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{{Short description|Historical racial classification}}
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'''{{lang|es|Mulatto}}''' ({{IPAc-en|m|j|uː|ˈ|l|æ|t|oʊ}}, {{IPAc-en|m|ə|ˈ|l|ɑː|t|oʊ}}) (original Italian spelling) is a ] that refers to people of mixed ] and ] ancestry only. When speaking or writing about a singular woman in English, the word is '''{{lang|es|mulatta}}''' ({{Langx|es|mulata|links=no}}).<ref name="CollinsDictionary2021">{{cite web |title=Mulatta definition and meaning {{!}} Collins English Dictionary |url=https://www.collinsdictionary.com/us/dictionary/english/mulatta |website=www.collinsdictionary.com |access-date=25 March 2021}}</ref><ref name="Lexico 2021">{{cite web |title=mulato {{!}} Traducción de MULATTO al inglés por Oxford Dictionary en Lexico.com y también el significado de MULATTO en español |url=https://www.lexico.com/en-es/translate/mulatto |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200629201155/https://www.lexico.com/en-es/translate/mulatto |url-status=dead |archive-date=29 June 2020 |website=Lexico Dictionaries|access-date=25 March 2021 |language=es}}</ref> The use of this term began in the ] shortly after the ] began and its use was widespread, derogatory and disrespectful. After the post ], the term is now considered to be both outdated and offensive in America.<ref name="Beck1975" /> In other Anglophone countries (the ]) such as the British Isles, and English and Dutch-speaking West Indian countries, the word mulatto is still used.<ref>. trouw.nl</ref><ref>Quote: In English and among many African Americans, the term "mulatto" carries offensive connotations. In Spanish and Portuguese, however, and among U.S. Latinos/as and Latin Americans, the term mulato/a (so spelled) not only does not carry an offensive connotation but has become a sign of pride and identity. (in "Grace and Humanness: Theological Reflections Because of Culture'' by Orlando O. Esp, Orbis Books, 2007)</ref><ref name="Lexico2021">{{cite web |title=Mulatto|url=https://www.lexico.com/definition/mulatto |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200628173703/https://www.lexico.com/definition/mulatto |url-status=dead |archive-date=28 June 2020 |website=Lexico Dictionaries|access-date=25 March 2021 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dictionary.com/browse/mulatto|title=Dictionary.com &#124; Meanings & Definitions of English Words|website=Dictionary.com|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref> The use of this word does not have the same negative associations found among English speakers. Among Latinos in both the US and Latin America, the word is used in every day speech and its meaning is a source of racial and ethnic pride. In four of the Latin-based languages, the default, masculine word ends with the letter "o" and is written as follows: Spanish and Portuguese – ''mulato''; Italian – ''mulatto''. The French equivalent is ''mulâtre''. In English, the masculine plural is written as ''mulattoes'' while in Spanish and Portuguese it is ''mulatos''. The masculine plural in Italian is ''mulatti'' and in French it is ''mulâtres''. The feminine plurals are: English – ''mulattas''; Spanish and Portuguese – ''mulatas''; Italian – ''mulatte''; French – ''mulâtresses''.
Countries with the highest percentages of multi-racials who specifically have equally high European and African ancestry — ''Mulatto'' — are the ] (74%)<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/ethnic-groups-of-the-dominican-republic.html|title=Ethnic Groups Of The Dominican Republic|date=25 April 2017|website=WorldAtlas|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|title=Unravelling the hidden ancestry of American admixed populations|first1=Francesco|last1=Montinaro|first2=George B.J.|last2=Busby|first3=Vincenzo L.|last3=Pascali|first4=Simon|last4=Myers|first5=Garrett|last5=Hellenthal|first6=Cristian|last6=Capelli|date=24 March 2015|journal=Nature Communications|volume=6|pages=6596|doi=10.1038/ncomms7596|pmid=25803618|pmc=4374169|bibcode=2015NatCo...6.6596M }}</ref> and ] (71%).<ref name="worldatlas.com">{{Cite web|url=https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/ethnic-groups-of-cape-verde.html|title=Ethnic Groups Of Cape Verde|date=5 June 2018|website=WorldAtlas|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last=Barker | first=Jean E. | title=Cape Verdean-Americans: A Historical Perspective of Ethnicity and Race | journal=Trotter Review | date=12 September 2012 | volume=10 | issue=1 | url=https://scholarworks.umb.edu/trotter_review/vol10/iss1/6/ | access-date=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.countryreports.org/country/CapeVerde.htm|title=Cabo Verde &#124; Culture, Facts & Travel &#124; - CountryReports|website=www.countryreports.org|access-date=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/about/archives/2021/countries/cabo-verde/|title=Cabo Verde - The World Factbook|website=www.cia.gov|access-date=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1=Fisher | first1=Gene A. | last2=Model | first2=Suzanne | title=Cape Verdean identity in a land of Black and White | journal=Ethnicities | volume=12 | issue=3 |year=2012| doi=10.1177/1468796811419599 | pages=354–379| s2cid=145341841 }}</ref> ] has the largest Mulatto population by definition, numbering between 60–90 million (30–45% of the country), as majority of the people who identify as ] (brown or mixed) have high amounts of both European and African ancestries, many can be considered Mulatto, ''Quadroon'', or ''Tri-racial'', smaller numbers of other Brazilians –especially those who self identify as black– can be considered 'Mulatto' due to having high levels of both African and European blood.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://loja.editora.ufg.br/historia/gente-sem-sorte--a-invencao-dos-mulatos-no-brasil-colonial-213/p | title=Produto &#124; Detalhes &#124; Gente sem sorte: A invenção dos mulatos no Brasil Colonial Livraria UFG }}</ref><ref></ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://rioandlearn.com/pt-br/mulato-brasileiro/ | title=Mulato no Brasil | date=July 2024 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://core.ac.uk/reader/288499920 | title=A Forced Hand: Natives, Africans, and the Population of Brazil, 1545-1850 }}</ref><ref name=darcy>{{cite book|author=Darcy Ribeiro |date=2003 |pages= |publisher=] |title=O Povo Brasileiro}}<!-- auto-translated from Portuguese by Module:CS1 translator --></ref><ref></ref><ref name="ReferenceA">{{cite journal|access-date=21 August 2017 |date=10 September 2015 |doi=10.1002/ajhb.22714 |first1=Ronald |first2=Antonio Victor Campos |first3=Valdir |first4=Sergio |first5=Lucas André Cavalcanti |last1=Rodrigues de Moura |last2=Coelho |last3=de Queiroz Balbino |last4=Crovella |last5=Brandão |number=5 |pages=674–680 |periodical=American Journal of Human Biology |title=Meta-analysis of Brazilian genetic admixture and comparison with other Latin America countries |url=http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ajhb.22714/abstract |via=Wiley Online Library |volume=27|hdl=11368/2837176 }}<!-- auto-translated from Portuguese by Module:CS1 translator --></ref><ref name=Revisiting>{{cite journal|bibcode=2013PLoSO...875145S |date=2013 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0075145 |number=9 |pages=e75145 |periodical=PLOS ONE |pmc=3779230 |pmid=24073242 |title=Revisiting the Genetic Ancestry of Brazilians Using Autosomal AIM-Indels |vauthors=Saloum de Neves Manta F, Pereira R, Vianna R, Rodolfo Beuttenmüller de Araújo A, Leite Góes Gitaí D, Aparecida da Silva D, de Vargas Wolfgramm E, da Mota Pontes I, Ivan Aguiar J, Ozório Moraes M, Fagundes de Carvalho E, Gusmão L |volume=8|doi-access=free }}<!-- auto-translated from Portuguese by Module:CS1 translator --></ref><ref name=":1"></ref><ref></ref><ref name="fee"></ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.statista.com/statistics/1001058/share-population-brazil-ethnicity/|title=Population by ethnicity Brazil 2022|website=Statista|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref></ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.dn.pt/mundo/populacoes-mulata-praticamente-iguala-a-branca-no-brasil-5519049.html/ | title=População mulata praticamente iguala a branca no Brasil }}</ref> Mulattos in many Latin American countries, aside from predominately European and African ancestry, usually also have slight indigenous admixture. "Race-mixing" has been strong in Latin America for centuries, since the start of the ] in many cases. Many Latin American multiracial families (including mulatto) have been mixed for several generations. In the 21st century, multiracials now frequently have unions and marriages with other multiracials. Other countries and territories with notable mulatto populations in percentage and/or total number include ],<ref name="web.archive.org"> latinostories.com</ref> ],<ref> nationalgeographic.org 25 July 2014</ref> ],<ref> ine.gob.ve</ref> ],<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/panama/#people-and-society|title=Panama|date=6 December 2023|publisher=Central Intelligence Agency|access-date=14 December 2023|via=CIA.gov}}</ref> ],<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://geoportal.dane.gov.co/geovisores/sociedad/cnpv-2018/?lt=4.456007353293281&lg=-73.2781601239999&z=5|title=Geoportal del DANE - Geovisor CNPV 2018|access-date=14 December 2023}}</ref> ],<ref>{{dead link|date=December 2023}}</ref> and the ].<ref>{{cite report | last=Bodenhorn | first=Howard | title=The Complexion Gap: The Economic Consequences of Color among Free African Americans in the Rural Antebellum South | publication-place=Cambridge, MA |year=2002 | doi=10.3386/w8957 }}</ref>


==Etymology==
]
] was born into slavery in ]. He was of mixed African and Spanish descent.]]
'''Mulatto''' (also '''Mulato''') is a term of ] or ] origin describing the offspring of a ] and an ]. The form "mulato" is the orthoraphy as used in Spanish and Portuguese. A considerable number of ] Americans identify themselves as mulatto.


The English term and spelling ''mulatto'' is derived from the ] and ] {{Lang|es|mulato}}. It was a common term in the Southeastern United States during the era of slavery. Some sources suggest that it may derive from the Portuguese word {{Lang|pt|mula}} (from the ] {{Lang|la|mūlus}}), meaning ']', the ] offspring of a ] and a ].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|title=Chambers Dictionary of Etymology|encyclopedia=Robert K. Barnhart|page=684|publisher=Chambers Harrap Publishers Ltd.|year=2003}}</ref><ref>{{OEtymD|mulatto|access-date=2008-07-14}}</ref> The ] traces its origin to {{Lang|es|mulo}} in the sense of hybridity; originally used to refer to any ] person.<ref>{{cite web|title=Mulato|url=http://dle.rae.es/srv/fetch?id=Q2jb9eE|publisher=Real Academia Española|access-date=14 June 2017|quote=De mulo, en el sentido de híbrido, aplicado primero a cualquier mestizo}}</ref> The term is now generally considered outdated and offensive in non-Spanish and non-Portuguese speaking countries,<ref name="DaCosta2007">{{cite book|author=Kimberly McClain DaCosta|title=Making Multiracials: State, Family, and Market in the Redrawing of the Color Line|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7065AAAAIAAJ|year=2007|publisher=Stanford University Press|isbn=978-0-8047-5545-0|pages=165–166|quote=Although the "mulatto" ad is supposed to be streetwise, authentic, and hip, the mixed-race character's use of an outdated, even offensive, term to refer to herself belies such assertions.}}</ref> and was considered offensive even in the 19th century.<ref name="Beck1975">{{cite book|author=Nicholas Patrick Beck|title=The Other Children: Minority Education in California Public Schools from Statehood to 1890|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eUElAQAAIAAJ&q=%22mulatto%22|year=1975|publisher=University of California, Los Angeles|page=132|quote=Strictly speaking, a "mulatto" is the first-generation offspring of a white and a Negro. Often regarded, even in the 19th century, as an offensive term, the word was frequently used to indicate a person of any mixture of caucasian and Negro ancestry.}}</ref>
In colonial years the term originally referred to the children of one European and one African parent as well as to children of two mulatto parents. During this era many other terms, both in ] and the ], were in use to accurately denote the percentage of individuals of African/European ancestry in ratios smaller or greater than the 50:50 of mulattos: for example ] or ], as well as mixtures other than European and African.


Jack D. Forbes suggests it originated in the ] term '']'', which means 'a person of mixed ancestry'.<ref>{{cite book|author=Jack D. Forbes|title=Africans and Native Americans: the language of race and the evolution of Red-Black peoples|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6aLAeB5QiHAC|year=1993|publisher=University of Illinois Press|isbn=978-0-252-06321-3|page=}}</ref> {{Lang|ar-latn|Muwallad}} literally means 'born, begotten, produced, generated; brought up', with the implication of being born of Arab and non-Arab parents. {{Lang|ar-latn|Muwallad}} is derived from the ] {{Lang|ar-latn|WaLaD}} (Arabic: {{Lang|ar|ولد}}, direct Arabic ]: {{Lang|ar-latn|waw}}'','' {{Lang|ar-latn|lam}}'','' {{Lang|ar-latn|dal}}) and ] pronunciation can vary greatly. {{Lang|ar-latn|Walad}} means 'descendant, offspring, scion; child; son; boy; young animal, young one'.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}


In ], {{Lang|ar-latn|muwallad}} referred to the offspring from parents of Arab Muslim origin and non-Arab Muslim people who adopted the Islamic religion and manners. Specifically, the term was historically applied to the descendants of Arab or Berber Muslims and indigenous Christian Iberians who, after several generations of living among a Muslim majority, adopted their culture and religion.
==Etymology==


In English, printed usage of ''mulatto'' dates to at least the 16th century. The 1595 work ''Drake's Voyages'' first used the term in the context of intimate unions producing biracial children. The '']'' defined mulatto as "one who is the offspring of a European and a Black". This earliest usage regarded "black" and "white" as discrete "species", with the "mulatto" constituting a third separate "species".<ref>{{cite book|editor=David S. Goldstein|editor2=Audrey B. Thacker|title=Complicating Constructions: Race, Ethnicity, and Hybridity in American Texts|date=2007|publisher=University of Washington Press|isbn=978-0295800745|page=77|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9qxlZj8oRrcC&pg=PT105}}</ref>
It is important to be aware that etymological origin and actual meaning are NOT identical. The etymological origin of a term is therfore irrelevant. This means for example that many words of common usage can be traced to a 'negative' etymological origin. Among those are words like ''berber'', ''slavic'' (which is thought to be related to the world slave), ''Hapa'', ''hysterical'' (sexist origin) or even the innocent "kid" (which at its roots meant young goat) . However neither of these words are used in any way shape or form to mean what their roots mean, and neither is mulatto. It's also important to note that the term "black" referring to people was once a derrogatory term.


According to ],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mgar.net/var/esclavos3.htm|title=La esclavitud en Huelva y Palos (1570-1587)|last=Izquierdo Labrado|first=Julio|language=es|access-date=2008-07-14}}</ref> the 19th-century linguist Leopoldo Eguilaz y Yanguas, as well as some Arabic sources<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.syriatoday.ca/salloum-arab-lan.htm|title=The impact of the Arabic language and culture on English and other European languages|last=Salloum|first=Habeeb|publisher=The Honorary Consulate of Syria|access-date=2008-07-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080630193414/http://www.syriatoday.ca/salloum-arab-lan.htm|archive-date=2008-06-30|url-status=dead}}</ref> {{Lang|ar-latn|muwallad}} is the etymological origin of {{Lang|es|mulato}}''.'' These sources specify that {{Lang|es|mulato}} would have been derived directly from {{Lang|ar-latn|muwallad}} independently of the related word ''],'' a term that was applied to ] who had ] during the ] ] in the ].
The word ''mulato'' together with ''mestizo'' can be found for the first time in a document dated from 1549 -1603. '' Mulatos'', the plural form occurs for the first time in a document dated 1560 by Francisco Cervantes de Salazar also alongside ''mestizos''.


