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Venezuelans

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People of Venezuela
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Ethnic group
Venezuelans
Venezolanos
Total population
c.33.5 million
Diaspora
c.7.89 million
0.44% of world's population
Regions with significant populations
Venezuela     28,199,867 (2021)[1][2]
Colombia2,820,000[3]
Peru1,662,889[4][5][6][7]
United States1,168,271(2024)[8]
Chile728,586(2023)[9]
Brazil626,885(2024)[10]
Spain518,918(2023)[11]
Ecuador500,000[12][13]
Argentina162,495[14]
Dominican Republic124,100[15][16]
Portugal100,000[17]
Panama94,400[18]
Trinidad and Tobago78,849[19][20]
Syria60,000 - 200,000[21][22]
Italy59,000 - 150,000[23][24][25]
Mexico53,000[17]
Uruguay33,000[26][27]
France30,000[28]
 Canada28,395[29]
Germany20,000[19][17]
French Guiana
(Overseas France)
19,000[30]
Bolivia18,940[31]
Aruba17,000[32]
Curaçao17,000[32]
United Kingdom15,000[17]
Cuba15,000[17]
Lebanon12,000[33][34]
Australia10,000[17]
Ireland5,000[17]
Paraguay4,000[35]
Puerto Rico3,108[36]
Costa Rica3,000[17]
Guyana3,000[17]
United Arab Emirates2,500[17]
Sweden2,274[37]
New Zealand2,000[17]
Denmark1,325[38]
China1,000[17]
Netherlands1,000[17]
Saudi Arabia1,000[17]
South Africa1,000[17]
Bonaire713[39]
Sint Maarten600[40]
Languages
PrimarilyVenezuelan Spanish (96.6%)[41]
Other languages
Religion
Christian majority:Catholicism (71.0%),Protestantism (Evangelicals) (22.0%), other Christians:Eastern Orthodoxy,Mormonism,Jehovah Witnesses

Irreligion,Deism,Agnosticism andAtheism: (8.0%)

minorities:Santería (1%),Judaism (0.05%)[44]
Related ethnic groups
Spaniards,Mestizo,Amerindians

Venezuelans (Spanish:venezolanos) are thecitizens identified with the country ofVenezuela. This connection may be through citizenship, descent or cultural. For most Venezuelans, many or all of these connections exist and are the source of their Venezuelan citizenship or their bond to Venezuela.

Venezuela is adiverse andmultilingual country, home to a melting pot of people of distinct origins, as a result, many Venezuelans do not regard their nationality with ethnicity, but with citizenship or allegiance. Venezuela as Argentina and Brazil, received most immigrants, during 1820s to 1930s Venezuela received a major wave of 2.1 million European immigrants, being the third country in Latin America to have received Europeans, behind Argentina and Brazil.[45]

Historical and ethnic aspects

[edit]

Pre-Columbian period

[edit]

Writing was not used in pre-Columbian times, a historical stage where various groups began to move throughout the Americas, thus making it difficult to find evidence of the people who began to populate this land. However, archaeological excavations show evidence of certain periods that were taking place on the continent.

Venezuela was probably first settled by humans 16,000 years ago, due to migration flows from other indigenous cultures of America, from the south to the Amazon, from the west through Los Andes and north by theCaribbean Sea.

There are four periods of diversity that develop in the current Venezuela, which also entering a new period, it did not mean the end of the previous.

The first migrations to the continent were probably from East Asia to 15,000 years. C. These early migrants (called forth by the generic name "Indians") came at first to be located in North America, later moving to the territory of present Venezuela.

During this period, various mammals were disappearing by climatic changes already beginning to take place from 5000 years ago, so the population in the mainland, starts to move towards the coast and spread to some nearby islands, trying to find new feeding alternatives.

Colonization

[edit]

On August 2, 1498 (516 years),Christopher Columbus, and the Spanish colonizers' ships, first landed on the American mainland in what is currently Venezuelan territory. Colonization was rapid despite small local indigenous rebellions, and the Spaniards managed to conquer the territory. During this period, the most significant crossbreeding process took place. One that will later define the social profile of the country.

With the passage of time, and the introduction of the African continent, a third race, the Africans, started to integrate into the population, creating heterogeneity in the faces of the society of the time.

