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Hondurans

Hondurans (Spanish: Hondureños; also Catrachos) are the citizens of Honduras. Most Hondurans live in Honduras, although there is also a significant Honduran diaspora, particularly in the United States, Spain, and many smaller communities in other countries around the world.

Hondurans
Hondureños
Total population
 Honduras          9,942 million
Regions with significant populations
 United States773,045[1]
 Spain99,418[1] 149,949 (2022)[2]
 Mexico38,764[1]
 Nicaragua13,110[1]
 El Salvador11,878[1]
 Belize9,784[1]
 Guatemala9,023[1]
 Canada8,382[1]
 Costa Rica4,708[1]
 Italy3,225[1]
 Panama1,797[1]
 Germany1,596[1]
 Switzerland740[1]
 United Kingdom694[1]
 Colombia690[1]
 France669[1]
 Netherlands574[1]
 Ecuador489[1]
 Dominican Republic442[1]
 Sweden410[1]
 Australia343[1]
 Belgium322[1]
 Peru311[1]
 Guinea285[1]
 Venezuela275[1]
 Bolivia257[1]
 Jamaica162[1]
 Brazil160[1]
 Denmark155[1]
 Norway133[1]
Languages
Religion
Predominantly Roman Catholic and Protestant; irreligious and other religious minorities exist[3]
Related ethnic groups

Catracho or Catracha Edit

Latin Americans refer to a person from Honduras as a Catracho or Catracha. The term was coined by Nicaraguans in the mid-19th century when Honduran General Florencio Xatruch returned from battle with his Honduran and Salvadoran soldiers after defeating American freebooters commanded by William Walker, whose purpose was to re-establish slavery and take over all of Central America. As the general and his soldiers returned, some Nicaraguans yelled out ¡Aquí vienen los xatruches!, meaning "Here come Xatruch's boys!" However, Nicaraguans had so much trouble pronouncing the general's Catalan last name that they altered the phrase to los catruches and ultimately settled on las catrachas or los catrachos.[4]

History Edit

 
Lempira, native hero of the Lenca culture.

Before the conquest, "Honduras was inhabited by an aboriginal population descended from different ethnic groups." 1 Among these are: Los Lencas, Payas, Chorotegas, Xicaques, Chortis, just to mention a few. All of these groups lacked "cultural unity," and "probably had a Mesoamerican and South American cultural origin. "According to some historians: «These cultures achieved great progress in the various fields of human knowledge, driven by the development of a varied agriculture ... In this way they guaranteed adequate food for their large population. They also applied techniques of great perfection in fabrics and ceramics. They developed an intense and varied trade. »

In the north-western section of Honduras predominated the peoples of the Chortís, a Mayan group located in Copán and Ocotepeque, and the Lencas that extended through the departments of Santa Bárbara, Lempira, Intibucá, La Paz, Comayagua, Francisco Morazán and Valle. And part of what today comprises the territory of El Salvador.[5]

The rest of the Honduran territory was inhabited by peoples from the south of the continent, with a nomadic and semi-nomadic culture, governed by primitive communal production relations. Among these peoples were Tolupanes (also known as "xicaques"), Pechs (also known as "payas"), Tawahkas and Misquitos who, as a whole, made up the majority of the country's population.

According to the Honduran sociologist Guillermo Molina Chocano, the first counts of the Honduran population are the product of estimates made by "historians, chroniclers, and travelers." Most of these coincide that upon the arrival of the Spanish, the aboriginal population both in Honduras and the rest of America was very numerous. For example, the Milanese traveler, Girolaneo Benzoni (Historia del Nuevo Mundo, 1572) assures that:

"When the Spanish went to conquer the region of Honduras ... they encountered more than four hundred thousand Indians ..."Others (El Costo de la Conquista, 1992) claim that "the aboriginal population of Honduras was approximately 800,000 indigenous people.

For some historians "The starting point to study the population is the general census for the province of Honduras prepared by the mayor Don Ramón de Anguiano." "9 10 which" gave in 1801 a population of 130,000 in 249 inhabited centers." "If the evolution of the Honduran population is compared, since the end of the 16th century, "with the figures of 1778, 1791 and In 1801, no substantial modifications are observed in the behavior of the population ... "In such a way" says Molina Chocano, "that it is not possible to specify the evolution of the population in the Colonial period as a whole." However, they can detect some phenomena in the years of transition towards the republican stage and throughout the 19th century.