The ] (Spanish Royal Academy) casts doubt on the {{Lang|ar-latn|muwallad}} theory. It states, "The term {{Lang|es|mulata}} is documented in our diachronic data bank in 1472 and is used in reference to livestock mules in {{Lang|es|Documentacion medieval de la Corte de Justicia de Ganaderos de Zaragoza}}'','' whereas {{Lang|es|muladí}} (from {{Lang|ar-latn|mullawadí}}) does not appear until the 18th century, according to Corominas]]".{{#tag:ref|Corominas describes his doubts on the theory as follows: " does not derive from the Arab ''muwállad'', 'acculturated foreigner' and sometimes 'mulatto' (see {{'}}''Mdí''{{'}}), as Eguílaz would have it, since this word was pronounced 'moo-EL-led' in the Arabic of Spain. In the 19th century, ] (''Supplément aux Dictionnaires Arabes'', Vol. II, Leyden, 1881, 841a) rejected this Arabic etymology, indicating the true one, supported by the Arabic ''nagîl,'' 'mulatto', derived from ''nagl'', 'mule'."<ref>Corominas, Joan and Pascual, José A. (1981). ''Diccionario crítico etimológico castellano e hispánico'', Vol. ME-RE (4). Madrid: Editorial Gredos. {{ISBN|84-249-1362-0}}.</ref>|group="nb"}}


Scholars such as ] cast doubt on the mule etymology for ''mulatto''. In the 18th and 19th centuries, ] such as ] and ] began to assert that mulattoes were sterile like mules. They projected this belief back onto the etymology of the word mulatto. Sollors points out that this etymology is anachronistic: "The Mulatto sterility hypothesis that has much to do with the rejection of the term by some writers is only half as old as the word 'Mulatto'."<ref>Werner Sollors, ''Neither Black Nor White Yet Both'', Oxford University Press, 1997, p. 129.</ref>
The etymological origin of the term as given by many dictionaries is from the ] word ''mulo''. However dictionaries who mention ''mulo'' as etymology for ''mulato'' also express doubt about the suffix -ato whose origin is obscure to them.


==Africa==
According to the Real Academia Espagnola ''mulo'' has two meanings in Spanish. The first meaning is "mule" from ] ''mulus''. There is no proof of whether the term has once been a generic designation name for any ] species, but this is why it may be considered offensive by some ]-speakers who might prefer terms like "]" instead. The second meaning of ''mulo'' in spanish according to the Real Academia Espagnola is "a person characterized by strength and vigour".
{{See also|Indigenous peoples of Africa}}
{{more citations needed section|date=March 2016}}
Of ]'s 193,413 inhabitants, the largest segment is classified as ''],'' or mixed race.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0107943.html|title=São Tomé and Príncipe|publisher=Infoplease|access-date=2008-07-14}}</ref> 71% of the population of ] is also classified as such.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0107395.html|title=Cape Verde|publisher=Infoplease|access-date=2008-07-14}}</ref> The great majority of their current populations descend from unions between the Portuguese, who colonized the islands from the 15th century onward, and black Africans they brought from the ] to work as slaves. In the early years, mestiços began to form a third-class between the Portuguese colonists and African slaves, as they were usually bilingual and often served as interpreters between the populations.


In ] and ], the {{Lang|pt|mestiço}} constitute smaller but still important minorities; 2% in Angola<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0107280.html|title=Angola|publisher=Infoplease|access-date=2008-07-14}}</ref> and 0.2% in Mozambique.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0107804.html|title=Mozambique|publisher=Infoplease|access-date=2008-07-14}}</ref>
Another etymology which can also be found in some dictionaries and scholarly works traces its origins to the ] term ''muwallad'', which means "a person of mixed ancestry". Muwallad literally means, "born, begotten, produced, generated; brought up, raised; born and raised among Arabs (but not of pure Arab blood)." Muwallad is derived from the root word WaLaD (Arabic spelling: waw, lam, dal). Walad means, "descendant, offspring,
scion; child; son; boy; young animal, young one." ''Muwallad'' referred to the offspring of Arab men and foreign, non-Arab women. The term ''muwalladin'' is used in arabic up to this day to describe the children between Arab fathers and foreign mothers.
According to Julio Izquierdo Labrado as well as Leopoldo Eguilaz y Yanguas and others as well as different arabian sources ''muwallad'' is the etymological origin of ''mulato''. In this context ''mulato'' would have been derived DIRECTLY from ''muwallad'' and NOT through ''muladi'', a term which applied to Spanish christians who had converted to islam during the arab domination of Spain. Rather do the two words share the analogous etymology of ''muwallad''. The arab origin of ''mulatto'' would not be surprising given the importance of Arabic at the time.


''Mulatto'' and {{Lang|pt|mestiço}} are not terms commonly used in ] to refer to people of mixed ancestry. The persistence of some authors in using this term, anachronistically, reflects the old-school essentialist views of race as a ''de facto'' biological phenomenon, and the 'mixing' of race as legitimate grounds for the creation of a 'new race'. This disregards cultural, linguistic and ethnic diversity and/or differences between regions and globally among populations of mixed ancestry.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Not White Enough, Not Black Enough: Racial Identity in the South African Coloured Community|last=results|first=search|date=2005-11-17|publisher=Ohio University Press|isbn=9780896802445|edition= 1st|location=Athens|language=en}}</ref>
"From the 8th to the 12th centuries, Arabic became the scientific language of mankind. During this period anyone who desired to advance in the world and become a skilled and learned man had to study Arabic. Christians living under Muslim rule became so proficient in Arabic that they neglected their own tongue. Christians were captivated by the glamour of Arabic literature and that men of taste despised Latin authors, and wrote only in the language of their conquerors. Although Spain was the principal point of the Arab impact, Arab influence also spread to Europe from Sicily after its conquest and Arabization. In addition, the Crusaders returning from the civilized Arab East brought back to the Europe of the Dark Ages many new products and ideas. After these soldiers of the cross returned, English and other European languages were enriched with numerous words. English was one of the European languages which received an inflow of words from this early contact with Spain, Sicily and the Arab East. From these lands it was a continuing process, the flowing in of new words. Later, among others, French and Portuguese were instrumental, as a medium, in some of the transmissions. Arabic is the seventh on the list of languages that has contributed to the enrichment of the English vocabulary. Only Greek, Latin, French, German, Scandinavian and the Celtic group of languages have contributed more than Arabic to the English idiom."


In ], an ethnic group known as ], descend from historic liaisons between the Cape Colony Dutch and indigenous African women. The name ''Baster'' is derived from the Dutch word for 'bastard' (or 'crossbreed'). While some people consider this term demeaning, the ] proudly use the term as an indication of their history. In the early 21st century, they number between 20,000 and 30,000 people. There are, of course, other people of mixed race in the country.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}
Islamic Moors also traveled over to the New World with the Spaniards.


==Muwalladins == ===Cape Verde===
As of 2018, 71% of Cape Verdeans were Mulatto or Creole.<ref name="worldatlas.com"/>


===South Africa===
"Engseng Ho, an anthropologist, discusses the role of the muwallad in the region. The term muwallad, used primarily in reference to those of 'mixed blood,' is analyzed through ethnographic and textual information. The focus is on Hadramis who return to Hadramawt although their birth was some place else."
{{main|Coloureds}}
]]]
The ] / ] people from Africa are descendants of mixed ancestry, from the early 17th Century European colonizers namely Dutch, British and French intermixed with the indigenous Khoisan and Bantu tribes of that region, as well as intermixing with Asian slaves from Indonesia, Malaysia and India.


The intermixing of different races began in the Cape province of South Africa during the 17th and 18th centuries, the ] brought enslaved people from Asian regions, including; ], ] and ] these individuals were brought to the Cape Colony to work on farms, in households, as they were enslaved labourers . There is a significant genetic mixture of European, African and (Indian) Asian DNA in the modern ethnic group of Coloured people. Thus forced into their own communities and therefore created a generational mix of people and are to date an ethnic group.
"We tend to know about the success stories, but migration also produced large numbers of dislocated and disoriented people. Often, they were muwalladin, a term used for people from the coast, but also for children of mixed parentage. While the muwalladin often had the cultural capital to function in more than one society - which might well explain the adaptability and eventual success of so many of them - they also risked being regarded as outsiders; this was to become particularly relevant in the second half of the 20th century with the rise of nationalism."


In addition to African, European and Asian ancestry, Coloured people had some portion of Spanish or Portuguese ancestry. In the early 19th century some immigrants from ] arrived in South Africa as sailors, traders or refugees, and some intermarried with local mixed race (Coloured) communities. Also The (Canary Islands) ] off the northwest coast of Africa, were a Spanish colony, and during the 17th and 18th centuries, the Dutch east India Company and other European powers brought enslaved people from the Canary Islands to South Africa, particularly to the Cape Colony (now known as South Africa). The Dutch East India Company's ship "Het Gelderland", which arrived at the Cape in 1671 with 174 slaves from the Canary Islands and The Portuguese ship, "Sao Jose" which was captured by the Dutch in 1713 and brought to the Cape with slaves from the Canary Islands. These enslaved people were forced to work on farms, in households, and in other industries and many were subjected to harsh conditions and treatment. The intermixing among European men and Spanish and Portuguese women's descendants are part of the diverse Coloured communities in South Africa. It is however important to note that Spanish and Portuguese ancestry is not a dominant feature amongst the Coloured identity in South Africa, Namibia and Zimbabwe. Individual family histories and ancestry may vary widely while the African, European and Asian ancestry is dominant amongst Coloured people from Africa.
"Thus, the pure Arab immigrants or ulaytis took local wives. Their children
became muwallads through their Indonesian mothers."


Based on the Population Registration Act to classify people, the government passed laws prohibiting mixed marriages. Many people who classified as belonging to the "Asian" category could legally intermarry with "mixed-race" people because they shared the same nomenclature.<ref name=":0">{{cite thesis |last1=Palmer |first1=Fileve T. |title=Through a Coloured Lens: Post-Apartheid Identity amongst Coloureds in KZN |date=April 2015 |hdl=2022/19854 }}</ref> The use of the term ''Coloured'' has changed over the course of history. For instance, in the first census after the South African war (1912), Indians were counted as 'Coloured'. Before and after this war, they were counted as 'Asiatic'.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Christopher|first=A.J.|date=2009|title=Delineating the nation: South African censuses 1865–2007|journal=Political Geography|volume=28|issue=2|pages=101–109|doi=10.1016/j.polgeo.2008.12.003|issn=0962-6298}}</ref> Zimbabwean Coloureds were descended from ] or ] mixing with British and ] settlers and Arab slaves.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}
==Hispanic America and Brazil==
In Latin America, mulattos officially made up the majority of the population in the ]<sup>]</sup> (73%<sup>]</sup>) and ] (51%).


], on the other hand, are descendants of ] and Afrikaner ].<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Griqua mission at Philippolis, 1822-1837|date=2005|publisher=Protea Book House|others=Schoeman, Karel.|isbn=978-1869190170|location=Pretoria, South Africa|oclc=61189833}}</ref> The Griqua were subjected to an ambiguity of other creole people within Southern African social order. According to Nurse and Jenkins (1975), the leader of this "mixed" group, Adam Kok I, was a former slave of the Dutch governor. He was manumitted and provided land outside Cape Town in the eighteenth century. With territories beyond the Dutch East India Company administration, Kok provided refuge to deserting soldiers, refugee slaves, and remaining members of various Khoikhoi tribes.<ref name=":0" />
In other American countries where mulattos do not constitute a majority, they can represent a significant portion of their populations; ] (aprox. 38%), ] (14%), ], ] (14%) and ]


===Afro-European tribes and clans===
*]s
*]s
*]
*]
*]
* ]
* Sherbro Hubris
*]
* ]
* Sherbro Rogers
* Sherbro Clevelands
*]


===Uganda===
Although when Africans were first brought to ] and ] they represeneted a sizable portion of the population, there was never more than 200,000 Africans in Mexico (and a similar number in Honduras). Also, they were absorbed there for the most part by the ] populations of mixed European and ] descent. Furthermore, when slavery was abolished, the African and Mulatto populations decreased due to continued immigration from Spain and other European countries; Native Americans in Mexico, in modern times, have the highest birth rates in the nation. Thus the African and mulatto population is not as significant there as in other American nations.
{{main|Multiracial Ugandans in Uganda#Ugandan-Europeans (Afro-Europeans)}}


===Equatorial Guinea===
==United States and Puerto Rico==
{{main|Fernandino people}}
In the ], the term was in the beginning also used as a term for those of mixed white and Native American ancestry. ''Mulatto'' was an official census category until 1930.
It was the racism of the American eugenist movement of the early 20th century which led to the establishment of what is known as the One Drop Rule. The One Drop Rule was made law in 1924 by the Eugenist Walter Plecker. It said that a single drop of black blood would from there on make a person fully black and was based on the false assumption that blacks where genetically inferior to whites. The one-drop-rule became illegal in 1964 but only since the 1980s is it increasingly under attack.


==Latin America and the Caribbean==
One criticism made in the use of "mulatto" is that it is said to ignore the high rate of racial intermixing in North America. However most black Americans are still predominantly black (average of 17% European ancestry according to geneticist Marc Shriver). This makes them quite different in ancestry from mulattoes which in the US are often even more than 50% European in ancestry. 30% of European Americans also have black ancestry.
===Mulattoes in colonial Mexico===
{{Main|Casta}}
{{See also|Pardo|Morisco|Torna atrás|Lobo (racial category)}}
]. Mexico 1763]]
Africans were transported by Spaniards slave traders to Mexico starting in the early 16th century. Offspring of Spaniards and African women resulted early on in mixed-race children, termed mulattoes. In Spanish law, the status of the child followed that of the mother, so that despite having a Spanish parent, their offspring were enslaved. The label ''mulatto'' was recorded in official colonial documentation, so that marriage registers, censuses, and court documents allow research on different aspects of mulattoes’ lives. Although some legal documents simply label a person a ''mulatto/a'', other designations occurred. In the sales of ] slaves in 17th-century ], official notaries recorded gradations of skin color in the transactions. These included {{Lang|es|mulato blanco}} or {{Lang|es|mulata blanca}} ('white mulatto'), for light-skinned slave. These were usually American-born slaves. Some said categorized persons i.e. {{Lang|es|mulata blanca}} used their light skin to their advantage if they escaped their unlawful and brutal incarceration from their criminal slave owners, thus 'passing' as free persons of color. {{Lang|es|Mulatos blancos}} often emphasized their Spanish parentage, and considered themselves and were considered separate from {{Lang|es|negros}} or '']s'' and ordinary mulattoes. Darker mulatto slaves were often termed {{Lang|es|mulatos prietos}} or sometimes {{Lang|es|mulatos cochos}}.<ref>{{cite book |last=Vinson |first=Ben III. |title=Before Mestizaje: The Frontiers of Race and Caste in Colonial Mexico |location=New York |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2018 |pages=82–83, 86 |isbn=978-1-107-02643-8 }}</ref> In Chile, along with {{Lang|es|mulatos blancos}}, there were also {{Lang|es|españoles oscuros}} ('dark Spaniards').<ref>{{cite book |last=Undurraga Schüler |first=Verónica |chapter=Españoles oscuros y mulatos blancos: Identidades múltiples y disfraces del color en el ocaso de la colonia chilena: 1778–1820 |title=Historias de racismo y discriminación en Chile |editor-first=Rafael |editor-last=Gaune |editor2-first=Martín |editor2-last=Lara |location=Santiago |year=2009 |pages=341–68 |isbn=978-956-8601-61-4 |language=es }}</ref>


There was considerable malleability and manipulation of racial labeling, including the seemingly stable category of mulatto. In a case that came before the ], a woman publicly identified as a mulatta was described by a Spanish priest, Diego Xaimes Ricardo Villavicencio, as "a white {{Lang|es|mulata|italic=no}} with curly hair, because she is the daughter of a dark-skinned {{Lang|es|mulata|italic=no}} and a Spaniard, and for her manner of dress she has flannel petticoats and a native blouse ('']''), sometimes silken, sometimes woolen. She wears shoes, and her natural and common language is not Spanish, but ] , as she was brought up among Indians with her mother, from which she contracted the vice of drunkenness, to which she often succumbs, as Indians do, and from them she has also received the crime of ." Community members were interrogated as to their understanding of her racial standing. Her mode of dress, very wavy hair and light skin confirmed for one witness that she was a mulatta. Ultimately though, her rootedness in the indigenous community persuaded the Inquisition that she was an {{Lang|es|India}}, and therefore outside of their jurisdiction.<ref>Tavárez, David. "Legally Indian: Inquistorial Readings of Indigenous Identity in New Spain” in ''Imperial Subjects: Race and Identity in Colonial Latin America''. Eds. Andrew B. Fisher and Matthew D. O’Hara. Durham: Duke University Press 2009, (quoting AGN Mexico, Inquisition 669, no, 10m 481r-v) pp. 91-93.</ref> Even though the accused had physical features of a mulatta, her cultural category was more important. In colonial Latin America, {{Lang|es|mulato}} could also refer to an individual of mixed African and Native American ancestry, but the term '']'' was more consistently used for that racial mixture.<ref name="aim">{{cite journal |last=Schwaller |first=Robert C. |year=2010 |title=''Mulata, Hija de Negro y India'': Afro-Indigenous ''Mulatos'' in Early Colonial Mexico |journal=Journal of Social History |volume=44 |issue=3 |pages=889–914 |doi=10.1353/jsh.2011.0007|pmid=21853621 |s2cid=40656601 }}</ref>
This criticism is also fails to take into account that in the United States the historic ] tradition of the ] (the custom of deeming all people with any amount of African blood to be black) prevented mulattos from remaining an independent ethnic entity through the past 70 years, with members seeing themselves as such. The existing mulatto communities in Charlston, Richmond, New Orleans and elsewhere were torn apart by the one-drop-rule. Yet remnants of those communities still exist to this day despite the official black label.