Duringcolonial times (16th, 17th, and 18th centuries), "peninsular whites" began to settle Venezuela, coming directly from theIberian Peninsula, primarily from theBasque region. These people tended to hold positions in the crown, and they represented 15% of the population. Another group of whites who were born in Venezuela were originally called "Creole", representing 20% of the population: they were mostly from the Canary Islands and they worked mainly in petty trade. The other two smaller groups were the original inhabitants (Indians) and Venezuelan-born blacks originally brought from Africa: they were about 5% of the population. Soon the racial groups started to intermix and the "browns" were created. They are mixed descendants of Whites, Indians, Blacks, and other Browns. By the 18th century, they were the largest racial group in Venezuela, making up more than 60% of the population.

This process is currently responsible for the majority of Venezuelans who are of mixed race. This number, however, would continue to decrease after the economic boom in the mid 20th century.

Current ethnic groups

[edit]

The country has a diverse population that reflects its rich history and the people that have lived here since antiquity to the present. The historic amalgam of different principal groups form the basis of the current demographics of Venezuela: the European immigrants, the Amerindian peoples, African, and other recent immigrants.

Many of the indigenous peoples were absorbed by the mixed population, but the remaining 500,000 currently represent more than 85 different cultures.

European immigrants were mainly Spanish colonists, but another large and growing number are descendants of Europeans (Portuguese,Italians,Germans andAmericans) who migrated to the region in mid-twentieth century during the oil growth in the country. Small numbers are descendants ofFrench,English andPolish, as they emigrated during World War II and the Cold War.

Black Africans were brought as slaves, mostly coastal lowlands, beginning early in the sixteenth century and continuing into the nineteenth century. Other immigrant populations are Asian and Middle East, particularly Lebanon, Syria and the Arab world, some Jews from southern Spain, Israel and Central European nations, Dominicans, Trinidadians and Tobagonians, Haitians, Cubans, Peruvians, Argentines, Uruguayans, Chileans, Ecuadorians, Guyaneses and Colombians, this being the greatest social impact due to a large number of displaced individuals who entered the Venezuelan territory during the armed conflict in that country; which generated a high supply of labor, personnel and domestic economy informal.

Ethnic-somatic characteristics

[edit]
Venezuelan people inCanada.
Boys fromMargarita Island,Nueva Esparta.

As of 1981, according to the critic D'Ambrosio and other academics, about 51.6% of Venezuelans are mestizos or mulattos (calledCriollos: the 40% of them are with mostly white features, 20% with mostly black features and 10% with mostly Indians features), 45% are white, 2% are black and 1% Indians. According to these scholars, is the fact that virtually there are no pure blacks nor indigenous people in Venezuela. With the exception of direct descendants of immigrants or specific indigenous tribes.

In addition, according to a genetic autosomal DNA study conducted in 2008 by the University of Brasilia (UNB), the composition of the population of Venezuela is: 60.60% European, 23% of Native American contribution and 16% of Africa's contribution.[46]

Demography

[edit]
Main article:Demographics of Venezuela
Venezuelans in a protest against theBolivarian Revolution inSão Paulo,Brazil.
Venezuelan diaspora in the world
  Venezuela
  + 1,000,000
  + 100,000
  + 10,000
  + 1,000

The population of approximately 28 million people (in 2011)[47]made Venezuela the sixth-most populous country inLatin America (afterBrazil,Mexico,Colombia,Argentina andPeru). Approximately more than one million (4-6% of the total population) are living in other countries. Due to the worsening economic conditions in Venezuela, there are 100,000 Venezuelans living in neighbouring Guyana and larger numbers living in Peru, Colombia, Brazil, Ecuador, the USA, Trinidad and Tobago, Chile and Panama.[48]

More than ninety percent of the Venezuelans live in urban areas – a figure significantly higher than the world average. The literacy rate (98 percent) in Venezuela is also well above the world average, and the rate of population growth slightly exceeds the world average. A large proportion of Venezuelans are young, largely because of recent decreases in the infant mortality rate. While 30 percent of the people are 14 years old or younger, just 4 percent are aged 65 or older.

