翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Portuguese Mechanized Brigade
・ Portuguese military aircraft serials
・ Portuguese motorcycle Grand Prix
・ Portuguese Motorcycling Federation
・ Portuguese Mozambican Legislative Assembly election, 1973
・ Portuguese Mozambicans
・ Portuguese Mozambique
・ Portuguese Grand Prix
・ Portuguese Grand Prix (disambiguation)
・ Portuguese Guinea
・ Portuguese Guinea Legislative Assembly election, 1973
・ Portuguese Guinea National Assembly election, 1972
・ Portuguese Guinean escudo
・ Portuguese Guinean real
・ Portuguese guitar
Portuguese Guyanese
・ Portuguese Handball Cup
・ Portuguese Handball Federation
・ Portuguese Handball First Division
・ Portuguese Handball Fourth Division
・ Portuguese Handball League Cup
・ Portuguese Handball Second Division
・ Portuguese Handball Super Cup
・ Portuguese Handball Third Division
・ Portuguese heraldry
・ Portuguese Heritage Society
・ Portuguese Historical Museum
・ Portuguese House of Burgundy
・ Portuguese ibex
・ Portuguese immigration to Hawaii


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

Portuguese Guyanese : ウィキペディア英語版
Portuguese Guyanese

A Portuguese Guyanese is a Guyanese whose ancestors came from Portugal, or a Portuguese who has Guyanese citizenship.
== History ==
The history of Portuguese Guyanese community relates directly with the end of slavery. After the abolition of slavery in 1834, the planters of British Guiana sought alternative sources of labour. They were eager to recruit white labourers in order to bolster the proportion of white to coloured residents in the colony.
In 1834, the first Portuguese people arrived from the Portuguese island of Madeira, having been sponsored by a coalition of planters and by the colonial government. Between 1834 and 1882, some 30,645 Portuguese arrived in Guyana, the vast majority from Madeira, but others from the Azores Islands. Mixed race Portuguese speaking elements from Cape Verde and Brazil also were brought in.
The Madeiran Portuguese, or simply Madeirans as they came to be known, soon shunned working in the fields given the high mortality rate due to tropical diseases. They settled in Georgetown, New Amsterdam and other towns in Guyana and dedicated themselves into the venture of the retail and wholesale trades. By 1851, 173 out of 296 shops in Georgetown were Portuguese-owned, while the figure was 28 out of 52 in New Amsterdam. In 1891, Portuguese numbered 4.3% of the population of Guyana.
The Portuguese of Guiana faced considerable discrimination from both the black Creoles and the white British ruling class. The former believed them to be opportunists and lackies of the white establishment while the latter considered the Portuguese inferior due to their Catholic and Mediterranean racial roots. The Portuguese are white, but the white ruling class knew that, although the Portuguese were racially European, they were also indigent peasants from Madeira.
Tensions boiled over on a number of occasions and Georgetown experienced a spate of race riots, most notably in 1856 and 1898. On both occasions, disgruntled black Creoles directed their anger against Portuguese-owned shops and widespread looting occurred leading to damages of over $30,000 and over $200,000 respectively.
Eventually, although the Portuguese were called by the British as inferior, the Portuguese were given more privileges by other whites and assimilated - becoming part of Guyanese society. They anglicized their surnames and began to speak English as their primary language. However, during the struggle for independence, the Portuguese came to be identified with the British colonial establishment while the ethnic Indo-Guyanese and Afro-Guyanese fought over power. The 1964 killing of the civil servant Arthur Abraham (Guyanese), an ethnic Portuguese, led many to emigrate before Britain introduced restrictions.

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「Portuguese Guyanese」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.