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  1. More Images

    Spanish Filipinos

    A Hispanic ethnic identity

    Spanish Filipino or Hispanic Filipino are Filipinos of Spanish descent. The term may also include Filipino mestizos of Spanish ancestry and Hispanicized native Filipinos who identify with Spanish culture and may or may not speak the Spanish language. Forming a part of the Spanish diaspora, the heritage of Spanish Filipinos may come recently from Spain, be descendants of the original Spanish settlers during the Spanish colonial period, or from Spain's colonies in Latin America. Many of their communities in Spain, Mexico, the United States, Australia, Canada, Latin America and the Philippines trace their origin to the early settlers from Europe and Southeast Asia during the Spanish colonial period and in recent overseas migration in the 1900s. Wikipedia

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  2. lajornadafilipina.com

    Dec 22, 2023"Anti-Spanish sentiments are strongest in our country considering the fact that Spanish is no longer an official language here. Thus, the 'activism' done by Filipino Hispanists, including myself, is merely a reaction against this unjust treatment."
  3. en.wikipedia.org

    Spanish Filipino or Hispanic Filipino (Spanish: Español Filipino, Hispano Filipino, Tagalog: Kastílâ Filipino, Cebuano: Katsílà Filipino) are Filipinos of Spanish descent. The term may also include Filipino mestizos of Spanish ancestry and Hispanicized native Filipinos who identify with Spanish culture and may or may not speak the Spanish language. [20] Forming a part of the Spanish ...
  4. famousfix.com

    Lourdes Castrillo-Brillantes is a Filipino writer in the Spanish language, professor, and a Premio Zobel awardee in 1998. She has authored works such as 81 Años del Premio Zobel (81 Years of the Premio Zobel), which documented the history of the Premio Zobel and its winners; and the Tesoro Literario de Filipinas, a compilation of Filipino ...
  5. The term "Hispanist", strictly speaking, is someone who studies Hispanic culture. There are several types of Hispanists, sure, but for the most part it is an academic term. Ambeth Ocampo, for example, is a Hispanist, because that's his research interest. In the same vein, a "Filipinist" is someone who studies Filipino culture, and it in no way is supposed to mean that person is a "indigenista ...
  6. elneptunoazul.blogspot.com

    The answer is that the Filipino hispanists are all in responsible positions, as teachers, journalist, and politicians. The hispanists belong almost exclusively to the upper class of Manila; the Spanish Club is the most exclusive club in the capital; society news is the mainstay of the Voz de Manila .
  7. vamospanish.com

    Oct 19, 2023The Spanish-Filipino influence is an integral part of Filipino culture and language, shaped by centuries of historical ties and cultural assimilation. Spain's colonization of the Philippines for over 300 years left a lasting impact on the customs, traditions, and cultural norms of the Filipino people.
  8. lajornadafilipina.com

    Later, it was translated into English and into its present-day Filipino version. The leaders of the independence movement, along with many other revered Filipino heroes such as Emilio Aguinaldo, Marcelo H. del Pilar, Apolinario Mabini, Antonio and Juan Luna, Emilio Jacinto and Jose Rizal were Spanish-speaking Filipinos. Were they Hispanic?
  9. tagaloglang.com

    Spanish remains alive in some creole languages, such as Chabacano. In Manila, the Cervantes Institute has given Spanish classes for years, and the Philippine Academy of the Spanish Language is involved in the teaching and standard use of Spanish in the Philippines. But there is no institution or association that brings together and defends the interests of Hispanic Filipinos themselves.

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