-and-Multiethnic-Country-20140828-0060.html〕 Spanish speaking nation in Central America called Costa Rica. Costa Ricans are predominantly whites, castizos (halfway between white and mestizo) and mestizos, but their country is considered a multiethnic society, which means that it is home to people of many different ethnic backgrounds. As a result, modern-day Costa Ricans do not consider their nationality as an ethnicity but as a citizenship with various ethnicities. Costa Rica has four small minority groups: Mulattoes, Blacks, Asians, and Amerindians. In addition to the "Indigenas", whites, mestizos, blacks and mulattoes, Costa Rica is also home to thousands of Asians. Most of the Chinese and Indians now living in the country arrived during the 19th century as migrant workers.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Luxury Centralamerica Culture packages - Travelwizard )
According to the 2011 Census, Costa Rica has a population of 4,301,712 people. The population growth rate between 2005 and 2010 was estimated to be 1.5% annually, with a birth rate of 17.8 live births per 1,000 inhabitants and a mortality rate of 4.1 deaths per 1,000 inhabitants.
Costa Rica was the point where the Mesoamerican and South American native cultures met. The northwest of the country, the Nicoya peninsula, was the southernmost point of Nahuatl cultural influence when the Spanish conquerors (conquistadores) came in the 16th century. The central and southern portions of the country had Chibcha influences. The Atlantic coast, meanwhile, was populated with Jamaican immigrant workers during the 19th century. The country has received immigration from Europe, Africa, Asia, Americas, Middle East etc.
==History==

The colonial period began when Christopher Columbus reached the eastern coast of Costa Rica on his fourth voyage in 1502. Numerous subsequent Spanish expeditions followed, eventually leading to the first Spanish colony, Villa Bruselas in Costa Rica in 1524.〔http://www.guiascostarica.com/history.htm〕
During most of the colonial period, Costa Rica was the southernmost province of the Captaincy General of Guatemala, which was nominally part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain (i.e., Mexico), but which in practice operated as a largely autonomous entity within the Spanish Empire. Costa Rica's distance from the capital in Guatemala, its legal prohibition under Spanish law to trade with its southern neighbors in Panama, then part of the Viceroyalty of New Granada (i.e., Colombia), and the lack of resources such as gold and silver, made Costa Rica into a poor, isolated, and sparsely inhabited region within the Spanish Empire. Costa Rica was described as "the poorest and most miserable Spanish colony in all America" by a Spanish governor in 1719.
Another important factor behind Costa Rica's poverty was the lack of a significant indigenous population available for forced labor, which meant that most of the Costa Rican settlers had to work on their own land, preventing the establishment of large ''haciendas''. For all these reasons Costa Rica was by and large unappreciated and overlooked by the Spanish Crown and left to develop on its own. The small landowners' relative poverty, the lack of a large indigenous labor force, the population's ethnic and linguistic homogeneity, and Costa Rica's isolation from the Spanish colonial centers in Mexico and the Andes all contributed to the development of an autonomous and individualistic agrarian society. Even the Governor had to farm his own crops and tend to his own garden due to the poverty that he lived in. An egalitarian tradition also arose. Costa Rica became a "rural democracy" with no oppressed mestizo or indigenous class. It was not long before Spanish settlers turned to the hills, where they found rich volcanic soil and a milder climate than that of the lowlands.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Costa Ricans」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.