] friar ] spent over a decade in the ] in the early 17th century; he converted to ] and later wrote of his travels, often disparaging Spanish colonial society and culture. In Mexico City, he observed in considerable detail the opulence of dress of women, writing that "The attire of this baser sort of people of blackamoors and mulattoes (which are of a mixed nature, of Spaniards and blackamoors) is so light, and their carriage so enticing, that many Spaniards even of the better sort (who are too too prone to venery) disdain their wives for them... Most of these are or have been slaves, though love have set them loose, at liberty to enslave souls to sin and Satan."<ref>{{cite book |title=Thomas Gage's Travels in the New World |orig-year=1648 |editor-first=J. Eric S. |editor-last=Thompson |location=Norman |publisher=University of Oklahoma Press |year=1958 |pages=68–69 |oclc=229491 }}</ref>
Mulattos might also constitute a significant portion of the population of ], a commonwealth territory in association with the USA. However, recent genetic research indicates that, in relation to matrilineal ancestry as revealed by ], 61% have inherited mitochondrial DNA from an Amerind female ancestor, 27% have inherited mitochondrial DNA from a female African ancestor and 12% showed to have inherited mitochondrial DNA from a female European ancestor. Conversely, patrilineal input as indicated by the ], showed that 70% of all Puerto Rican males have inherited Y chromosome DNA from a male European ancestor, 20% have inherited Y chromosome DNA from a male African ancestor and less than 10% have inherited Y chromosome DNA from male Amerindian ancestor. Because these test measure only the DNA along the matrilineal line and patrilinel lines of inheritance, each test only measures the one individual out of thousands, perhaps millions of ancestors; they cannot tell us exactly what percentage of Puerto Ricans have African Ancestry.


In the late 18th century, some mixed-race persons sought legal "certificates of whiteness" ({{Lang|es|cédulas de gracias al sacar}}), in order to rise socially and practice professions. American-born Spaniards ('']'') sought to prevent the approval of such petitions, since the "purity" of their own whiteness would be in jeopardy. They asserted their "purity of blood" ('']'') as white persons who had "always been known, held and commonly reputed to be white persons, Old Christians of the nobility, clean of all bad blood and without any mixture of commoner, Jew, Moor, Mulatto, or ] in any degree, no matter how remote."<ref>]. "Purchasing Whiteness: Conversations on the Essence of Pardo-ness and Mulatto-ness at the End of Empire" in ''Imperial Subjects'', p. 146.</ref> Spaniards both American- and Iberian-born discriminated against pardos and mulattoes because of their "bad blood." One Cuban sought the grant of his petition in order to practice as a surgeon, a profession from which he was barred because of his mulatto designation. Royal laws and decrees prevented pardos and mulattoes from serving as a public notary, lawyer, pharmacist, ordination to the priesthood, or graduation from university. Mulattas declared white could marry a Spaniard.<ref>Twinam, "Purchasing Whiteness" p. 147.</ref>
Nevertheless, independent of their actual numbers, the history of the population of Puerto Rican mulattos is independent from those of the US. Prior to the ], when Puerto Rico became a commonwealth of the United States, Puerto Rico was an integral part of the Spanish Empire, and it still constitutes a cultural-geographic segment of Latin America. Thus, the history of Puerto Rico is a shared one with Latin America.


==]== ====Gallery====
<gallery>
In ] (formerly ]), a non-Hispanic country of the Caribbean, mulattos represented a smaller proportion of the population than in many Latin American countries. Today they constitute about 5% of the population.
File:Alcibar-Mulatto.jpg|] of a Spaniard, a ''Negra'' and a Mulatto. ], 18th c. Mexico
File:Anónimo - Escena del Méjico colonial.jpg|De Español y Negra, Mulato. Anon. 18th c.
File:José Joaquín Magón - La Mulata.jpg|De Español y Negra, Mulato. ]. 18th c. Mexico
File:BMVB - anònim - "6. De Español y Negra, Mulato" - 9347.jpg|De Español y Negra, Mulato. Anon.
File:Mulatto.jpg|''De negro y española, sale mulato'' (From a Black man and a Spanish woman, a Mulatto is begotten). Anon.
File:BMVB - anònim - "7. De Español y Mulata, Morisca" - 1080.jpg|De Español y Mulata, Morisca. Anon. 1799
File:De Mulata y Español, Morisca (Juan Patricio Morlete).jpg|De Mulata y Español, Morisca, Juan Patricio Morlete. 18th c. Mexico
File:De Mulato y Mestiza.jpg|De Mulato y Mestiza, ]
File:Sambo 1770.jpg|De Negro y Mulata, Zambo. 18th c. Peru
File:Miguel Enriquez.jpg|] ], a ] ]
File:1763-MARRIAGE (2-14-1763) Juan Antonio Ambrosio Rosales and Juana Anastacia Briones (Right, 2nd row) (with Salvador,JuanaJosefa).jpg|Examples of Nueva Espana (New Spain/Mexico) classifications of Mulatto and Mestizo in 1763
File:About 1948-Descendants of Salvador Rosales(1711) the mulatto(moor) from the land NewSpain.jpg|Descendants of (1711) Salvador Rosales the mulatto.
</gallery>


===Mulattoes in the modern era===
Historically, Haitian mulattos have been looked down upon by both blacks and whites alike, and used by both when best suited. African Hatians regarded them as no better or worse than their unmixed French progenitors. Mulattos made up a class of their own. They were free and usually had a preference for French rather than African culture. Often they were highly educated and wealthy. This is much in contrast to US mulattos where mulattos inherited slave status if the mother was a slave, although in French-influenced areas of the South prior to the ] (particularly ]) a number of mulattos were also free and slave-owning.
====Brazil====
{{main|Pardo Brazilians|Mixed-race Brazilian}}
The term "Pardo" was first used by the Portuguese after their arrival in Brazil in 1500. The earliest reference comes from a letter by ]. Over time, the term evolved from the Latin word "Pardus" and was used to name birds called "] in the Middle East and the Americas. Currently, "Pardo" is officially used in Brazil by the ]<ref name=":1" />(Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics) for the classification of color/race. "Pardo" can also be known as "mulatto," referring to a person of ], typically including white, black, and indigenous roots]''), by ] painter ], 1895, ]. (Brazil) The painting depicts a black grandmother, mulatta mother, white father and their ] child, hence three generations of ] through ].]]
According to the ] 2020 census, 45,3% of Brazilians identified as {{Lang|pt|pardo}}, a term for people of mixed backgrounds.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ibge.gov.br/english/presidencia/noticias/20122002censo.shtm |publisher=Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística|title=Last stage of publication of the 2000 Census presents the definitive results, with information about the 5,507 Brazilian municipalities |access-date=2008-07-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090213225009/http://www.ibge.gov.br/english/presidencia/noticias/20122002censo.shtm|archive-date=13 February 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ibge.gov.br/home/estatistica/populacao/censo2000/populacao/cor_raca_Censo2000.pdf|title=Populaçăo residente, por cor ou raça, segundo a situaçăo do domicÌlio e os grupos de idade - Brasil|work=Censo Demográfico 2000|publisher=Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística|access-date=2008-07-14}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |url=https://censo2020.ibge.gov.br/media/com_mediaibge/arquivos/bfd69167fb62613effc2bae005e4666d.pdf |title=Manual do Recenseador Parte 2 |publisher=Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística |date=August 2019 |access-date=21 January 2022 |place=Rio de Janeiro |page=32}}</ref> Many mixed-race Brazilians have varying degrees of European, Amerindian and African ancestry.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} According to the ] census 2006, some 42.6% of Brazilian identify as {{Lang|pt|pardo}}'','' an increase over the 2000 census.<ref>{{cite book |title=Síntese de indicadores sociais 2006 |publisher=IBGE |year=2006 |isbn=85-240-3919-1 |url=http://www.ibge.gov.br/home/estatistica/populacao/condicaodevida/indicadoresminimos/sinteseindicsociais2006/indic_sociais2006.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070304102727/http://www.ibge.gov.br/home/estatistica/populacao/condicaodevida/indicadoresminimos/sinteseindicsociais2006/indic_sociais2006.pdf |archive-date=4 March 2007 }}{{page needed|date=November 2020}}</ref>


==== Haiti ====
Being part of their time, many Haitian mulattos were also slaveholders and as such actively participated in the oppression of the black majority. However, many also actively fought for the abolition of slavery. Distinguished mulattos such as Nicolas Suard and others were prime examples of mulattoes who devoted their time, energy and financial means to this cause. Some were also members of the ''Les Amis des Noirs'' in Paris, an association that fought for the abolition of slavery.
{{Main|Mulatto Haitians}}
Mulattoes account for up to 5% of ]'s population. In ], such mixed-race people, known in colonial times as free people of color, gained some education and property before the Revolution. In some cases, their white fathers arranged for multiracial sons to be educated in France and join the military, giving them an advance economically. Free people of color gained some social capital and political power before the Revolution, were influential during the Revolution and since then. The people of color have retained their elite position, based on education and social capital, that is apparent in the political, economic and cultural hierarchy in present-day Haiti. Numerous leaders throughout Haiti's history have been people of color.<ref>Smucker, Glenn R. "The Upper Class". '''' (Richard A. Haggerty, editor). ] ] (December 1989).</ref>


Many Haitian mulattoes were slaveholders and often actively participated in the oppression of the black majority.<ref>{{cite web |title=Haitian Revolution |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Haitian-Revolution |website=Britannica|date=9 November 2023 }}</ref> Some Dominican mulattoes were also slave owners.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1230&context=gsp|title=Anti-Haitianism, Historical Memory, and the Potential for Genocidal Violence in the Dominican Republic|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref>
Nevertheless, many mulattos were slaughtered by African Haitians during the wars of independence in order to secure African political power over the island. Earlier some African volunteers had already aligned themselves with the French against the mulattos during the first and second mulatto rebellion.


The ] was started by mulattoes. The subsequent struggle within Haiti between the mulattoes led by ] and the black Haitians led by ] devolved into the ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www2.webster.edu/~corbetre/haiti/history/revolution/revolution3.htm |title=The Haitian Revolution of 1791-1803 |first=Bob |last=Corbett |publisher=Webster University}}</ref><ref>Smucker, Glenn R. "Toussaint Louverture". '''' (Richard A. Haggerty, editor). ] ] (December 1989).</ref> With secret aid from the United States,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/disp_textbook.cfm?smtID=3&psid=222|title=Digital History|website=www.digitalhistory.uh.edu|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref> Toussaint eventually won the conflict and made himself ruler of the entire island of Hispaniola. ] ordered for ] and a substantial army to put down the rebellion; Leclerc seized Toussaint in 1802 and deported him to France, where he died in prison a year later. Leclerc was succeeded by General ]. With reinforcements from France and Poland, Rochambeau began a bloody campaign against the mulattoes and intensified operations against the blacks, importing bloodhounds to track and kill them. Thousands of black POW and suspects were chained to cannonballs and tossed into the sea.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Clodfelter|first1=Micheal|title=Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492-2015 |edition=4th |date=2017|publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0786474707 |page=141 }}</ref> Historians of the Haitian Revolution credit Rochambeau's brutal tactics for uniting black and mulatto soldiers against the French.
In Haiti, mulattos initially possessed legal equality with the unmixed French population. This provided them with many benefits, including inheritance. In the 18th century, however, Europeans fearful of slave revolts had restricted their rights, but they were successfully reclaimed in 1791.
]
In 1806, Haiti divided into a black-controlled north and a mulatto-ruled south. Haitian President ], the son of a Frenchman and a former African slave, managed to unify a divided Haiti but excluded blacks from power. In 1847, a black military officer named ] was made president, with the mulattoes supporting him; but, instead of proving a tool in the hands of the senators, he showed a strong will, and, although by his antecedents belonging to the mulatto party, he began to attach the blacks to his interest. The mulattoes retaliated by conspiring; but Soulouque began to decimate his enemies by confiscation, proscriptions, and executions. The black soldiers began a general massacre in Port-au-Prince, which ceased only after the French consul, Charles Reybaud, threatened to order the landing of marines from the men-of-war in the harbor.


===== Dominican Republic =====
Soulouque considered the neighbouring ]'s white and mulatto rulers as his "natural" enemies.<ref name=Baur>{{cite journal|last1=Baur|first1=John E.|title=Faustin Soulouque, Emperor of Haiti His Character and His Reign|date=1949|page=143}}</ref> He invaded the Dominican Republic in March 1849, but was defeated at the ] by Pedro Santana{{#tag:ref|General Pedro Santana, who also held the Spanish noble name ].<ref name=Schoenrich>{{cite book |last1=Schoenrich |first1=Otto |title=Santo Domingo: a Country with a Future |url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924021106848 |date=1918 |publisher=Macmillan Company |location=New York}}</ref>|group="nb"}} near Ocoa on 21 April and compelled to retreat. Haitian strategy was ridiculed by the American press:
{{blockquote| ... a division of negro troops of Faustin ran, and their commander, Gen. Garat, was killed. The main body, eighteen thousand troops, under the Emperor, encountered four hundred Dominicans with a field piece, and notwithstanding the disparity of force, the latter charged and caused the Haytiens to flee in every direction ... Faustin came very near falling into the enemy's hands. They were once within a few feet of him, and he was only saved by Thirlonge and other officers of his staff, several of whom lost their lives. The Dominicans pursued the retreating Haytiens some miles until they were checked and driven back by the ''Garde Nationale'' of Port-au-Prince, commanded by Robert Gateau, the auctioneer.<ref>], January 28, 1856.</ref>}}


The Haitians were unable to ward off a series of Dominican navy reprisal raids along Haiti's south coast, launched by Dominican president Buenaventura Báez.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Deibert|first1=Michael|title=Notes From the Last Testament: The Struggle for Haiti|date=2011|publisher=Seven Stories Press|page=161}}</ref> Despite the failure of the Dominican campaign, Soulouque caused himself to be proclaimed ] on 26 August 1849, under the name of ]. He was called a ''rey de farsa'' (clown emperor) by the Dominicans.<ref name=Baur/> Toward the close of 1855, he invaded the Dominican Republic again at the head of an army of 30,000 men, but was again defeated by Santana, and barely escaped being captured. His treasure and crown fell into the hands of the enemy. Soulouque was ousted in a military coup led by mulatto General Fabre Geffrard in 1858–59.
==]==
The traditionnal mulatto communities and mulatto ethnicities in Africa include the South African coloreds as well as the Rehobother Basters of Namibia.