In 1816, five years before independence, "the Mayor Don Juan Antonio Tomos issued a report of his visit in 1815, in which he indicated 100,000 inhabitants in 39 curatos and 8 villages of Caribbean blacks near Trujillo (estimated at about 10,000 ) for a total of 110,000 inhabitants. After independence" the population of 1826[6] (200,000 people) is based on the calculation made by Mr. Dionisio de Herrera, former head of the state of Honduras; the same as the of 1850 (350,000 people) that rests on the calculation made by Mr. E. G. Squier "13 If the census of 182614 is taken into account and compared" with the calculation of the Archbishop of Guatemala, Don Francisco de Paula García Peláez, in 1838, (173,365 inhabitants (21,165 Spaniards, 106,668 Ladinos and 45,532 Indians), 15 a clear decrease in the rate of population growth can be observed in the years "after independence and" during the existence of the Central American Federation. "

Other ethnic groups

Demographics Edit

Considering metropolitan areas only, the Honduran capital is the fourth largest Central American urban agglomeration, after Guatemala City, Managua, and San Salvador.

Population Edit

In 2017 Honduras had a population of more than 9 million people. Honduras had a population of 7.4 million according to the Honduras 2001 Census of Population. The most populous Departments are: Cortés (1.2 million), Francisco Morazán (1.2 million), Yoro (466,000), Olancho (420,000), Choluteca (391,000) and Comayagua (353,000). The least populous are Bay Islands and Gracias a Dios.

According to the same source, the main cities are: Tegucigalpa (894,000-Central District only), San Pedro Sula (517,000), Choloma (160,000), La Ceiba (140,000), El Progreso (106,000), Choluteca, Comayagua, Puerto Cortés, La Lima and Danlí. However, the main metropolitan areas are Tegucigalpa (1,200,000-est. 2007-) and San Pedro Sula (900,000). Between the 1988 and 2001 Census, San Pedro Sula's population doubled. The country has 20 cities with more than 20,000 inhabitants.

According to the 2013 census Hondurans are[citation needed]:

Group Total %
Mestizo 6 886 470 82,93
White 653 637 7,87
Indigenous 601 824 7,25
Garifuna 61 617 0,74
Black 54 178 0,65
Other 46 046 0,55

Ethnic groups Edit

Mestizos Edit

 
Poet, Roberto Sosa.

The majority of the Honduran population is Mestizo (a mixture of Spaniards and Amerindian), these people are descended from immigrants from Spain and Amerindian people like the Lencas and Mayans. According to studies the Mestizo population makes up 40% of the total population of Honduras. Mestizos have also most representation on Media due the fact of being the majority.

Blacks Edit

The Afro-Honduran population are around 1-2%.[7][8][9] They mainly reside on the country's Caribbean or Atlantic coast. The black population comes from a number of sources. Many are the descendants of the West Indian islands. Another large group are the Garífuna, descendants of an Afro-Carib population which revolted against British authorities on the island of St. Vincent and were forcibly moved to Belize and Honduras during the 18th century. Garífunas are part of Honduran identity through theatrical presentations such as Louvavagu.

Amerindian Edit

 
Stele of king Uaxaclajuun Ub'aah K'awiil of Copan, The mayan-Chorti presence has been strong in western Honduras.

The Amerindian population consists of seven indigenous groups recognized by the Confederation of Autochthonous Peoples of Honduras (CONPAH) and the government of Honduras, among them they recognize the Afro-Caribbean and Garífuna groups which are not Amerindian.

The seven indigenous groups are: the Ch'orti', a Mayan group living in the northwest on the border with Guatemala; the Garifuna speaking a Carib language, which live along the entire Caribbean coastline of Honduras, and in the Bay Islands; the Pech or Paya Indians living in a small area in the Olancho department; the Tolupan (also called Jicaque, "Xicaque", or Tol), living in the Department of Yoro and in the reserve of the Montaña de la Flor and parts of the department of Yoro; the Lenca Indians living in the western highlands of Intibuca, Lempira, La Paz, Valle and Choluteca departments; and the Miskito Indians living on the northeast coast in the Gracias A Dios department and along the border with Nicaragua.