Ethnic groups

[edit]
Family in 1961
Venezuelan girls dancing

The country has a diverse population that reflects its colorful history and the peoples that have resided there throughout. The historic amalgam of the different main groups forms the basics of Venezuela's current demographics:European immigrants,Amerindian peoples,Africans,Asians(including theArabs/West Asians) and other recent immigrants. The autosomal DNA genetic composition of population in Venezuela, is 60.60% of European contribution, 23% of Amerindian contribution, and 16.30% of African contribution.[46]

Moreno population of Venezuela in 2011.
White population of Venezuela in 2011.
Amerindian population of Venezuela in 2011.
Afro-descendant population of Venezuela in 2011.

Morenos

[edit]
Main article:Moreno Venezuelans

Many of the indigenous peoples were absorbed into theMoreno population, because of the heavy mixture of European and African people. They represent over half of the country's population (about 51.6%).[49] This proportion is beginning to decrease, though, as mixed lower income Venezuelans are more likely to flee to other South American countries.[50]

Europeans

[edit]
Main articles:European Venezuelan andHistory of the Jews in Venezuela

Early European settlers and post-independence immigrants were mostlySpanish colonists, but a high number of other Europeans brought in were fromPortuguese,Italian, andGerman immigrants to the region in the middle 20th century by thePetroleum Growth, and in much smaller numbers ofFrench,English,Portuguese,Polish,Russian,Greek,Scandinavian,Romanian,Ukrainian andHungarian communities who immigrated during theSecond World War and theCold War. 300,000 Italians and an equal numbers of Spaniards and immigrated in the 1940s and 1950s, and earlier who were fleeing from theSpanish Civil War (1930s).

Up to 95% of Venezuelans live principally in important urban areas likeGreater Caracas,Maracaibo,Maracay,Valencia,Lecheria,Barquisimeto/Cabudare,Colonia Tovar,Punto Fijo; theAndean States,Margarita Island andAraya Peninsula.[51] They represent almost half of the population with 43.6% self-identifying as ‘blanco’ (white) in the 2011 census.[49]

Afro-Venezuelans

[edit]
Main article:Afro-Venezuelan
Nercely Soto, Afro-Venezuelan athlete

African people were brought asslaves, mostly to the coastal lowlands, beginning early in the 16th century, and continuing into the mid 19th century. Although they are located in almost the entire country, the Black and African population are concentrated in places where they used to be enslaved and worked as farm hands on subsistence farms ofplantains,cocoa,tobacco,sugar cane andcotton in theAroa Valley,Litoral varguense,Eastern Falcon state;Gibraltar,Bobures andPalmarito in theSur del Lago Region; and in areas where slaves would run away duringColonial Venezuela and formed cumbes, communities in mountainous and isolated areas, such as, theSierra de Falcón,Barlovento Region (Acevedo,Andrés Bello,Brión,Buroz andPáez municipalities),Ocumare de La Costa,Choroní;El Callao andParia Peninsula (whereAfro-Trinidadian also migrated); and throughLos Llanos, well dispersed in small to decent percents. They represent 3.6% of the population.[49]

Amerindians

[edit]
Main article:Indigenous peoples in Venezuela
VenezuelanWayuu family inZulia

Before the Spanish colonization of the region that would become the country of Venezuela, the territory was the home to many differentindigenous peoples. Today more than fifty different indigenous ethnic groups inhabit Venezuela. Most of them speak languages belonging to theArawakan,Cariban, andChibchan languages families. Pure indigenous Amerindians comprise around 2 percent of the population.[52] There are 101 languages listed for Venezuela in the Ethnologue database, of which 80 are spoken today as living languages. Today, they're mostly located south of theOrinoco, in theGuayana Region, an area that covers half of the country but the population represents just 2.7% of Venezuelans; other important regions where they're located are onZulia state,Apure state, theEastern Region andOrinoco Delta.

Asians

[edit]

East and South Asians

[edit]
Main articles:Chinese Venezuelan,Japanese Venezuelan,Korean Venezuelan, andIndian Venezuelan

The largest sub-groups are immigrants or descendants of immigrants from Mainland China, Philippines, India, Japan and Korea. The first wave of immigrants began in 1847 and consisted of mainly Cantonese immigrants; then the second wave during beginning of the 1940s and 1950s, consisted of Chinese and Japanese immigrants;[53] reaching a peak in the mid-1970s in connection with theoil boom, where Korean[54][55] and Indian immigrants (mostlyIndo-Caribbeans) formed a new group to the country. Asian people represent around 1% of the Venezuelan population.