In the eastern two-thirds of ], the mulattoes were an ever-growing majority group, and in essence they took over the entire Dominican Republic, with no organized black opposition. Many of its rulers and famous figures were mulattoes, such as ], ], ], ],<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ricourt |first1=Milagros |title=The Dominican Racial Imaginary: Surveying the Landscape of Race and Nation in Hispaniola |page=69}}</ref> ],<ref>{{cite book |last1=Marley |first1=David |title=Historic Cities of the Americas: An Illustrated Encyclopedia |page=99}}</ref> and ].<ref>{{cite web |title=The Dictatorship of Rafael Leonidas Trujillo Molina |url=http://webhost.lclark.edu/woodrich/POWERPOINT/WarmuthTrujillo.ppt}}</ref> The Dominican Republic has been described as the only true mulatto country in the world.<ref name=Keen>{{cite book |last1=Keen |first1=Benjamin |last2=Haynes |first2=Keith A. |title=A History of Latin America |date=2009 |publisher=Cengage Learning |page=303}}</ref> Pervasive ], based on rejection of African ancestry, has led to many assaults against the large Haitian immigrant community,<ref name=Keen/> the most lethal of which was the 1937 ]. Approximately 5,000–67,000{{citation needed|date=December 2023}} men, women, children, babies and elderly, who were selected by their skin color, were massacred with machetes, or were thrown to sharks.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Tarbox |first1=Jeremy |title=Racist massacre in the Dominican pigmentocracy |journal=Eureka Street |date=2012 |volume=22 |issue=19 |pages=20–21 |url=https://www.eurekastreet.com.au/article/racist-massacre-in-the-dominican-pigmentocracy |accessdate=14 December 2018}}</ref>
==Europe==
There are growing numbers of mulattoes in modern Europe. These mulattos are mainly the direct descendents of the growing numbers of recent African immigrants as well as earlier West-Indian immigrants and European residents.


==== Dominican Republic ====
==Famous Mulattoes==
{{main|Mixed Dominicans}}
Mixed Dominicans, also referred to as '''mulatto''', '''mestizo''' or historically '''quadroon''', are ] who are of mixed racial ancestry. Dominican Republic has many racial terms and some are used differently than in other countries, for example Mestizo signifies any racial mix and not solely a European/indigenous mix like in other Latin American countries, while Indio describes people of skin tones between white and black and has nothing to do with native peoples. Representing 73.9% of the ]'s population, they are by far the single largest racial grouping of the country.<ref name="ONE-Encuesta-Autopercepcion">{{cite book |date= 2022 |location=Santo Domingo |title=Breve Encuesta Nacional de Autopercepción Racial y Étnica en la República Dominicana |publisher=Oficina Nacional de Estadística de la República Dominicana}}</ref> Mixed Dominicans are the descendants from the racial integration between the Europeans, Native Americans, and later the Africans. They have a total population of approximately 8 million.<ref>{{Smallcaps|Esteva Fabregat}}, Claudio «» Revista Complutense de Historia de América, ]. p. 133 (1981)</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=U.S. Department of State People Profiles Latin American Countries |url=http://latinostories.com/Latin_America_Resources/Latin_American_Country_Profiles.htm |access-date=23 March 2020 |archive-date=27 May 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200527182206/http://latinostories.com/Latin_America_Resources/Latin_American_Country_Profiles.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>


The Dominican Republic was the site of the first European ] in the Americas, the ] founded in 1493. After the arrival of Europeans and the founding of the colony, ] people were imported to the island. The fusion of European, native ], and African influences contributed to the development of present-day Dominican culture. From the start of the colonial period in the 1500s, ] (''Mestizaje)'', intermixing of races particularly Spanish settlers, native Tainos, and imported Africans (free or enslaved), was very strong.<ref> yale.edu</ref> In fact, colonial Santo Domingo had higher amount of mixing and lesser racial tensions in comparison to other colonies, even other Spanish colonies, this was due to the fact that for most of its colonial period, Santo Domingo was a poorer colony where even the majority of the white Spanish settlers were poor, which helped foster a relatively peaceful racial atmosphere, allowing for growth in its mixed race population and racial fluidity. Santo Domingo as a colony was used a military base and had an economy based on ], which was a far less labor-intensive than the more common plantation slavery at the time.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Dominican-Republic/Press-and-broadcasting|title=Dominican Republic - Press, Broadcasting, Media &#124; Britannica|website=www.britannica.com|access-date=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.refworld.org/docid/4954ce1923.html|title=Refworld &#124; World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples - Dominican Republic|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref> By the 1700s, the majority of the population was mixed race, forming the basis of the Dominican ethnicity as a distinct people well before independence was achieved.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.refworld.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/rwmain?page=country&category=&publisher=&type=COUNTRYPROF&coi=DOM&rid=&docid=4954ce1923&skip=0|title=Refworld &#124; World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples - Dominican Republic|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref> During colonial times, mixed-race/mulatto Dominicans had a lot of influence, they were instrumental in the independence period and the founding of the nation. Many Dominican presidents were mulatto, and mulatto Dominicans have had influence in every aspect of Dominican culture and society.
] has French and Réunionese ancestry]]


According to recent ] of the Dominican population, the genetic makeup is predominantly ] and ], with a lesser degree of ] ancestry.<ref name="Supplementary Data">{{Cite journal|author1=Montinaro, Francesco |display-authors=etal |title=Unravelling the hidden ancestry of American admixed populations |journal=Nature Communications |volume=6 |pmc=4374169 |doi=10.1038/ncomms7596 |pmid=25803618 |date=24 March 2015 |at=See |bibcode=2015NatCo...6.6596M }}</ref> The average Dominican DNA of the founder population is estimated to be 73% European, 10% Native, and 17% African. After the Haitian and Afro-Caribbean migrations the overall percentage changed to 57% European, 8% Native and 35% African.<ref>{{Cite journal|title=Medical genetics and genomic medicine in the Dominican Republic: challenges and opportunities|first1=Juvianee I.|last1=Estrada-Veras|first2=Giselle A.|last2=Cabrera-Peña|first3=Ceila|last3=Pérez-Estrella de Ferrán|date=12 May 2016|journal=Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine|volume=4|issue=3|pages=243–256|doi=10.1002/mgg3.224|pmid=27247952|pmc=4867558}}</ref> Due to mixed race Dominicans (and most Dominicans in general) being a mix of mainly European and African, with lesser amounts of indigenous Taino, they can accurately be described as ''"Mulatto"'' or ''"Tri-racial"''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://thedominicans.org/2019/01/11/ancestry-dna-results-dominicans-are-spaniards-mixed-with-africans-and-tainos/|title=Ancestry DNA Results: Dominicans are Spaniards Mixed with Africans and Tainos|first=Ernesto|last=Rodríguez|date=11 January 2019|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://dominicantoday.com/dr/local/2016/07/06/dominicans-are-49-black-39-white-and-4-indian/|title=Dominicans are 49% Black, 39% White and 4% Indian|first=Merit Designs Consulting|last=Group, 2006-2020|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref> Dominican Republic have several informal terms to loosely describe a person's degree of racial admixture, Mestizo means any type of mixed ancestry unlike in other Latin American countries it describes specifically a European/native mix,<ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://repositorio.unphu.edu.do/handle/123456789/881|title=Orígenes del mestizaje y de la mulatización en Santo Domingo.|first=Manuel A.|last=García Arévalo|date=14 December 1995|accessdate=14 December 2023|website=repositorio.unphu.edu.do}}</ref> ''Indio'' describes mixed race people whose skin color is between white and black.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://losdominicanos.org/2021/09/30/evidencia-del-uso-de-indio-antes-de-establecerse-la-republica-dominicana/|title=Evidencia del uso de "indio" antes de establecerse la República Dominicana|first=Ernesto|last=Rodríguez|date=30 September 2021|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref>
*], (1/2 Kenyan - 1/2 European American) ]
*], (1/2 African-American - 1/2 white British) American Actress
*], (1/2 Portugese - 1/2 African) most famous Brazilian colonial architect
*], (1/2 Zimbabwean - 1/2 White) British Actress
*], (part Dutch, Haitian, French MGM) Civil rights leader
*], Civil Rights Leader
*], Abolitionist
*], Cuban Astronaut
*], Cuban Aboloitionist, General and Independence Fighter
*], (1/2 black Jamaican - 1/2 white Jamaican) Jamaican Singer/Rastafarian
*], (1/2 Jamaican - 1/2 English) British Athlete/Olympic Gold Medalist (800m, 1500m)
*], (1/2 Nigerian - 1/2 Scottish) British Athlete/Olympic Gold Medalist (2x ])
*], Mexican Abolitionist and Independence Fighter
*], Mexican Abolitionist and Independence Fighter
*], first elected Haitian President and Abolitionist
*], (1/2 Nigerian - 1/2 British) British singer and musician
*], Director
*], Film Directors
*], (1/2 Grenadian - 1/2 English/Jewish) British R&B Singer
*], French, German, Indian, Black]]
*] (1/4 black Brazilian - 3/4 white brazilian and portugese) Brazilian writer, considered the most important writer of brazilian History
*](1/4 African 3/4 white French) most read French writer
*], (1/2 Jamaican/Asian - 1/2 White/Native American) Canadian Singer
*], Former British MP, now Ambassador to South Africa
*], (1/2 Bahamian - 1/2 White Canadian) American Basketball player
*], (1/2 Dominican - 1/2 English) British Talkshow hostess
*], (1/2 Ghanaian - 1/2 Swedish) Former Miss Sweden
*], (1/2 Jewish/American - 1/2 African/American) American Musician
*], (1/2 Jamaican - 1/2 White) British Singer
*], (1/2 Jamaican American - 1/2 Italian/Irish) American Singer
*], (1/2 Ghanaian - 1/2 German) Austrian Model/Actor
*], (1/2 Bahamian - 1/2 French) French Model
*], (1/2 Réunionese - 1/2 French) French Actress/Model
*], (1/2 African-American - 1/2 Irish/French-Canadian) American Actor/Model
*], (1/2 Jamaican - 1/2 Italian) American Singer
*], (1/2 Nigerian - 1/2 Jewish) British actress
*], (1/2 African-American - 1/2 White) American Models
*], (1/2 Irish - 1/2 African-Venezuelan(mullato)) American Singer
*], (1/2 French-Canadian - 1/2 African-Canadian) Canadian Singer
*] (1/2 Italian,Scottish,Irish - 1/2 African American) American actor


In Dominican Republic and some other Latin American countries, it can sometimes be difficult to determine the exact number of racial groups, because the lines between whites and lighter multiracials are very blurry, which is also true between blacks and darker multiracials. As race in Dominican Republic acts as a continuum of white—mulatto—black and not as clear cut as in places like the United States.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://aparcelofribbons.co.uk/2011/09/black-white-and-in-between-categories-of-colour/|title=Black, White and In Between - Categories of Colour|first=Anne M.|last=Powers|date=26 September 2011|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref> And many times in the same family, there can be people of different colors and racial phenotypes who are blood related, this is due to the large amounts of interracial mixing for hundreds of years in Dominican Republic and the Spanish Caribbean in general, allowing for high amounts of genetic diversity.<ref name="scholarworks.umb.edu">{{cite journal | last=Rivera | first=Lucas | title=The Hypocrisy of the "Pigmentocracy" | journal=Trotter Review | date=18 May 2012 | volume=7 | issue=2 | url=https://scholarworks.umb.edu/trotter_review/vol7/iss2/9/ | access-date=14 December 2023}}</ref> The majority of the Dominican population is tri-racial, with nearly all Dominicans having ] ] ancestry along with ] and ] ancestry. European ancestry in the mixed population typically ranges between 50% and 60% on average, while African ancestry ranges between 30% and 40%, and the Native ancestry usually ranges between 5% and 10%. European and Native ancestry tends to be strongest in cities and towns of the north-central ] region, and generally in the mountainous interior of the country. African ancestry is strongest in coastal areas, the southeast plain, and the border regions.<ref name="Supplementary Data"/>
==Footnotes==
#<small id="1">In the Dominican Republic, the mulatto population has also absorbed the small number of ] ]s once present in that country.</small>
#<small id="2">Based on a 1960 census that included colour categories such as white, Black, yellow, and mulatto. Since then, any racial components have been dropped from the Dominican census.


==== Puerto Rico ====
==Sources==
Although the average Puerto Rican is of mixed-race,{{citation needed|date=October 2023}}<!-- Empty reference <ref name="Rivera 2015" /--> few actually identified as multiracial ("two or more races") in the 2010 census; only 3.3% did so.<!-- Empty reference <ref name="auto1"/--><ref> U.S. Department of Commerce. Bureau of the Census. Retrieved July 1, 2013.</ref> They more often identified with their predominant heritage or phenotype. However, in the 2020 census, the amount of Puerto Ricans identifying as multiracial went up to 49.8% and an additional 25.5% identified as "some other race", showing a marked change in the way Puerto Ricans view themselves. This may show that Puerto Ricans are now more open to embracing all sides of their mixed-race heritage and do not view themselves as part of the standard race dynamic in the United States hence the high number of people identifying as "some other race", a similar phenomenon went on in the mainland United States with the overall US Hispanic/Latino population.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/library/stories/2021/08/improved-race-ethnicity-measures-reveal-united-states-population-much-more-multiracial.html|title=2020 Census Illuminates Racial and Ethnic Composition of the Country|website=Census.gov|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref>
* Julio Izquierdo Labrado (1993): '''La esclavitud en Huelva y Palos (1570-1587)'''
Most have significant ancestry from two or more of the founding source populations of Spaniards, Africans, and Tainos, although Spanish ancestry is predominant in a majority of the population. Similar to many other Latin American ethnic groups, Puerto Ricans are multi-generationally mixed race, though most are European dominant in ancestry, Puerto Ricans who are "evenly mixed" can accurately be described "''Mulatto''", "'']''", or ''Tri-racial'' very similar to mixed populations in Cuba and Dominican Republic. Overall, Puerto Ricans are European-dominant Tri-racials, however there are many with near even European and African ancestry. According to the ] ], "the average Puerto Rican individual carries 12% Native American, 65% West Eurasian (Mediterranean, Northern European and/or Middle Eastern) and 20% Sub-Saharan African DNA."<ref name="Puerto Rican History">{{cite web|url=https://blog.nationalgeographic.org/2014/07/25/genographic-project-dna-results-reveals-details-of-puerto-rican-history/|title=Genographic Project DNA Results Reveal Details of Puerto Rican History|date=2014-07-25|website=National Geographic Society Newsroom|language=en-US|access-date=2020-03-24|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200324164653/https://blog.nationalgeographic.org/2014/07/25/genographic-project-dna-results-reveals-details-of-puerto-rican-history/|archive-date=March 24, 2020|url-status=dead}}</ref>
* Leopoldo Eguilaz y Yanguas (1886): '''Glosario de las palabras españolas (castellanas, catalanas, gallegas, mallorquinas, protugueses, valencianas y bascongadas), de orígen oriental (árabe, hebreo, malayo, persa y turco). Granada, La Lealtad, 1886.'''


