indios
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Answer this question… Peninsulares
The Portuguese and Spanish.
I think the Answer is the English, Spanish, French, Swedes,and Dutch
Spanish, Native American and African
Spanish, Native American and African
The vast majority of the population in Spanish America was made up of Indigenous peoples and people of mixed descent, known as mestizos. Indigenous groups originally inhabited the region before European colonization, while mestizos emerged from the intermarriage between Spanish colonizers and Indigenous individuals. Together, these groups formed a significant portion of the demographic landscape in Spanish colonies throughout the Americas.
The middle class system in Spanish America was made up of professionals such as lawyers, doctors, and teachers; merchants and traders; skilled craftsmen; and some landowners. These groups were economically comfortable but did not have as much wealth and power as the upper class.
white, spanish, Portuguese, African Americans, and indigenous people (native Americans)
The largest ethnic groups in South America are those that are nationalized: Brazilian Colombian Argentine Venezuelan Peruvian Chilean Ecuadorian Bolivian Paraguayan Uruguayan Guyanese Surinamese Large minority ethnic groups include American, German, British, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Mexican, and Japanese.
The class system in Spanish America was primarily made up of peninsulares (those born in Spain), criollos (those born in the Americas of Spanish descent), mestizos (mixed European and indigenous ancestry), mulattos (mixed European and African ancestry), indigenous peoples, and enslaved Africans. These groups were hierarchically structured with peninsulares at the top and indigenous peoples and enslaved Africans at the bottom.
The natives did not have advanced technology and the Spanish carried diseases such as smallpox that they had grown immune to but these diseases were new to the natives and killed many of them before they even went out to battle