Whites Edit

 
Honduran hero, Francisco Morazán. He was of Italian-spaniard ancestry.

White Hondurans or white people from Honduras (colloquially called cheles), is a term used to refer to those Hondurans who are cataloged or considered as white people. However, the term white in Honduras similar to other Latin American countries is quite ambiguous, and some white people would not be classified as such in other countries. The first whites in Honduras came with Columbus in 1502, during the entire 16th century came a huge spaniard migration to Honduras. Whites of Honduran origin are also descended from immigrants who arrived from Europe, such as places like Catalonia, Germany, Italy and East Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries. Percentages have varied from 1% to 7%.[10]

Genetics Edit

A study carried out on general honduran mestizo population and Garífuna samples from the Caribbean coast of Honduras, showed the following results:[11]

Population European African Indigenous
Honduras 58,4% 5,4% 36,2%
Garífunas 26,0% 62,0% 12,0%

Religion Edit

 
Cathedral of Santa Rosa de Copan.

Indigenous faiths Edit

 
Mayan rain god Chaac at a museum in Copan

While the country is dominated by Christianity, indigenous peoples typically maintain elements of their original spiritualities in a sort of syncretism.

Garifuna religion Edit

The Garífuna religion is the Dugú, it is a mixture of African, Catholic, and indigenous beliefs.

Christianity Edit

Today, Hondurans are primarily Catholic with 46% and Protestants 41%, dividing equally between Protestants and Catholics. Historically, at the beginning of the 20th century, due to the influence of the United States that arrived during this period, Protestants outnumbered the Catholics, representing two-thirds of the country, mainly in the north.

With the loss of the Protestant regions after World War II, coupled with the increase in agnosticism and atheism in the eastern region of the country the Protestant population decreased. Today there are rural and urban regions where Protestantism has ceased to predominate.

Atheists, Nonreligious Edit

A survey found that 23% of Hondurans are considered without religion (15% non-religious and 8% atheists)

Other religions Edit

Honduras has small communities of Jewish and Bahai Faith people,

Culture Edit

Honduras is a multi-ethnic and multicultural country with a heritage of more than 12 thousand years of history. 28% of the Honduran population is indigenous from different groups or ethnicities that have left their mark on both the culture and the gastronomy of the country. Another element is Spanish, which left a deep mark on the culture of the country. The popular culture of the Honduran people, as in most countries, consists of artistic creations attended by large audiences or shows. Such artistic-cultural exhibitions are held during certain days of the year through very creative celebrations.

Holidays Edit

 
Our lady of Suyapa.

Among the most popular holidays are; on September 15, Honduras' independence day. This commemoration is carried out with parades of schools and colleges throughout the country. Some companies also participate who adorn the parade with floats of any kind. Since the conquest of Honduras, the predominant religion in the country is Catholic, because of this, special interest is given to the Holy Week celebrations.

The day of the Virgin of Suyapa is celebrated on February 3 of each year with a great pilgrimage to Tegucigalpa to give it veneration. During the Easter holidays, most of the population takes advantage of this holiday week that begins on Wednesday and ends on Sunday to walk on the beaches and spas of the country, and enjoy the tropical summer that is only enjoyed at this time of year mainly on the North and South Coast of Honduras.[12]

Literature Edit

Literature in Honduras dates back to the Mayan codices, although new literary genres were introduced after the conquest. Among the most notable writers of Honduras are David Fortin, Froylán Turcios, Juan Ramón Molina, Rafael Heliodoro Valle, Antonio José Rivas, Clementina Suárez, Ramón Amaya Amador, Marco Antonio Rosa, Roberto Sosa, Lucila Gamero de Medina, Roberto Quezada, Armando García , Helen Umaña, Alberto Destephen, Argentina Díaz Lozano, Rony Bonilla and Julio Escoto.