Studies have shown that the racial ancestry mixture of the average Puerto Rican (regardless of racial self-identity) is about 64% European, 21% African, and 15% Native Taino, with European ancestry strongest on the west side of the island and West African ancestry strongest on the east side, and the levels of Taino ancestry (which, according to some research, ranges from about 5%-35%) generally highest in the southwest of the island.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://m.livescience.com/37624-mapping-puerto-rican-heritage.html|title=Mapping Puerto Rican Heritage with Spit and Genomics|website=]|access-date=October 26, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304000922/http://m.livescience.com/37624-mapping-puerto-rican-heritage.html|archive-date=March 4, 2016|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.eldiario.es/canariasahora/sociedad/cerca-puertorriquenos-europeos-descienden-canarias_1_3275441.html|title = Cerca del 40% de los puertorriqueños con genes europeos descienden de Canarias|date = July 19, 2017}}</ref><ref name="Via">{{cite journal|last1=Via|first1=Marc|last2=Gignoux|first2=Christopher R.|last3=Roth|first3=Lindsay A.|display-authors=etal|date=Jan 2011|title=History Shaped the Geographic Distribution of Genomic Admixture on the Island of Puerto Rico|journal=PLOS ONE|volume=6|issue=1|pages=e16513|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0016513|pmid=21304981|pmc=3031579|bibcode=2011PLoSO...616513V|doi-access=free}}</ref>
* Mulatto not derived from Latin but an Arabic loan-word

* Engseng Ho, an anthropologist, discusses the role of the muwallad in the region. The term muwallad, used primarily in reference to those of 'mixed blood,' is brilliantly analyzed through ethnographic and textual information.
A study of a sample of 96 healthy self-identified White Puerto Ricans and self-identified Black Puerto Ricans in the U.S. showed that, although all carried a contribution from all 3 ancestral populations (European, African, and Amerindian), the proportions showed significant variation. Depending on individuals, although often correlating with their self-identified race, African ancestry ranged from less than 10% to over 50%, while European ancestry ranged from under 20% to over 80%. Amerindian ancestry showed less fluctuation, generally hovering between 5% and 20% irrespective of self-identified race.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.ssc.wisc.edu/cde/demsem/loveman-muniz.pdf |title=How Puerto Rico Became White |date=February 7, 2006 |website=SSC WISC Edu |publisher=University of Wisconsin-Madison |access-date=February 22, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171123151459/https://www.ssc.wisc.edu/cde/demsem/loveman-muniz.pdf |archive-date=November 23, 2017 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="genographic.nationalgeographic.com">{{cite web|url=https://genographic.nationalgeographic.com/reference-populations/|title=Your Regional Ancestry: Reference Populations|access-date=October 26, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170227020449/https://genographic.nationalgeographic.com/reference-populations/|archive-date=February 27, 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="Latino populations: a unique opport">{{cite journal | pmc= 1449501 | pmid=16257940 | doi=10.2105/AJPH.2005.068668 | volume=95 | issue=12 | title=Latino populations: a unique opportunity for the study of race, genetics, and social environment in epidemiological research | date=December 2005 | journal=Am J Public Health | pages=2161–8 | last1 = González Burchard | first1 = E | last2 = Borrell | first2 = LN | last3 = Choudhry | first3 = S |display-authors=etal }}</ref>
*

*
Many Spaniard men took indigenous Taino and West African wives and in the first centuries of the Spanish colonial period the island was overwhelmingly racially mixed. Under Spanish rule, mass immigration shifted the ethnic make-up of the island, as a result of the Royal Decree of Graces of 1815. Puerto Rico went from being two-thirds black and mulatto in the beginning of the 19th century, to being nearly 80% white by the middle of the 20th century. This was compounded by more flexible attitudes to race under Spanish rule, as epitomized by the ''Regla del Sacar''.<ref name="Puerto Rico's History on race">{{cite web|url=http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/cde/demsem/loveman-muniz.pdf|title=Puerto Rico's History on race|access-date=2018-11-28|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120207224431/http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/cde/demsem/loveman-muniz.pdf|archive-date=2012-02-07|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="mona.uwi.edu">{{cite web|url=http://myspot.mona.uwi.edu/liteng/|archive-url=https://archive.today/20121212130544/http://myspot.mona.uwi.edu/liteng/|url-status=dead|title=Representation of racial identity among Puerto Ricans and in the u.s. mainland|archive-date=December 12, 2012}}</ref><ref> Retrieved June 8, 2009.</ref><ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110705043714/http://2010.census.gov/2010census/data/ |date=July 5, 2011 }}</ref><ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303171842/http://stewartsynopsis.com/racial_amnesia.htm |date=2016-03-03 }} Retrieved November 10, 2011.</ref> Under Spanish rule, Puerto Rico had laws such as ''Regla del Sacar'' or ''Gracias al Sacar'', which allowed persons of mixed ancestry to pay a fee to be classified as white,<ref>{{Cite news|last=Alford|first=Natasha S.|date=2020-02-09|title=Why Some Black Puerto Ricans Choose 'White' on the Census|language=en-US|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/09/us/puerto-rico-census-black-race.html|access-date=2021-07-23|issn=0362-4331}}</ref> which was the opposite of "]" in US society after the American Civil War.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{cite journal |access-date=21 August 2017 |date=10 September 2015 |doi=10.1002/ajhb.22714 |first1=Ronald |first2=Antonio Victor Campos |first3=Valdir |first4=Sergio |first5=Lucas André Cavalcanti |last1=Rodrigues de Moura |last2=Coelho |last3=de Queiroz Balbino |last4=Crovella |last5=Brandão |number=5 |pages=674–680 |periodical=American Journal of Human Biology |title=Meta-analysis of Brazilian genetic admixture and comparison with other Latin America countries |url=http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ajhb.22714/abstract |via=Wiley Online Library |volume=27|pmid=25820814 |hdl=11368/2837176 }}<!-- auto-translated from Portuguese by Module:CS1 translator --></ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qLSU-SiojsYC&q=Jay+Kinsbruner,+Not+of+Pure+Blood,|title=Not of Pure Blood: The Free People of Color and Racial Prejudice in Nineteenth-century Puerto Rico|first=Jay|last=Kinsbruner|date=February 22, 1996|publisher=Duke University Press|via=Google Books|isbn=978-0822318422}}</ref>
*

*
==== Cuba ====
*
In the 2012 Census of Cuba, 26.6% (2.97 million) of the Cubans self-identified as mulatto or ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/major-ethnic-groups-in-cuba.html|title=Major Ethnic Groups In Cuba|date=23 July 2018|website=WorldAtlas|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref> But the percentage multiracial/mulatto make up varies widely, from as low as 26% to as high as 51%.<ref name="web.archive.org"/> Unlike, the two other Spanish Caribbean islands (Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico) where nearly everyone even most self-proclaimed whites and blacks are mixed to varying degrees, in Cuba there are significant pure or nearly pure European and African populations.<ref name="scholarworks.umb.edu"/> Multi-racials/Mulattos are widespread throughout Cuba. The DNA average for the Cuban population is 72% European, 23% African, and 5% indigenous, though among mulatto Cubans the European and African ancestry is more even.<ref>{{Cite journal|title=Cuba: Exploring the History of Admixture and the Genetic Basis of Pigmentation Using Autosomal and Uniparental Markers|first1=Beatriz|last1=Marcheco-Teruel|first2=Esteban J.|last2=Parra|first3=Evelyn|last3=Fuentes-Smith|first4=Antonio|last4=Salas|first5=Henriette N.|last5=Buttenschøn|first6=Ditte|last6=Demontis|first7=María|last7=Torres-Español|first8=Lilia C.|last8=Marín-Padrón|first9=Enrique J.|last9=Gómez-Cabezas|first10=Vanesa|last10=Álvarez-Iglesias|first11=Ana|last11=Mosquera-Miguel|first12=Antonio|last12=Martínez-Fuentes|first13=Ángel|last13=Carracedo|first14=Anders D.|last14=Børglum|first15=Ole|last15=Mors|date=24 July 2014|journal=PLOS Genetics|volume=10|issue=7|pages=e1004488|doi=10.1371/journal.pgen.1004488|pmid=25058410|pmc=4109857 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
*

Prior to the 20th century, majority of the Cuban population was of mixed race descent to varying degrees, with pure Spaniards or ] being a significant minority. Between 1902 and 1933, some 750,000 Spaniards migrated to Cuba from Europe, which changed the racial demographics of the region rapidly. Many of the newly arrived Spanish migrants did not intermix with the native Cuban population, unlike the earlier colonial settlers and ]s who intermixed with ] and ] at large scale rates. Self identified “white” Cubans with colonial roots on the island usually have Amerindian and or African admixture to varying degrees, as well as self identified “black” Cubans with colonial roots having varying degrees of European and or Amerindian admixture.

==United States==

===Colonial and Antebellum eras===
{{See also|Children of the plantation|Shadow family}}

] offering a reward for his ] named Sandy who was defined as "mulatto".<ref>{{cite news |title=Fugitive Slave Laws |url=https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/fugitive-slave-laws/ |access-date=August 30, 2022 |work=Encyclopedia Virginia}}</ref>]]

Historians have documented sexual abuse of enslaved women during the colonial and post-revolutionary slavery times by white men in power: planters, their sons before marriage, overseers, etc., which resulted in many multiracial children born into slavery. Starting with Virginia in 1662, colonies adopted the principle of '']'' in slave law, which said that children born in the colony were born into the status of their mother. Thus, children born to slave mothers were born into slavery, regardless of who their fathers were and whether they were baptized as Christians. Children born to white mothers were free, even if they were mixed-race. Children born to free mixed-race mothers were also free.<ref>{{Cite web |title="Negro womens children to serve according to the condition of the mother" (1662) |url=https://encyclopediavirginia.org/primary-documents/negro-womens-children-to-serve-according-to-the-condition-of-the-mother-1662/ |access-date=2024-11-26 |website=Encyclopedia Virginia |language=en-US}}</ref>

Paul Heinegg has documented that most of the free people of color listed in the 1790–1810 censuses in the Upper South were descended from unions and marriages during the colonial period in Virginia between white women, who were free or indentured servants, and African or African American men, servant, slave or free. In the early colonial years, such working-class people lived and worked closely together, and slavery was not as much of a racial caste. Slave law had established that children in the colony took the status of their mothers. This meant that multi-racial children born to white women were born free. The colony required them to serve lengthy indentures if the woman was not married, but nonetheless, numerous individuals with African ancestry were born free, and formed more free families. Over the decades, many of these free people of color became leaders in the African-American community; others married increasingly into the white community.<ref>, Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co, 1995-2005</ref><ref>Dorothy Schneider, Carl J. Schneider, ''Slavery in America'', Infobase Publishing, 2007, pp. 86–87.</ref> His findings have been supported by ] and other contemporary researchers as well.<ref>Felicia R Lee, , ''New York Times''. Accessed November 3, 2013.</ref>

A daughter born to a ] father and ] mother in ] in 1680, both of whom probably came to the colony as indentured servants, was classified as a "mulatto" and sold into slavery.<ref>{{cite web|author=Assisi, Francis C.|title=Indian-American Scholar Susan Koshy Probes Interracial Sex|year=2005|publisher=INDOlink|url=http://www.indolink.com/displayArticleS.php?id=111605054006|access-date=2009-01-02|url-status=usurped|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090130022356/http://www.indolink.com/displayArticleS.php?id=111605054006|archive-date=2009-01-30}}</ref>

Historian F. James Davis says,
{{Blockquote|Rapes occurred, and many slave women were forced to submit regularly to white males or suffer harsh consequences. However, slave girls often courted a sexual relationship with the master, or another male in the family, as a way of gaining distinction among the slaves, avoiding field work, and obtaining special jobs and other favored treatment for their mixed children (Reuter, 1970:129). Sexual contacts between the races also included prostitution, adventure, ], and sometimes love. In rare instances, where free blacks were concerned, there was marriage (Bennett, 1962:243–68).<ref>, pp. 38–39</ref>}}

] woman with black servant, New Orleans, 1867.]]
Historically in the ], the term mulatto was also applied at times to persons with mixed ] and ] ancestry.<ref name=afch>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xpusu6xQq6QC&q=afro+cherokee+smallpox&pg=PA33 |title=Ties that Bind: The Story of an Afro-Cherokee Family in Slavery and Freedom |author=Miles, Tiya |access-date=2009-10-27 |year=2008 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-25002-4}}</ref> For example, a 1705 ] statute reads as follows:
<blockquote>"And for clearing all manner of doubts which hereafter may happen to arise upon the construction of this act, or any other act, who shall be accounted a mulatto, Be it enacted and declared, and it is hereby enacted and declared, That the child of an ] and the child, grand child, or great grand child, of a ] shall be deemed, accounted, held and taken to be a mulatto."<ref>{{cite book|author1=General Assembly of Virginia|author-link1=Virginia|editor1-last=Hening|editor1-first=William Waller|title=Statutes at Large|date=1823|location=Philadelphia|page=252|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4i3OAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA252|access-date=30 September 2014|chapter=4th Anne Ch. IV (October 1705)}}</ref></blockquote>However, southern colonies began to prohibit Indian slavery in the eighteenth century, so, according to their own laws, even mixed-race children born to Native American women should be considered free. The societies did not always observe this distinction.

Certain Native American tribes of the Inocoplo family in ] referred to themselves as "mulatto".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/bmm38 |title=Mulato Indians |work=The Handbook of Texas Online |publisher=Texas State Historical Association |access-date=2013-01-07}}</ref> At one time, Florida's laws declared that a person from any number of mixed ancestries would be legally defined as a mulatto, including White/Hispanic, Black/Native American, and just about any other mix as well.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R8nvkAIulFIC&pg=PA19 |page=19 |title=The Indians of North Florida: From Carolina to Florida, the Story of the Survival of a Distinct American Indian Community |author1=Sewell, Christopher Scott |author2=Hill, S. Pony |publisher=Backintyme |date=2011-06-01 |access-date=2013-01-07|isbn=9780939479375 }}</ref>

In the United States, due to the influence and laws making slavery a racial caste, and later practices of ], white colonists and settlers tended to classify persons of mixed African and Native American ancestry as black, regardless of how they identified themselves, or sometimes as ]. But many tribes had ] ] systems and practices of absorbing other peoples into their cultures. Multiracial children born to Native American mothers were customarily raised in her family and specific tribal culture. Federally recognized Native American tribes have insisted that identity and membership is related to culture rather than race, and that individuals brought up within tribal culture are fully members, regardless of whether they also have some European or African ancestry. Many tribes have had mixed-race members who identify primarily as members of the tribes.

If the multiracial children were born to slave women (generally of at least partial African descent), they were classified under slave law as slaves. This was to the advantage of slaveowners, as Indian slavery had been abolished. If mixed-race children were born to Native American mothers, they should be considered free, but sometimes slaveholders kept them in slavery anyway. Multiracial children born to slave mothers were generally raised within the African-American community and considered "black".<ref name=afch/>

], ], July 1940]]

===California===
{{See also|Los Angeles Pobladores}}
The first pioneers of ] were of mulatto ancestry.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2rdaBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT242|title=Recovering History, Constructing Race: The Indian, Black, and White Roots of Mexican Americans|first=Martha|last=Menchaca|date=15 January 2002|publisher=University of Texas Press|isbn=9780292778481 |accessdate=14 December 2023|via=Google Books}}</ref>

===Louisiana===
] digital newspaper archive)]]
The ] to Louisiana, published by the ] in 1941, included a breakdown of traditional race classifications in that region, stating "The following elaborate terminology, now no longer in use because of the lack of genealogical records upon which to base finely drawn blood distinctions, was once employed to differentiate between types according to diminution of Negro blood."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Louisiana Writers' Project |url=https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/001264253 |title=Louisiana: A Guide to the State |date=1941 |publisher=Hastings House |isbn=978-0-403-02169-7 |series=American guide series |location=New York|via=]|language=en-us}}</ref> (Original ] preserved.)

