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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: COR-CRE |
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CREOLE (the Fr. form of criollo, a West Indian, probably a negro corruption of the Span. criadillo, the dim. of criado, one bred or reared, from criar, to breed, a derivative of the Lat. creare, to create) , a word used originally (16th century) to denote persons born in the West Indies of Spanish parents, as distinguished from immigrants direct from Spain, aboriginals, negroes or mulattos. It is now used of the descendants of non-aboriginal races born and settled in the West Indies, in various parts of the American mainland and in Mauritius, Reunion and some other places colonized by Spain, Portugal, France, or (in the case of the West Indies) by England. In a similar sense the name is used of animals and plants. The use of the word by some writers as necessarily implying a person of mixed blood is totally erroneous; in itself " creole " has no distinction of colour; a creole may be a person of European, negro, or mixed extraction or even a horse
Local variations occur in the use of the word as applied to people. In the West Indies it designates the descendants of any European race; in the United States the French-speaking native portion of the white
South
Mexico
white
population , but is also occasionally used of the inhabitants of European descent. The difference in type between the white creoles and the European races from whom they have sprung, a difference often considerable, is due principally to changed environmentespecially to the tropical or semi-tropical climate of the lands they inhabit. The many patois
term
some writers to include similar dialects spoken in countries where the word creole is rarely used. See G. W. Cable, The Creoles of Louisiana (1884) ; A. Coelho, " Os Dialetos romanicos on neo Latinos na Africa, Asia
End of Article: CREOLE (the Fr. form of criollo, a West Indian, probably a negro corruption of the Span. criadillo, the dim. of criado, one bred or reared, from criar, to breed, a derivative of the Lat. creare, to create) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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