Cinema Edit

Cinema in the country has its true beginning in 1962. The first official Honduran filmmaker was Sami Kafati, who studied cinematography in Rome in the 1960s. His first cinematographic work was the experimental short film Mi Amigo Ángel. Produced in 1962, it is the first fictional cinematographic work produced in Honduras. According to the Honduran film historian Marxis Lenin Hernández "the film was not so well received in its time, but today it is highly valued." This short film has a great expressive force and a great social and artistic sensitivity. The most prominent modern Honduran filmmakers are Hispano Duron, Rene Pauck, and Juan Carlos Fanconi.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad "Honduras - Emigrantes totales". expansion.com/ Datosmacro.com (in Spanish).
  2. ^ "Población por comunidades". ines.es (in Spanish).
  3. ^ The Latin American Socio-Religious Studies Program / Programa Latinoamericano de Estudios Sociorreligiosos (PROLADES) PROLADES Religion in America by country
  4. ^ Sánchez Ramírez, Roberto. . La Prensa (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2007-11-10. Retrieved 2007-11-27.
  5. ^ "Senate Roslution No. 410". www.legis.state.pa.us. Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  6. ^ "Correspondence". Scientific American. 62 (7): 103. 1890-02-15. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican02151890-103. ISSN 0036-8733.
  7. ^ "Honduras". CIA World Factbook. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  8. ^ Louis., Appiah, Anthony. Gates, Henry (1999). Africana : the encyclopedia of the African and African American experience. Basic Civitas Books. OCLC 1024166471.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ "Afro-Hondurans 1%" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2016-04-25.
  10. ^ "Honduras - Indigenous, Mestizo, Garifuna | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-08-17.
  11. ^ Salazar-Flores, J.; Zuñiga-Chiquette, F.; Rubi-Castellanos, R.; Álvarez-Miranda, J. L.; Zetina-Hérnandez, A.; Martínez-Sevilla, V. M.; González-Andrade, F.; Corach, D.; Vullo, C.; Álvarez, J. C.; Lorente, J. A.; Sánchez-Diz, P.; Herrera, R. J.; Cerda-Flores, R. M.; Muñoz-Valle, J. F. (2015-02-01). "Admixture and genetic relationships of Mexican Mestizos regarding Latin American and Caribbean populations based on 13 CODIS-STRs". HOMO. 66 (1): 44–59. doi:10.1016/j.jchb.2014.08.005. ISSN 0018-442X. PMID 25435058.
  12. ^ "Honduras | History, Geography, & Culture | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-11-05.