{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Term !! Parentage !! "Percentage of Negro blood"
|-
| ''Sacatro'' || Negro and Griffe || 87.5
|-
| ''Griffe'' || Negro and Mulatto || 75
|-
| ''Marabon'' || Mulatto and Griffe || 62.5
|-
| ''Mulatto'' || Negro and white || 50
|-
| ''Os rouge'' || Negro and Indian || 50
|-
| ''Tierceron'' || Mulatoon and Quadroon || 37.5
|-
| ''Quadroon'' || White and Mulatto || 25
|-
| ''Octoroon'' || White and Quadroon || 12.5
|}

A 1916 history called ''The Mulatto in the United States'' reported two other archaic race-classification systems:<ref>{{cite book | url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044042923136&view=1up&seq=18 | title=The mulatto in the United States: Including a study of the rôle of mixed-blood races throughout the world | year=1918 | publisher=Badger }}</ref>

{| class="wikitable"
|+ From ]'s ''A Journey to the Seaboard Slave States'' (1854)
|-
! Header text !! Header text
|-
| ''Sacatra'' || griffe and negress
|-
| ''Griffe'' || Negro and mulatto
|-
| ''Marabon'' || mulatto and griffe
|-
| ''Mulatto'' || white and Negro
|-
| ''Quadroon'' || white and mulatto
|-
| ''Metif'' || white and Quadroon
|-
| ''Meamelouc'' || white and metif
|-
| ''Quarteron'' || white and meamelouc
|-
| ''Sang-mele'' || white and quarteron
|}

{| class="wikitable"
|+ From ]'s ''Heredity of Skin Color in Negro-White Crosses'' (1910)
|-
! Header text !! Header text
|-
| ''Mulatto'' || Negro and white
|-
| ''Quadroon'' || mulatto and white
|-
| ''Octoroon'' || quadroon and white
|-
| ''Cascos'' || mulatto and mulatto
|-
| ''Sambo'' || mulatto and Negro
|-
| ''Mango'' || sambo and Negro
|-
| ''Mustifee'' || octoroon and white
|-
| ''Mustifino'' || mustifee and white
|}

===Contemporary era===
{{Further|Multiracial Americans}}
Mulatto was used as an official ] racial category in the United States, to acknowledge multiracial persons, until 1930.<ref>{{cite book |first=Paul |last=Schor |chapter=The Disappearance of the ‘Mulatto’ as the End of Inquiry into the Composition of the Black Population of the United States |title=Counting Americans: How the US Census Classified the Nation |location=New York |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2017 |isbn=978-0-19-991785-3 |pages=155–168 }}</ref> (In the early 20th century, several southern states had adopted the ] as law, and southern Congressmen pressed the US Census Bureau to drop the mulatto category: they wanted all persons to be classified as "black" or "white".)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mitsawokett.com/Introduction.html |title=Introduction|publisher=Mitsawokett: A 17th Century Native American Community in Central Delaware}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mitsawokett.com/Plecker.htm |title=Walter Plecker's Racist Crusade Against Virginia's Native Americans |publisher=Mitsawokett: A 17th Century Native American Settlement in Delaware |access-date=2008-07-14}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://heite.org/Invis.indians1.html|title=Introduction and statement of historical problem|work=Delaware's Invisible Indians|last=Heite|first=Louise|access-date=2008-07-14|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080724082356/http://www.heite.org/Invis.indians1.html|archive-date=2008-07-24}}</ref>

Since 2000, persons responding to the census have been allowed to identify as having more than one type of ethnic ancestry.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Center |first=Pew Research |date=2015-06-11 |title=Chapter 1: Race and Multiracial Americans in the U.S. Census |url=https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2015/06/11/chapter-1-race-and-multiracial-americans-in-the-u-s-census/ |access-date=2024-04-17 |website=Pew Research Center’s Social & Demographic Trends Project |language=en-US}}</ref>

Mulatto (''Biracial'' in the U.S.) populations come from various sources. Firstly, the average ancestral DNA of African Americans is about 90% African, 9% European, and 1% indigenous.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.broadinstitute.org/news/detailed-map-african-american-genetic-variation-unveiled|title=Detailed map of African-American genetic variation unveiled|date=22 July 2011|website=Broad Institute|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref> Lighter skinned (African descendant Americans) are usually "more mixed" than the average African American, with the white ancestors sometimes being several generations back, which gives them a multiracial phenotype.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://newsone.com/3772809/skin-color-black-people-african-americans-light-dark/|title=Why So Many Black People Are Still So Caught Up On Skin Color|first=newsone|last=Staff|date=2 February 2018|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bartleby.com/essay/The-Mulatto-Advantage-Summary-BFC766443644C6E0|title=The Mulatto Advantage Summary - 423 Words &#124; Bartleby|website=www.bartleby.com|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | last=Bates | first=Karen Grigsby | title='A Chosen Exile': Black People Passing In White America | website=NPR | date=7 October 2014 | url=https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2014/10/07/354310370/a-chosen-exile-black-people-passing-in-white-america | access-date=14 December 2023}}</ref> Some of these lighter African Americans have abandoned the black identity and started to identify as multiracial.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.pewresearch.org/race-ethnicity/2022/04/14/black-americans-personal-identity-and-intra-racial-connections/|title=1. Personal identity and intra-racial connections|first=Pew Research|last=Center|date=14 April 2022|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref> Many small isolate mixed race groups, such as for example Louisiana Creole people, got absorbed into the overall African American population. There also growing numbers of black/white interracial couples and ] people of recent origins– parents being of different races.<ref> census.gov</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.axios.com/2022/09/07/approval-of-interracial-marriage-america|title=The rise of interracial marriage — and its approval rating|access-date=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.voanews.com/a/interracial-marriages-mixed-race-americans/3749441.html|title=Number of Interracial Marriages, Multiracial Americans Growing Rapidly|date=4 March 2017|website=Voice of America|accessdate=14 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | last1=Foster-Frau | first1=Silvia | last2=Mellnik | first2=Ted | last3=Blanco | first3=Adrian | title='We're talking about a big, powerful phenomenon': Multiracial Americans drive change | newspaper=Washington Post | date=8 October 2021 | url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/10/08/mixed-race-americans-increase-census/ | access-date=14 December 2023}}</ref> Many immigrants who are racially Mulattos, have come to the United States from countries like Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico, being most prevalent in cities like New York and Miami.

==Colonial references==
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==References==
;Notes
{{Reflist|group="nb"}}

;Citations
{{Reflist}}

==Further reading==

* Beckmann, Susan. "The mulatto of style: language in Derek Walcott's drama." ''Canadian Drama'' 6.1 (1980): 71–89.
* {{cite book | title=Sex and Race in the Black Atlantic: Mulatto Devils and Multiracial Messiahs | year=2010 | author=McNeil, Daniel | publisher=Routledge}}
* {{cite book | title=The Forgotten Cause of the Civil War: A New Look at the Slavery Issue | year=1997 | author=Tenzer, Lawrence Raymond | publisher=Scholars' Pub. House}}
* {{cite book | title=Mulatto America: At the Crossroads of Black and White Culture: A Social History | url=https://archive.org/details/mulattoamericaat00talt | url-access=registration | year=2003 | author=Talty, Stephan | publisher=HarperCollins Publishers Inc.| isbn=9780060185176 }}
* {{cite book | title=Aristocrats of Color: The Black Elite, 1880-1920 | url=https://archive.org/details/aristocratsofcol00gate | url-access=registration | year=1990 | author=Gatewood, Willard B. | publisher=]| isbn=9780253325525 }}
* {{cite book|last=Eguilaz y Yanguas |first=Leopoldo |title=Glosario de las palabras españolas (castellanas, catalanas, gallegas, mallorquinas, portuguesas, valencianas y bascongadas), de orígen oriental (árabe, hebreo, malayo, persa y turco)|publisher=La Lealtad|location=Granada|year=1886|language=es}}
* {{Cite book|title=Hadhrami Traders, Scholars and Statesmen in the Indian Ocean, 1750s-1960s|editor1=Freitag, Ulrike|editor2=Clarence-Smith, William G.|publisher=Brill|location=Leiden|year=1997|series=Social, Economic and Political Studies of the Middle East and Asia|volume=57|page=392|isbn=90-04-10771-1|url=http://www.aiys.org/webdate/frei.html|access-date=2008-07-14|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080628072840/http://www.aiys.org/webdate/frei.html|archive-date=2008-06-28}} Engseng Ho, an anthropologist, discusses the role of the ''muwallad'' in the region. The term ''muwallad'', used primarily in reference to those of "mixed blood", is analyzed through ethnographic and textual information.
* {{cite web|url=http://www.al-bab.com/bys/articles/freitag99.htm|title=Hadhrami migration in the 19th and 20th centuries|last=Freitag|first=Ulrike|date=December 1999|publisher=The British-Yemeni Society|access-date=2008-07-14|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000712123052/http://www.al-bab.com/bys/articles/freitag99.htm|archive-date=2000-07-12}}
* {{Cite journal|last=Myntti|first=Cynthia|year=1994|title=Interview: Hamid al-Gadri|journal=Yemen Update|publisher=American Institute for Yemeni Studies|volume=34|issue=44|pages=14–9|url=http://www.aiys.org/webdate/gadr.html|access-date=2008-07-14|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080618163007/http://www.aiys.org/webdate/gadr.html|archive-date=2008-06-18}}
*{{cite book | title= New People: Miscegenation and Mulattoes in the United States | url= https://archive.org/details/newpeoplemiscege00will | url-access= registration | year=1980 |author=Williamson, Joel | publisher= The Free Press | isbn= 9780029347904 }}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Wiktionary}}
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* * , ''Jim Crow Museum,'' Ferris State University
* , in-depth research links on Mulattoes, About.com
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* ( 2009-11-01)
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* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Mulatto}}


{{Hispanics/Latinos}}
{{Miscegenation in Spanish colonies}}{{Multiethnicity}}{{Authority control}}


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Latest revision as of 14:59, 17 December 2024

Historical racial classification Not to be confused with Mulatto (rapper) or Mulatto Mountain. "Mulato" and "Mulatos" redirect here. For other uses, see Mulato (disambiguation). For the river in Colombia, see Mulatos River.

Mulatto (/mjuːˈlætoʊ/, /məˈlɑːtoʊ/) (original Italian spelling) is a racial classification that refers to people of mixed African and European ancestry only. When speaking or writing about a singular woman in English, the word is mulatta (Spanish: mulata). The use of this term began in the United States of America shortly after the Atlantic Slave Trade began and its use was widespread, derogatory and disrespectful. After the post Civil Rights Era, the term is now considered to be both outdated and offensive in America. In other Anglophone countries (the English-speaking world) such as the British Isles, and English and Dutch-speaking West Indian countries, the word mulatto is still used. The use of this word does not have the same negative associations found among English speakers. Among Latinos in both the US and Latin America, the word is used in every day speech and its meaning is a source of racial and ethnic pride. In four of the Latin-based languages, the default, masculine word ends with the letter "o" and is written as follows: Spanish and Portuguese – mulato; Italian – mulatto. The French equivalent is mulâtre. In English, the masculine plural is written as mulattoes while in Spanish and Portuguese it is mulatos. The masculine plural in Italian is mulatti and in French it is mulâtres. The feminine plurals are: English – mulattas; Spanish and Portuguese – mulatas; Italian – mulatte; French – mulâtresses.

Countries with the highest percentages of multi-racials who specifically have equally high European and African ancestry — Mulatto — are the Dominican Republic (74%) and Cape Verde (71%). Brazil has the largest Mulatto population by definition, numbering between 60–90 million (30–45% of the country), as majority of the people who identify as Pardo (brown or mixed) have high amounts of both European and African ancestries, many can be considered Mulatto, Quadroon, or Tri-racial, smaller numbers of other Brazilians –especially those who self identify as black– can be considered 'Mulatto' due to having high levels of both African and European blood. Mulattos in many Latin American countries, aside from predominately European and African ancestry, usually also have slight indigenous admixture. "Race-mixing" has been strong in Latin America for centuries, since the start of the European colonization of the Americas in many cases. Many Latin American multiracial families (including mulatto) have been mixed for several generations. In the 21st century, multiracials now frequently have unions and marriages with other multiracials. Other countries and territories with notable mulatto populations in percentage and/or total number include Cuba, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Panama, Colombia, South Africa, and the United States.

Etymology

Juan de Pareja by Diego Velázquez, CE 1650 – Juan de Pareja was born into slavery in Spain. He was of mixed African and Spanish descent.

The English term and spelling mulatto is derived from the Spanish and Portuguese mulato. It was a common term in the Southeastern United States during the era of slavery. Some sources suggest that it may derive from the Portuguese word mula (from the Latin mūlus), meaning 'mule', the hybrid offspring of a horse and a donkey. The Real Academia Española traces its origin to mulo in the sense of hybridity; originally used to refer to any mixed race person. The term is now generally considered outdated and offensive in non-Spanish and non-Portuguese speaking countries, and was considered offensive even in the 19th century.

Jack D. Forbes suggests it originated in the Arabic term muwallad, which means 'a person of mixed ancestry'. Muwallad literally means 'born, begotten, produced, generated; brought up', with the implication of being born of Arab and non-Arab parents. Muwallad is derived from the root word WaLaD (Arabic: ولد, direct Arabic transliteration: waw, lam, dal) and colloquial Arabic pronunciation can vary greatly. Walad means 'descendant, offspring, scion; child; son; boy; young animal, young one'.

In al-Andalus, muwallad referred to the offspring from parents of Arab Muslim origin and non-Arab Muslim people who adopted the Islamic religion and manners. Specifically, the term was historically applied to the descendants of Arab or Berber Muslims and indigenous Christian Iberians who, after several generations of living among a Muslim majority, adopted their culture and religion.

In English, printed usage of mulatto dates to at least the 16th century. The 1595 work Drake's Voyages first used the term in the context of intimate unions producing biracial children. The Oxford English Dictionary defined mulatto as "one who is the offspring of a European and a Black". This earliest usage regarded "black" and "white" as discrete "species", with the "mulatto" constituting a third separate "species".

According to Julio Izquierdo Labrado, the 19th-century linguist Leopoldo Eguilaz y Yanguas, as well as some Arabic sources muwallad is the etymological origin of mulato. These sources specify that mulato would have been derived directly from muwallad independently of the related word muladí, a term that was applied to Iberian Christians who had converted to Islam during the Moorish governance of Iberia in the Middle Ages.

The Real Academia Española (Spanish Royal Academy) casts doubt on the muwallad theory. It states, "The term mulata is documented in our diachronic data bank in 1472 and is used in reference to livestock mules in Documentacion medieval de la Corte de Justicia de Ganaderos de Zaragoza, whereas muladí (from mullawadí) does not appear until the 18th century, according to Corominas".

Scholars such as Werner Sollors cast doubt on the mule etymology for mulatto. In the 18th and 19th centuries, racialists such as Edward Long and Josiah Nott began to assert that mulattoes were sterile like mules. They projected this belief back onto the etymology of the word mulatto. Sollors points out that this etymology is anachronistic: "The Mulatto sterility hypothesis that has much to do with the rejection of the term by some writers is only half as old as the word 'Mulatto'."

Africa

See also: Indigenous peoples of Africa
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Of São Tomé and Príncipe's 193,413 inhabitants, the largest segment is classified as mestiço, or mixed race. 71% of the population of Cape Verde is also classified as such. The great majority of their current populations descend from unions between the Portuguese, who colonized the islands from the 15th century onward, and black Africans they brought from the African mainland to work as slaves. In the early years, mestiços began to form a third-class between the Portuguese colonists and African slaves, as they were usually bilingual and often served as interpreters between the populations.

In Angola and Mozambique, the mestiço constitute smaller but still important minorities; 2% in Angola and 0.2% in Mozambique.

Mulatto and mestiço are not terms commonly used in South Africa to refer to people of mixed ancestry. The persistence of some authors in using this term, anachronistically, reflects the old-school essentialist views of race as a de facto biological phenomenon, and the 'mixing' of race as legitimate grounds for the creation of a 'new race'. This disregards cultural, linguistic and ethnic diversity and/or differences between regions and globally among populations of mixed ancestry.

In Namibia, an ethnic group known as Rehoboth Basters, descend from historic liaisons between the Cape Colony Dutch and indigenous African women. The name Baster is derived from the Dutch word for 'bastard' (or 'crossbreed'). While some people consider this term demeaning, the Basters proudly use the term as an indication of their history. In the early 21st century, they number between 20,000 and 30,000 people. There are, of course, other people of mixed race in the country.

Cape Verde

As of 2018, 71% of Cape Verdeans were Mulatto or Creole.

South Africa

Main article: Coloureds
Abdullah Abdurahman

The Coloured / Cape Malay people from Africa are descendants of mixed ancestry, from the early 17th Century European colonizers namely Dutch, British and French intermixed with the indigenous Khoisan and Bantu tribes of that region, as well as intermixing with Asian slaves from Indonesia, Malaysia and India.

The intermixing of different races began in the Cape province of South Africa during the 17th and 18th centuries, the Dutch east India company brought enslaved people from Asian regions, including; Indonesia, Malaysia and India these individuals were brought to the Cape Colony to work on farms, in households, as they were enslaved labourers . There is a significant genetic mixture of European, African and (Indian) Asian DNA in the modern ethnic group of Coloured people. Thus forced into their own communities and therefore created a generational mix of people and are to date an ethnic group.