TheChinese in Venezuela are the 4th largest diaspora inthe Americas after theUnited States,Canada andPeru.[citation needed]

Arabs/West Asians

[edit]
Main articles:Arab Venezuelan andLebanese Venezuelan

Arab immigration to Venezuela started as early as the 19th and 20th centuries. They came mostly from Western Asia, particularlyLebanon,Syria, andPalestine. According to the president of the Federación de Entidades Árabes de Venezuela (FEARAB), the Arab community in the country numbers around 2 million people.[56] They are mostly located in the most important urban areas andMargarita Island, representing around 5% of the population in Venezuela.[57] In religion, the majority ofArab-Venezuelans are Christians who belong to theRoman Catholic,Eastern Orthodox andEastern Rite Catholic Churches. There are fewMuslims.

Israel has been chosen by manyVenezuelan Jews, along with the United States and other countries.[58]

According to the Venezuelan Institute of Statistics, about one million Venezuelans have Syrian origins and more than 20,000 Venezuelans are registered in the Venezuelan Embassy in Damascus.[59] Other sources stated that there is around 60,000Syrian-Venezuelans living in Syria.[60] More than 200,000 people from theSweida area carry Venezuelan citizenship and most are members ofSyria's Druze sect, who immigrated to Venezuela in the past century.[61]

Religion

[edit]
Main article:Religion in Venezuela
Religious affiliation in Venezuela. (2011)[44][62]
Affiliation% of Venezuela population
Christian88.3
 
Catholic71
 
Protestant17
 
Mormon0.3
 
Non-Christian faiths2.7
 
Jewish0.05
 
Muslim0.4
 
Santería1
 
Other Non-Christian faiths1.25
 
Unaffiliated9
 
Agnostic/indifferent6
 
Atheist2
 
Don't know/refused answer1
 
Total100
 

According to a 2011 poll, 88.3 percent of the population is Christian, primarilyRoman Catholic (71%), 17 percentProtestant, and the remaining 0.03 percentMormons (LDS Church).[63] The Venezuelans without religion are 9% (atheist 2%,agnostic or indifferent 6% and doesn't know/doesn't respond 1% ), almost 3% of the population follow other religions (1% of them are ofsanteria).[44][62]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
This articlehas an unclearcitation style. The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style ofcitation andfootnoting.(August 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
  1. ^"World Population Prospects 2022".United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. Retrieved17 July 2022.
  2. ^"World Population Prospects 2022: Demographic indicators by region, subregion and country, annually for 1950–2100"(XSLX) ("Total Population, as of 1 July (thousands)").United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. Retrieved17 July 2022.
  3. ^"DANE - Serie - Notas Estadísticas".www.dane.gov.co.Archived from the original on 12 September 2022. Retrieved4 October 2021.
  4. ^"Refugiados y migrantes de Venezuela". r4v.info. 3 June 2024. Archived fromthe original on 9 November 2024. Retrieved18 November 2024.
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  22. ^Vasquez, Fidel (October 2010)."Venezuela afianza relaciones con Siria" (in Spanish). Aristobulo Isturiz PSUV.Archived from the original on 16 January 2017. Retrieved15 January 2017.en Siria residen más de 60 mil ciudadanos sirio-venezolanos.
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  59. ^Gomez, Diego (February 2012)."EL LEVANTE Y AMÉRICA LATINA. UNA BITÁCORA DE LATINOAMÉRICA EN SIRIA, LÍBANO, JORDANIA Y PALESTINA".distintaslatitudes.net (in Spanish).Archived from the original on 4 April 2023. Retrieved15 January 2017.de acuerdo con el Instituto de Estadística de Venezuela, cerca de un millón de venezolanos tienen orígenes sirios y más de 20 mil venezolanos están registrados en el catastro del consulado sudamericano en Damasco.
  60. ^Vasquez, Fidel (October 2010)."Venezuela afianza relaciones con Siria" (in Spanish). Aristobulo Isturiz PSUV. Archived fromthe original on 16 January 2017. Retrieved15 January 2017.en Siria residen más de 60 mil ciudadanos sirio-venezolanos.
  61. ^"Chavez tells Israelis to disobey 'genocidal' govt". 26 September News. September 2009. Archived fromthe original on 6 October 2018. Retrieved15 January 2017.More than 200,000 people from the Sweida area carry Venezuelan citizenship and most are members of Syria's Druse sect, who immigrated to Venezuela in the past century.
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External links

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