When Spain conquered Mexico, they created the Viceroyalty of New Spain. Mexico remained a Spanish colony from 1535 until 1821. A lot of the Spanish customs and language remained and were adopted by Mexicans. Most of the southwest continued to be part of Mexico until the Mexican-American War (1846-1848) when Mexico lost California, Nevada, Utah, Texas and parts of Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, and Wyoming to the United States.
The Southwest region's Spanish and Mexican Culture can be attributed to its history of Spanish colonization and Mexican influence. This area was originally part of New Spain, which included present-day Mexico and southwestern United States. As a result, the Spanish language, cuisine, architecture, and traditions have heavily influenced the cultural landscape of the Southwest.
In Spanish, "chicano" refers to an American of Mexican descent or a person who identifies with Mexican-American culture or heritage.
Some examples of such influence include language (Spanish), religion (Roman Catholicism) as well as several traditions such as Easter, Christmas or New Year's Eve.
Yes, "Southwest Indian Culture" should be capitalized as it refers to a specific cultural group or heritage from the southwestern region of the United States.
Yes, Selena was fluent in Spanish and spoke it often, both in her personal life and in her music. She was proud of her Mexican-American heritage and embraced her roots by incorporating Spanish language and culture into her work.
Yes, but not exclusively. A nationality means, basically, that you could have a passport from that country and there are definitely Spanish nationals with Spanish passports. As the community answer below notes, Spanish is often used as an ethnicity for people who are not Spanish nationals, but have ancestors who were Spanish nationals and have Spanish or Hispanic culture.
spanish
Mexican or Spanish
The southwest was part of Mexico from 1821 until 1848; the cowboy culture is of Mexican origin; the Tex-Mex food is also of Mexican origin.
Her Grandparents are Mexican, but She's not.. But she still has Mexican Roots!
The most important would be the cowboy culture, which was copied from the Mexican 'vaqueros' (literally, cowboys in Spanish) who developed several haciendas in northern Mexico, (nowadays the US Southwest). From there, you have several other traits, such as the rodeo and the Tex-Mex cuisine, based on the traditions from these cowhands.
The defeat of Mexico in the Mexican War.Before then the southwest was controlled by MexicoThe people who had lived there for centuries had Spanish ancestors and spoke Spanish
Arthur L. Campa has written: 'Treasure of the Sangre De Cristos Tales and Traditions of the Spanish Southwest' 'Hispanic folklore studies of Arthur L. Campa' -- subject(s): Folklore, Social life and customs, Mexican Americans 'A bibliography of Spanish folk-lore in New Mexico' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Folklore 'Hispanic culture in the Southwest' -- subject(s): Civilization, Spanish influences 'Spanish religious folktheatre in the Southwest' -- subject(s): Folk drama, Spanish American, Religious drama, Spanish, Spanish American Folk drama, Spanish Religious drama
Mexican culture is the result of a mix between the Native American civilizations living there until the 15th century -- of special importance are the Aztec and Mayan civilizations -- as well as the Spanish culture, brought by Spanish conquistadors from 1521 until Mexican independence in 1821.
While language plays a significant role in expressing culture, it is still possible to share aspects of a culture without sharing the same language. Cultural exchange can occur through food, art, music, and traditions that transcend language barriers and enable people to connect and understand each other's cultures.
The American southwest was first explored and settled by the Spanish who brought their Catholic religious customs to the area. The food is probably more of a blend between Spanish and Indian tastes. Indians showed the Spanish what was edible in the New World and everyone put it all together and so the taco was born! Also, The area was once a part of Mexico.
Ancient Indian, Modern Mexican, and Spanish.
Mexican culture, is comprised of European Spanish and indegenous cultures. However, the Spanish culture in Mexico is twisted to make it uniquelly Mexican. The culture of Mexico differs from that of Spain. Tacos for example, are an indegenous Central American-Indian cusine, not a Spanish cuisine. For the indegenous people in not only Mexico, but also Guatemala, Bolivia, Belize (non-Spanish speaking) all make tortilla-based food. Some Spanish in Mexico also uses native Indian words, not those from Castilian (European Spanish).