In addition to African, European and Asian ancestry, Coloured people had some portion of Spanish or Portuguese ancestry. In the early 19th century some immigrants from Brazil arrived in South Africa as sailors, traders or refugees, and some intermarried with local mixed race (Coloured) communities. Also The (Canary Islands) Spain off the northwest coast of Africa, were a Spanish colony, and during the 17th and 18th centuries, the Dutch east India Company and other European powers brought enslaved people from the Canary Islands to South Africa, particularly to the Cape Colony (now known as South Africa). The Dutch East India Company's ship "Het Gelderland", which arrived at the Cape in 1671 with 174 slaves from the Canary Islands and The Portuguese ship, "Sao Jose" which was captured by the Dutch in 1713 and brought to the Cape with slaves from the Canary Islands. These enslaved people were forced to work on farms, in households, and in other industries and many were subjected to harsh conditions and treatment. The intermixing among European men and Spanish and Portuguese women's descendants are part of the diverse Coloured communities in South Africa. It is however important to note that Spanish and Portuguese ancestry is not a dominant feature amongst the Coloured identity in South Africa, Namibia and Zimbabwe. Individual family histories and ancestry may vary widely while the African, European and Asian ancestry is dominant amongst Coloured people from Africa.

Based on the Population Registration Act to classify people, the government passed laws prohibiting mixed marriages. Many people who classified as belonging to the "Asian" category could legally intermarry with "mixed-race" people because they shared the same nomenclature. The use of the term Coloured has changed over the course of history. For instance, in the first census after the South African war (1912), Indians were counted as 'Coloured'. Before and after this war, they were counted as 'Asiatic'. Zimbabwean Coloureds were descended from Shona or Ndebele mixing with British and Afrikaner settlers and Arab slaves.

Griqua, on the other hand, are descendants of Khoisan and Afrikaner trekboers. The Griqua were subjected to an ambiguity of other creole people within Southern African social order. According to Nurse and Jenkins (1975), the leader of this "mixed" group, Adam Kok I, was a former slave of the Dutch governor. He was manumitted and provided land outside Cape Town in the eighteenth century. With territories beyond the Dutch East India Company administration, Kok provided refuge to deserting soldiers, refugee slaves, and remaining members of various Khoikhoi tribes.

Afro-European tribes and clans

Uganda

Main article: Multiracial Ugandans in Uganda § Ugandan-Europeans (Afro-Europeans)

Equatorial Guinea

Main article: Fernandino people

Latin America and the Caribbean

Mulattoes in colonial Mexico

Main article: Casta See also: Pardo, Morisco, Torna atrás, and Lobo (racial category)
From Spaniard and Black woman, Coloured girl. Miguel Cabrera. Mexico 1763

Africans were transported by Spaniards slave traders to Mexico starting in the early 16th century. Offspring of Spaniards and African women resulted early on in mixed-race children, termed mulattoes. In Spanish law, the status of the child followed that of the mother, so that despite having a Spanish parent, their offspring were enslaved. The label mulatto was recorded in official colonial documentation, so that marriage registers, censuses, and court documents allow research on different aspects of mulattoes’ lives. Although some legal documents simply label a person a mulatto/a, other designations occurred. In the sales of casta slaves in 17th-century Mexico City, official notaries recorded gradations of skin color in the transactions. These included mulato blanco or mulata blanca ('white mulatto'), for light-skinned slave. These were usually American-born slaves. Some said categorized persons i.e. mulata blanca used their light skin to their advantage if they escaped their unlawful and brutal incarceration from their criminal slave owners, thus 'passing' as free persons of color. Mulatos blancos often emphasized their Spanish parentage, and considered themselves and were considered separate from negros or pardos and ordinary mulattoes. Darker mulatto slaves were often termed mulatos prietos or sometimes mulatos cochos. In Chile, along with mulatos blancos, there were also españoles oscuros ('dark Spaniards').

There was considerable malleability and manipulation of racial labeling, including the seemingly stable category of mulatto. In a case that came before the Mexican Inquisition, a woman publicly identified as a mulatta was described by a Spanish priest, Diego Xaimes Ricardo Villavicencio, as "a white mulata with curly hair, because she is the daughter of a dark-skinned mulata and a Spaniard, and for her manner of dress she has flannel petticoats and a native blouse (huipil), sometimes silken, sometimes woolen. She wears shoes, and her natural and common language is not Spanish, but Chocho , as she was brought up among Indians with her mother, from which she contracted the vice of drunkenness, to which she often succumbs, as Indians do, and from them she has also received the crime of ." Community members were interrogated as to their understanding of her racial standing. Her mode of dress, very wavy hair and light skin confirmed for one witness that she was a mulatta. Ultimately though, her rootedness in the indigenous community persuaded the Inquisition that she was an India, and therefore outside of their jurisdiction. Even though the accused had physical features of a mulatta, her cultural category was more important. In colonial Latin America, mulato could also refer to an individual of mixed African and Native American ancestry, but the term zambo was more consistently used for that racial mixture.

Dominican friar Thomas Gage spent over a decade in the Viceroyalty of New Spain in the early 17th century; he converted to Anglicanism and later wrote of his travels, often disparaging Spanish colonial society and culture. In Mexico City, he observed in considerable detail the opulence of dress of women, writing that "The attire of this baser sort of people of blackamoors and mulattoes (which are of a mixed nature, of Spaniards and blackamoors) is so light, and their carriage so enticing, that many Spaniards even of the better sort (who are too too prone to venery) disdain their wives for them... Most of these are or have been slaves, though love have set them loose, at liberty to enslave souls to sin and Satan."

In the late 18th century, some mixed-race persons sought legal "certificates of whiteness" (cédulas de gracias al sacar), in order to rise socially and practice professions. American-born Spaniards (criollos) sought to prevent the approval of such petitions, since the "purity" of their own whiteness would be in jeopardy. They asserted their "purity of blood" (limpieza de sangre) as white persons who had "always been known, held and commonly reputed to be white persons, Old Christians of the nobility, clean of all bad blood and without any mixture of commoner, Jew, Moor, Mulatto, or converso in any degree, no matter how remote." Spaniards both American- and Iberian-born discriminated against pardos and mulattoes because of their "bad blood." One Cuban sought the grant of his petition in order to practice as a surgeon, a profession from which he was barred because of his mulatto designation. Royal laws and decrees prevented pardos and mulattoes from serving as a public notary, lawyer, pharmacist, ordination to the priesthood, or graduation from university. Mulattas declared white could marry a Spaniard.

Gallery

  • Casta painting of a Spaniard, a Negra and a Mulatto. José de Alcíbar, 18th c. Mexico Casta painting of a Spaniard, a Negra and a Mulatto. José de Alcíbar, 18th c. Mexico
  • De Español y Negra, Mulato. Anon. 18th c. De Español y Negra, Mulato. Anon. 18th c.
  • De Español y Negra, Mulato. José Joaquín Magón. 18th c. Mexico De Español y Negra, Mulato. José Joaquín Magón. 18th c. Mexico
  • De Español y Negra, Mulato. Anon. De Español y Negra, Mulato. Anon.
  • De negro y española, sale mulato (From a Black man and a Spanish woman, a Mulatto is begotten). Anon. De negro y española, sale mulato (From a Black man and a Spanish woman, a Mulatto is begotten). Anon.
  • De Español y Mulata, Morisca. Anon. 1799 De Español y Mulata, Morisca. Anon. 1799
  • De Mulata y Español, Morisca, Juan Patricio Morlete. 18th c. Mexico De Mulata y Español, Morisca, Juan Patricio Morlete. 18th c. Mexico
  • De Mulato y Mestiza, Torna atrás De Mulato y Mestiza, Torna atrás
  • De Negro y Mulata, Zambo. 18th c. Peru De Negro y Mulata, Zambo. 18th c. Peru
  • Don Miguel Enríquez, a Puerto Rican privateer Don Miguel Enríquez, a Puerto Rican privateer
  • Examples of Nueva Espana (New Spain/Mexico) classifications of Mulatto and Mestizo in 1763 Examples of Nueva Espana (New Spain/Mexico) classifications of Mulatto and Mestizo in 1763
  • Descendants of (1711) Salvador Rosales the mulatto. Descendants of (1711) Salvador Rosales the mulatto.

Mulattoes in the modern era

Brazil

Main articles: Pardo Brazilians and Mixed-race Brazilian

The term "Pardo" was first used by the Portuguese after their arrival in Brazil in 1500. The earliest reference comes from a letter by Pero Vaz de Caminha. Over time, the term evolved from the Latin word "Pardus" and was used to name birds called "Pardais" in the Middle East and the Americas. Currently, "Pardo" is officially used in Brazil by the IBGE(Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics) for the classification of color/race. "Pardo" can also be known as "mulatto," referring to a person of mixed ethnic ancestry, typically including white, black, and indigenous roots

A Redenção de Cam (Redemption of Ham), by Galician painter Modesto Brocos, 1895, Museu Nacional de Belas Artes. (Brazil) The painting depicts a black grandmother, mulatta mother, white father and their quadroon child, hence three generations of hypergamy through racial whitening.

According to the IBGE 2020 census, 45,3% of Brazilians identified as pardo, a term for people of mixed backgrounds. Many mixed-race Brazilians have varying degrees of European, Amerindian and African ancestry. According to the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics census 2006, some 42.6% of Brazilian identify as pardo, an increase over the 2000 census.

Haiti

Main article: Mulatto Haitians

Mulattoes account for up to 5% of Haiti's population. In Haitian history, such mixed-race people, known in colonial times as free people of color, gained some education and property before the Revolution. In some cases, their white fathers arranged for multiracial sons to be educated in France and join the military, giving them an advance economically. Free people of color gained some social capital and political power before the Revolution, were influential during the Revolution and since then. The people of color have retained their elite position, based on education and social capital, that is apparent in the political, economic and cultural hierarchy in present-day Haiti. Numerous leaders throughout Haiti's history have been people of color.

Many Haitian mulattoes were slaveholders and often actively participated in the oppression of the black majority. Some Dominican mulattoes were also slave owners.

The Haitian Revolution was started by mulattoes. The subsequent struggle within Haiti between the mulattoes led by André Rigaud and the black Haitians led by Toussaint Louverture devolved into the War of Knives. With secret aid from the United States, Toussaint eventually won the conflict and made himself ruler of the entire island of Hispaniola. Napoleon ordered for Charles Leclerc and a substantial army to put down the rebellion; Leclerc seized Toussaint in 1802 and deported him to France, where he died in prison a year later. Leclerc was succeeded by General Rochambeau. With reinforcements from France and Poland, Rochambeau began a bloody campaign against the mulattoes and intensified operations against the blacks, importing bloodhounds to track and kill them. Thousands of black POW and suspects were chained to cannonballs and tossed into the sea. Historians of the Haitian Revolution credit Rochambeau's brutal tactics for uniting black and mulatto soldiers against the French.

Jean-Pierre Boyer, the mulatto ruler of Haiti (1818–43)

In 1806, Haiti divided into a black-controlled north and a mulatto-ruled south. Haitian President Jean-Pierre Boyer, the son of a Frenchman and a former African slave, managed to unify a divided Haiti but excluded blacks from power. In 1847, a black military officer named Faustin Soulouque was made president, with the mulattoes supporting him; but, instead of proving a tool in the hands of the senators, he showed a strong will, and, although by his antecedents belonging to the mulatto party, he began to attach the blacks to his interest. The mulattoes retaliated by conspiring; but Soulouque began to decimate his enemies by confiscation, proscriptions, and executions. The black soldiers began a general massacre in Port-au-Prince, which ceased only after the French consul, Charles Reybaud, threatened to order the landing of marines from the men-of-war in the harbor.

Dominican Republic

Soulouque considered the neighbouring Dominican Republic's white and mulatto rulers as his "natural" enemies. He invaded the Dominican Republic in March 1849, but was defeated at the Battle of Las Carreras by Pedro Santana near Ocoa on 21 April and compelled to retreat. Haitian strategy was ridiculed by the American press:

... a division of negro troops of Faustin ran, and their commander, Gen. Garat, was killed. The main body, eighteen thousand troops, under the Emperor, encountered four hundred Dominicans with a field piece, and notwithstanding the disparity of force, the latter charged and caused the Haytiens to flee in every direction ... Faustin came very near falling into the enemy's hands. They were once within a few feet of him, and he was only saved by Thirlonge and other officers of his staff, several of whom lost their lives. The Dominicans pursued the retreating Haytiens some miles until they were checked and driven back by the Garde Nationale of Port-au-Prince, commanded by Robert Gateau, the auctioneer.

The Haitians were unable to ward off a series of Dominican navy reprisal raids along Haiti's south coast, launched by Dominican president Buenaventura Báez. Despite the failure of the Dominican campaign, Soulouque caused himself to be proclaimed emperor on 26 August 1849, under the name of Faustin I. He was called a rey de farsa (clown emperor) by the Dominicans. Toward the close of 1855, he invaded the Dominican Republic again at the head of an army of 30,000 men, but was again defeated by Santana, and barely escaped being captured. His treasure and crown fell into the hands of the enemy. Soulouque was ousted in a military coup led by mulatto General Fabre Geffrard in 1858–59.

In the eastern two-thirds of Hispaniola, the mulattoes were an ever-growing majority group, and in essence they took over the entire Dominican Republic, with no organized black opposition. Many of its rulers and famous figures were mulattoes, such as Gregorio Luperón, Ulises Heureaux, José Joaquín Puello, Matías Ramón Mella, Buenaventura Báez, and Rafael Trujillo. The Dominican Republic has been described as the only true mulatto country in the world. Pervasive Dominican racism, based on rejection of African ancestry, has led to many assaults against the large Haitian immigrant community, the most lethal of which was the 1937 parsley massacre. Approximately 5,000–67,000 men, women, children, babies and elderly, who were selected by their skin color, were massacred with machetes, or were thrown to sharks.

Dominican Republic

Main article: Mixed Dominicans

Mixed Dominicans, also referred to as mulatto, mestizo or historically quadroon, are Dominicans who are of mixed racial ancestry. Dominican Republic has many racial terms and some are used differently than in other countries, for example Mestizo signifies any racial mix and not solely a European/indigenous mix like in other Latin American countries, while Indio describes people of skin tones between white and black and has nothing to do with native peoples. Representing 73.9% of the Dominican Republic's population, they are by far the single largest racial grouping of the country. Mixed Dominicans are the descendants from the racial integration between the Europeans, Native Americans, and later the Africans. They have a total population of approximately 8 million.

The Dominican Republic was the site of the first European settlement in the Americas, the Captaincy General of Santo Domingo founded in 1493. After the arrival of Europeans and the founding of the colony, African people were imported to the island. The fusion of European, native Taino, and African influences contributed to the development of present-day Dominican culture. From the start of the colonial period in the 1500s, Miscegenation (Mestizaje), intermixing of races particularly Spanish settlers, native Tainos, and imported Africans (free or enslaved), was very strong. In fact, colonial Santo Domingo had higher amount of mixing and lesser racial tensions in comparison to other colonies, even other Spanish colonies, this was due to the fact that for most of its colonial period, Santo Domingo was a poorer colony where even the majority of the white Spanish settlers were poor, which helped foster a relatively peaceful racial atmosphere, allowing for growth in its mixed race population and racial fluidity. Santo Domingo as a colony was used a military base and had an economy based on Cattle ranching, which was a far less labor-intensive than the more common plantation slavery at the time. By the 1700s, the majority of the population was mixed race, forming the basis of the Dominican ethnicity as a distinct people well before independence was achieved. During colonial times, mixed-race/mulatto Dominicans had a lot of influence, they were instrumental in the independence period and the founding of the nation. Many Dominican presidents were mulatto, and mulatto Dominicans have had influence in every aspect of Dominican culture and society.

According to recent genealogical DNA studies of the Dominican population, the genetic makeup is predominantly European and Sub-Saharan African, with a lesser degree of Native American ancestry. The average Dominican DNA of the founder population is estimated to be 73% European, 10% Native, and 17% African. After the Haitian and Afro-Caribbean migrations the overall percentage changed to 57% European, 8% Native and 35% African. Due to mixed race Dominicans (and most Dominicans in general) being a mix of mainly European and African, with lesser amounts of indigenous Taino, they can accurately be described as "Mulatto" or "Tri-racial". Dominican Republic have several informal terms to loosely describe a person's degree of racial admixture, Mestizo means any type of mixed ancestry unlike in other Latin American countries it describes specifically a European/native mix, Indio describes mixed race people whose skin color is between white and black.

