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・ Puerto Rico Highway 10
・ Puerto Rico Highway 100
・ Puerto Rico Highway 101
・ Puerto Rican suffrage referendum, 1970
・ Puerto Rican tanager
・ Puerto Rican Tests of Academic Achievement
・ Puerto Rican tody
・ Puerto Rican unicameralism referendum, 2005
・ Puerto Rican units of measurement
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・ Puerto Rican Volleyball Federation
・ Puerto Rican Volunteers Corps
・ Puerto Rican women in the military
・ Puerto Rican woodpecker
・ Puerto Rican Workers' Revolutionary Party
Puerto Ricans
・ Puerto Ricans for Puerto Rico Party
・ Puerto Ricans in Chicago
・ Puerto Ricans in the United States
・ Puerto Ricans in the Vietnam War
・ Puerto Ricans in World War I
・ Puerto Ricans in World War II
・ Puerto Rico
・ Puerto Rico (board game)
・ Puerto Rico (disambiguation)
・ Puerto Rico (El Torno)
・ Puerto Rico (Misiones)
・ Puerto Rico (Pando)
・ Puerto Rico Academy of Arts and Sciences
・ Puerto Rico Adjutant General


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

Puerto Ricans ((スペイン語:Puertorriqueños); Taíno: boricua) are the inhabitants or citizens of Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico is a multi-ethnic nation, home to people of different ethnic and national backgrounds. As a result, some Puerto Ricans do not treat their nationality as an ethnicity but as a citizenship with various ethnicities and national origins comprising the "Puerto Rican people".
Despite its multi-ethnic composition, the culture held in common by most Puerto Ricans is referred to as mainstream Puerto Rican culture, a Western culture largely derived from the traditions of Western European migrants, beginning with the early Spanish settlers, along with other Europeans arriving later such as the Corsicans Irish, Germans and French, along with a strong West African culture which has been influential.
Puerto Ricans commonly refer to themselves as ''boricuas''. "The majority of Puerto Ricans regard themselves as being of mixed Spanish-European descent. Recent DNA sample studies have concluded that the three largest components of the Puerto Rican genetic profile are in fact indigenous Taíno, European, and African".〔(''Minority Rights Groups International: Puerto Rico Overview: Peoples.'' ) World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples. 2005. Retrieved 2 July 2013.〕 The population of Puerto Ricans and descendants is estimated to be between 8 to 10 million worldwide, with most living within the islands of Puerto Rico and in the United States mainland. Within the United States, Puerto Ricans are present in all states of the Union, and the states with the largest populations of Puerto Ricans relative to the national population of Puerto Ricans in the United States at large are the states of New York, Florida, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, with large populations also in Massachusetts, Connecticut, California, Illinois, and Texas.〔(US Census Bureau: Table QT-P10 Hispanic or Latino by Type: 2010 ) Retrieved 25 March 2012 - select state from drop-down menu〕
For 2009,〔() 〕 the American Community Survey estimates give a total of 3,859,026 Puerto Ricans classified as "Native" Puerto Ricans. It also gives a total of 3,644,515 (91.9%) of the population being born in Puerto Rico and 201,310 (5.1%) born in the United States. The total population born outside Puerto Rico is 322,773 (8.1%). Of the 108,262 who were foreign born outside the United States (2.7% of Puerto Ricans), 92.9% were born in Latin America, 3.8% in Europe, 2.7% in Asia, 0.2% in Northern America, and 0.1% in Africa and Oceania each.〔
==Ancestry==
The original inhabitants of Puerto Rico are the Taíno, who called the island ''Borikén''; however, as in other parts of the Americas, the native people soon diminished in number after the arrival of European settlers. The negative impact on the numbers of Amerindian people was almost entirely the result of Old World diseases that the Amerindians had no natural/bodily defenses against, including measles, chicken pox, mumps, influenza, and even the common cold. In fact, it was estimated that the majority of all the Amerindian inhabitants of the New World perished due to contact and contamination with those Old World diseases, while those that survived were killed by warfare with each other and with Europeans.
Both run-away and freed African slaves (the Spanish, upon establishing a foothold, quickly began to import African slaves to work in expanding their colonies in the Caribbean) were in Puerto Rico. This interbreeding was far more common in Latin America because of those Spanish and Portuguese mercantile colonial policies exemplified by the oft-romanticized male conquistadors (e.g. Hernán Cortés). Aside from the presence of slaves, some indication for why the Amerindian population was so diluted was the tendency for conquistadors to bring with them scores of single men hoping to serve God, country, or their own interests. All of these factors would indeed prove detrimental for the Taínos in Puerto Rico and surrounding Caribbean islands.
In the 16th century, a significant depth of Puerto Rican culture began to develop with the import of African slaves by the Spanish, as well as by the French, the Portuguese, the British, and the Dutch. Thousands of Spanish settlers also immigrated to Puerto Rico from the Canary Islands during the 18th and 19th centuries, so many so that whole Puerto Rican villages and towns were founded by Canarian immigrants, and their descendants would later form a majority of the Spanish population on the island.
In 1791, the slaves in Saint-Domingue (Haiti), revolted against their French masters. Many of the French escaped to Puerto Rico via what is now the Dominican Republic and settled in the west coast of the island, especially in Mayagüez. Some Puerto Ricans are of British heritage, most notably Scottish people and English people who came to reside there in the 17th and 18th centuries.
When Spain revived the Royal Decree of Graces of 1815 with the intention of attracting non-Hispanics to settle in the island hundreds of French (especially Corsicans), Germans and Irish immigrants who were affected by Irish Potato Famine of the 1840s immigrated to Puerto Rico. They were followed by smaller waves from other European countries and China.
During the early 20th century Jews began to settle in Puerto Rico. The first large group of Jews to settle in Puerto Rico were European refugees fleeing German–occupied Europe in the 1930s and 1940s. The second influx of Jews to the island came in the 1950s, when thousands of Cuban Jews fled after Fidel Castro came to power.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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