In Dominican Republic and some other Latin American countries, it can sometimes be difficult to determine the exact number of racial groups, because the lines between whites and lighter multiracials are very blurry, which is also true between blacks and darker multiracials. As race in Dominican Republic acts as a continuum of white—mulatto—black and not as clear cut as in places like the United States. And many times in the same family, there can be people of different colors and racial phenotypes who are blood related, this is due to the large amounts of interracial mixing for hundreds of years in Dominican Republic and the Spanish Caribbean in general, allowing for high amounts of genetic diversity. The majority of the Dominican population is tri-racial, with nearly all Dominicans having Taíno Native American ancestry along with European and African ancestry. European ancestry in the mixed population typically ranges between 50% and 60% on average, while African ancestry ranges between 30% and 40%, and the Native ancestry usually ranges between 5% and 10%. European and Native ancestry tends to be strongest in cities and towns of the north-central Cibao region, and generally in the mountainous interior of the country. African ancestry is strongest in coastal areas, the southeast plain, and the border regions.

Puerto Rico

Although the average Puerto Rican is of mixed-race, few actually identified as multiracial ("two or more races") in the 2010 census; only 3.3% did so. They more often identified with their predominant heritage or phenotype. However, in the 2020 census, the amount of Puerto Ricans identifying as multiracial went up to 49.8% and an additional 25.5% identified as "some other race", showing a marked change in the way Puerto Ricans view themselves. This may show that Puerto Ricans are now more open to embracing all sides of their mixed-race heritage and do not view themselves as part of the standard race dynamic in the United States hence the high number of people identifying as "some other race", a similar phenomenon went on in the mainland United States with the overall US Hispanic/Latino population. Most have significant ancestry from two or more of the founding source populations of Spaniards, Africans, and Tainos, although Spanish ancestry is predominant in a majority of the population. Similar to many other Latin American ethnic groups, Puerto Ricans are multi-generationally mixed race, though most are European dominant in ancestry, Puerto Ricans who are "evenly mixed" can accurately be described "Mulatto", "Quadroon", or Tri-racial very similar to mixed populations in Cuba and Dominican Republic. Overall, Puerto Ricans are European-dominant Tri-racials, however there are many with near even European and African ancestry. According to the National Geographic Genographic Project, "the average Puerto Rican individual carries 12% Native American, 65% West Eurasian (Mediterranean, Northern European and/or Middle Eastern) and 20% Sub-Saharan African DNA."

Studies have shown that the racial ancestry mixture of the average Puerto Rican (regardless of racial self-identity) is about 64% European, 21% African, and 15% Native Taino, with European ancestry strongest on the west side of the island and West African ancestry strongest on the east side, and the levels of Taino ancestry (which, according to some research, ranges from about 5%-35%) generally highest in the southwest of the island.

A study of a sample of 96 healthy self-identified White Puerto Ricans and self-identified Black Puerto Ricans in the U.S. showed that, although all carried a contribution from all 3 ancestral populations (European, African, and Amerindian), the proportions showed significant variation. Depending on individuals, although often correlating with their self-identified race, African ancestry ranged from less than 10% to over 50%, while European ancestry ranged from under 20% to over 80%. Amerindian ancestry showed less fluctuation, generally hovering between 5% and 20% irrespective of self-identified race.

Many Spaniard men took indigenous Taino and West African wives and in the first centuries of the Spanish colonial period the island was overwhelmingly racially mixed. Under Spanish rule, mass immigration shifted the ethnic make-up of the island, as a result of the Royal Decree of Graces of 1815. Puerto Rico went from being two-thirds black and mulatto in the beginning of the 19th century, to being nearly 80% white by the middle of the 20th century. This was compounded by more flexible attitudes to race under Spanish rule, as epitomized by the Regla del Sacar. Under Spanish rule, Puerto Rico had laws such as Regla del Sacar or Gracias al Sacar, which allowed persons of mixed ancestry to pay a fee to be classified as white, which was the opposite of "one-drop rule" in US society after the American Civil War.

Cuba

In the 2012 Census of Cuba, 26.6% (2.97 million) of the Cubans self-identified as mulatto or mestizo. But the percentage multiracial/mulatto make up varies widely, from as low as 26% to as high as 51%. Unlike, the two other Spanish Caribbean islands (Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico) where nearly everyone even most self-proclaimed whites and blacks are mixed to varying degrees, in Cuba there are significant pure or nearly pure European and African populations. Multi-racials/Mulattos are widespread throughout Cuba. The DNA average for the Cuban population is 72% European, 23% African, and 5% indigenous, though among mulatto Cubans the European and African ancestry is more even.

Prior to the 20th century, majority of the Cuban population was of mixed race descent to varying degrees, with pure Spaniards or criollos being a significant minority. Between 1902 and 1933, some 750,000 Spaniards migrated to Cuba from Europe, which changed the racial demographics of the region rapidly. Many of the newly arrived Spanish migrants did not intermix with the native Cuban population, unlike the earlier colonial settlers and conquistadors who intermixed with Tainos and Africans at large scale rates. Self identified “white” Cubans with colonial roots on the island usually have Amerindian and or African admixture to varying degrees, as well as self identified “black” Cubans with colonial roots having varying degrees of European and or Amerindian admixture.

United States

Colonial and Antebellum eras

See also: Children of the plantation and Shadow family
Advertisement in the Virginia Gazette placed by Thomas Jefferson offering a reward for his escaped slave named Sandy who was defined as "mulatto".

Historians have documented sexual abuse of enslaved women during the colonial and post-revolutionary slavery times by white men in power: planters, their sons before marriage, overseers, etc., which resulted in many multiracial children born into slavery. Starting with Virginia in 1662, colonies adopted the principle of partus sequitur ventrem in slave law, which said that children born in the colony were born into the status of their mother. Thus, children born to slave mothers were born into slavery, regardless of who their fathers were and whether they were baptized as Christians. Children born to white mothers were free, even if they were mixed-race. Children born to free mixed-race mothers were also free.

Paul Heinegg has documented that most of the free people of color listed in the 1790–1810 censuses in the Upper South were descended from unions and marriages during the colonial period in Virginia between white women, who were free or indentured servants, and African or African American men, servant, slave or free. In the early colonial years, such working-class people lived and worked closely together, and slavery was not as much of a racial caste. Slave law had established that children in the colony took the status of their mothers. This meant that multi-racial children born to white women were born free. The colony required them to serve lengthy indentures if the woman was not married, but nonetheless, numerous individuals with African ancestry were born free, and formed more free families. Over the decades, many of these free people of color became leaders in the African-American community; others married increasingly into the white community. His findings have been supported by DNA studies and other contemporary researchers as well.

A daughter born to a South Asian father and Irish mother in Maryland in 1680, both of whom probably came to the colony as indentured servants, was classified as a "mulatto" and sold into slavery.

Historian F. James Davis says,

Rapes occurred, and many slave women were forced to submit regularly to white males or suffer harsh consequences. However, slave girls often courted a sexual relationship with the master, or another male in the family, as a way of gaining distinction among the slaves, avoiding field work, and obtaining special jobs and other favored treatment for their mixed children (Reuter, 1970:129). Sexual contacts between the races also included prostitution, adventure, concubinage, and sometimes love. In rare instances, where free blacks were concerned, there was marriage (Bennett, 1962:243–68).

Creole woman with black servant, New Orleans, 1867.

Historically in the American South, the term mulatto was also applied at times to persons with mixed Native American and African American ancestry. For example, a 1705 Virginia statute reads as follows:

"And for clearing all manner of doubts which hereafter may happen to arise upon the construction of this act, or any other act, who shall be accounted a mulatto, Be it enacted and declared, and it is hereby enacted and declared, That the child of an Indian and the child, grand child, or great grand child, of a negro shall be deemed, accounted, held and taken to be a mulatto."

However, southern colonies began to prohibit Indian slavery in the eighteenth century, so, according to their own laws, even mixed-race children born to Native American women should be considered free. The societies did not always observe this distinction.

Certain Native American tribes of the Inocoplo family in Texas referred to themselves as "mulatto". At one time, Florida's laws declared that a person from any number of mixed ancestries would be legally defined as a mulatto, including White/Hispanic, Black/Native American, and just about any other mix as well.

In the United States, due to the influence and laws making slavery a racial caste, and later practices of hypodescent, white colonists and settlers tended to classify persons of mixed African and Native American ancestry as black, regardless of how they identified themselves, or sometimes as Black Indians. But many tribes had matrilineal kinship systems and practices of absorbing other peoples into their cultures. Multiracial children born to Native American mothers were customarily raised in her family and specific tribal culture. Federally recognized Native American tribes have insisted that identity and membership is related to culture rather than race, and that individuals brought up within tribal culture are fully members, regardless of whether they also have some European or African ancestry. Many tribes have had mixed-race members who identify primarily as members of the tribes.

If the multiracial children were born to slave women (generally of at least partial African descent), they were classified under slave law as slaves. This was to the advantage of slaveowners, as Indian slavery had been abolished. If mixed-race children were born to Native American mothers, they should be considered free, but sometimes slaveholders kept them in slavery anyway. Multiracial children born to slave mothers were generally raised within the African-American community and considered "black".

"Mulattoes returning from town with groceries and supplies near Melrose, Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana." Marion Post Wolcott, Farm Security Administration, July 1940

California

See also: Los Angeles Pobladores

The first pioneers of Alta California were of mulatto ancestry.

Louisiana

Three different race classifications appear in this public notice by the executor of the last will of Andre Deshotels, deceased, regarding emancipation of his former slaves. (Opelousas Patriot, St. Landry Parish, November 3, 1855, via Chronicling America digital newspaper archive)

The American Guide to Louisiana, published by the Federal Writers Project in 1941, included a breakdown of traditional race classifications in that region, stating "The following elaborate terminology, now no longer in use because of the lack of genealogical records upon which to base finely drawn blood distinctions, was once employed to differentiate between types according to diminution of Negro blood." (Original orthography preserved.)

Term Parentage "Percentage of Negro blood"
Sacatro Negro and Griffe 87.5
Griffe Negro and Mulatto 75
Marabon Mulatto and Griffe 62.5
Mulatto Negro and white 50
Os rouge Negro and Indian 50
Tierceron Mulatoon and Quadroon 37.5
Quadroon White and Mulatto 25
Octoroon White and Quadroon 12.5

A 1916 history called The Mulatto in the United States reported two other archaic race-classification systems:

From Frederick Law Olmsted's A Journey to the Seaboard Slave States (1854)
Header text Header text
Sacatra griffe and negress
Griffe Negro and mulatto
Marabon mulatto and griffe
Mulatto white and Negro
Quadroon white and mulatto
Metif white and Quadroon
Meamelouc white and metif
Quarteron white and meamelouc
Sang-mele white and quarteron
From Charles Davenport's Heredity of Skin Color in Negro-White Crosses (1910)
Header text Header text
Mulatto Negro and white
Quadroon mulatto and white
Octoroon quadroon and white
Cascos mulatto and mulatto
Sambo mulatto and Negro
Mango sambo and Negro
Mustifee octoroon and white
Mustifino mustifee and white

Contemporary era

Further information: Multiracial Americans

Mulatto was used as an official census racial category in the United States, to acknowledge multiracial persons, until 1930. (In the early 20th century, several southern states had adopted the one-drop rule as law, and southern Congressmen pressed the US Census Bureau to drop the mulatto category: they wanted all persons to be classified as "black" or "white".)

Since 2000, persons responding to the census have been allowed to identify as having more than one type of ethnic ancestry.

Mulatto (Biracial in the U.S.) populations come from various sources. Firstly, the average ancestral DNA of African Americans is about 90% African, 9% European, and 1% indigenous. Lighter skinned (African descendant Americans) are usually "more mixed" than the average African American, with the white ancestors sometimes being several generations back, which gives them a multiracial phenotype. Some of these lighter African Americans have abandoned the black identity and started to identify as multiracial. Many small isolate mixed race groups, such as for example Louisiana Creole people, got absorbed into the overall African American population. There also growing numbers of black/white interracial couples and multiracial people of recent origins– parents being of different races. Many immigrants who are racially Mulattos, have come to the United States from countries like Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico, being most prevalent in cities like New York and Miami.

Colonial references

See also

References

Notes
  1. Corominas describes his doubts on the theory as follows: " does not derive from the Arab muwállad, 'acculturated foreigner' and sometimes 'mulatto' (see 'Mdí'), as Eguílaz would have it, since this word was pronounced 'moo-EL-led' in the Arabic of Spain. In the 19th century, Reinhart Dozy (Supplément aux Dictionnaires Arabes, Vol. II, Leyden, 1881, 841a) rejected this Arabic etymology, indicating the true one, supported by the Arabic nagîl, 'mulatto', derived from nagl, 'mule'."
  2. General Pedro Santana, who also held the Spanish noble name Marquess de las Carreras.
Citations
  1. "Mulatta definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary". www.collinsdictionary.com. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
  2. "mulato | Traducción de MULATTO al inglés por Oxford Dictionary en Lexico.com y también el significado de MULATTO en español". Lexico Dictionaries (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 29 June 2020. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
  3. ^ Nicholas Patrick Beck (1975). The Other Children: Minority Education in California Public Schools from Statehood to 1890. University of California, Los Angeles. p. 132. Strictly speaking, a "mulatto" is the first-generation offspring of a white and a Negro. Often regarded, even in the 19th century, as an offensive term, the word was frequently used to indicate a person of any mixture of caucasian and Negro ancestry.
  4. “Is 'mulat' taboo?”. trouw.nl
  5. Quote: In English and among many African Americans, the term "mulatto" carries offensive connotations. In Spanish and Portuguese, however, and among U.S. Latinos/as and Latin Americans, the term mulato/a (so spelled) not only does not carry an offensive connotation but has become a sign of pride and identity. (in "Grace and Humanness: Theological Reflections Because of Culture by Orlando O. Esp, Orbis Books, 2007)
  6. "Mulatto". Lexico Dictionaries. Archived from the original on 28 June 2020. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
  7. "Dictionary.com | Meanings & Definitions of English Words". Dictionary.com. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  8. "Ethnic Groups Of The Dominican Republic". WorldAtlas. 25 April 2017. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  9. Montinaro, Francesco; Busby, George B.J.; Pascali, Vincenzo L.; Myers, Simon; Hellenthal, Garrett; Capelli, Cristian (24 March 2015). "Unravelling the hidden ancestry of American admixed populations". Nature Communications. 6: 6596. Bibcode:2015NatCo...6.6596M. doi:10.1038/ncomms7596. PMC 4374169. PMID 25803618.
  10. ^ "Ethnic Groups Of Cape Verde". WorldAtlas. 5 June 2018. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  11. Barker, Jean E. (12 September 2012). "Cape Verdean-Americans: A Historical Perspective of Ethnicity and Race". Trotter Review. 10 (1). Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  12. "Cabo Verde | Culture, Facts & Travel | - CountryReports". www.countryreports.org. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  13. "Cabo Verde - The World Factbook". www.cia.gov. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  14. Fisher, Gene A.; Model, Suzanne (2012). "Cape Verdean identity in a land of Black and White". Ethnicities. 12 (3): 354–379. doi:10.1177/1468796811419599. S2CID 145341841.
  15. "Produto | Detalhes | Gente sem sorte: A invenção dos mulatos no Brasil Colonial Livraria UFG".
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  1. The U.S. Census Bureau excludes Brazilian Americans from the "Hispanic or Latino" category.
Casta terms for interracial marriage in Spanish America
Parent Black ——— Peninsular ——— Peninsular ——— Amerindian ——— Black
1st generation Mulatto Criollo Mestizo Zambo
2nd generation (with one Spanish parent) Cuarterón de negro Criollo Castizo Moreno
2nd generation (with one Amerindian parent) Chino Mestizo Cholo Cambujo
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