External links Edit

  Media related to People of Honduras at Wikimedia Commons

hondurans, spanish, hondureños, also, catrachos, citizens, honduras, most, live, honduras, although, there, also, significant, honduran, diaspora, particularly, united, states, spain, many, smaller, communities, other, countries, around, world, hondureñosflag,. Hondurans Spanish Hondurenos also Catrachos are the citizens of Honduras Most Hondurans live in Honduras although there is also a significant Honduran diaspora particularly in the United States Spain and many smaller communities in other countries around the world HonduransHondurenosFlag of HondurasTotal population Honduras 9 942 millionRegions with significant populations United States773 045 1 Spain99 418 1 149 949 2022 2 Mexico38 764 1 Nicaragua13 110 1 El Salvador11 878 1 Belize9 784 1 Guatemala9 023 1 Canada8 382 1 Costa Rica4 708 1 Italy3 225 1 Panama1 797 1 Germany1 596 1 Switzerland740 1 United Kingdom694 1 Colombia690 1 France669 1 Netherlands574 1 Ecuador489 1 Dominican Republic442 1 Sweden410 1 Australia343 1 Belgium322 1 Peru311 1 Guinea285 1 Venezuela275 1 Bolivia257 1 Jamaica162 1 Brazil160 1 Denmark155 1 Norway133 1 LanguagesSpanishIndigenous languagesReligionPredominantly Roman Catholic and Protestant irreligious and other religious minorities exist 3 Related ethnic groupsSpaniardsHonduran AmericansMexicansArabsAfro HonduransMestizosGarifunasMayansLencaGuatemalansSalvadoransNicaraguans Contents 1 Catracho or Catracha 2 History 3 Demographics 3 1 Population 4 Ethnic groups 4 1 Mestizos 4 2 Blacks 4 3 Amerindian 4 4 Whites 5 Genetics 6 Religion 6 1 Indigenous faiths 6 2 Garifuna religion 6 3 Christianity 6 4 Atheists Nonreligious 6 5 Other religions 7 Culture 7 1 Holidays 7 2 Literature 7 3 Cinema 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksCatracho or Catracha EditLatin Americans refer to a person from Honduras as a Catracho or Catracha The term was coined by Nicaraguans in the mid 19th century when Honduran General Florencio Xatruch returned from battle with his Honduran and Salvadoran soldiers after defeating American freebooters commanded by William Walker whose purpose was to re establish slavery and take over all of Central America As the general and his soldiers returned some Nicaraguans yelled out Aqui vienen los xatruches meaning Here come Xatruch s boys However Nicaraguans had so much trouble pronouncing the general s Catalan last name that they altered the phrase to los catruches and ultimately settled on las catrachas or los catrachos 4 History Edit Lempira native hero of the Lenca culture Before the conquest Honduras was inhabited by an aboriginal population descended from different ethnic groups 1 Among these are Los Lencas Payas Chorotegas Xicaques Chortis just to mention a few All of these groups lacked cultural unity and probably had a Mesoamerican and South American cultural origin According to some historians These cultures achieved great progress in the various fields of human knowledge driven by the development of a varied agriculture In this way they guaranteed adequate food for their large population They also applied techniques of great perfection in fabrics and ceramics They developed an intense and varied trade In the north western section of Honduras predominated the peoples of the Chortis a Mayan group located in Copan and Ocotepeque and the Lencas that extended through the departments of Santa Barbara Lempira Intibuca La Paz Comayagua Francisco Morazan and Valle And part of what today comprises the territory of El Salvador 5 The rest of the Honduran territory was inhabited by peoples from the south of the continent with a nomadic and semi nomadic culture governed by primitive communal production relations Among these peoples were Tolupanes also known as xicaques Pechs also known as payas Tawahkas and Misquitos who as a whole made up the majority of the country s population According to the Honduran sociologist Guillermo Molina Chocano the first counts of the Honduran population are the product of estimates made by historians chroniclers and travelers Most of these coincide that upon the arrival of the Spanish the aboriginal population both in Honduras and the rest of America was very numerous For example the Milanese traveler Girolaneo Benzoni Historia del Nuevo Mundo 1572 assures that When the Spanish went to conquer the region of Honduras they encountered more than four hundred thousand Indians Others El Costo de la Conquista 1992 claim that the aboriginal population of Honduras was approximately 800 000 indigenous people For some historians The starting point to study the population is the general census for the province of Honduras prepared by the mayor Don Ramon de Anguiano 9 10 which gave in 1801 a population of 130 000 in 249 inhabited centers If the evolution of the Honduran population is compared since the end of the 16th century with the figures of 1778 1791 and In 1801 no substantial modifications are observed in the behavior of the population In such a way says Molina Chocano that it is not possible to specify the evolution of the population in the Colonial period as a whole However they can detect some phenomena in the years of transition towards the republican stage and throughout the 19th century In 1816 five years before independence the Mayor Don Juan Antonio Tomos issued a report of his visit in 1815 in which he indicated 100 000 inhabitants in 39 curatos and 8 villages of Caribbean blacks near Trujillo estimated at about 10 000 for a total of 110 000 inhabitants After independence the population of 1826 6 200 000 people is based on the calculation made by Mr Dionisio de Herrera former head of the state of Honduras the same as the of 1850 350 000 people that rests on the calculation made by Mr E G Squier 13 If the census of 182614 is taken into account and compared with the calculation of the Archbishop of Guatemala Don Francisco de Paula Garcia Pelaez in 1838 173 365 inhabitants 21 165 Spaniards 106 668 Ladinos and 45 532 Indians 15 a clear decrease in the rate of population growth can be observed in the years after independence and during the existence of the Central American Federation Other ethnic groupsDemographics EditMain article Demographics of Honduras Considering metropolitan areas only the Honduran capital is the fourth largest Central American urban agglomeration after Guatemala City Managua and San Salvador Population Edit In 2017 Honduras had a population of more than 9 million people Honduras had a population of 7 4 million according to the Honduras 2001 Census of Population The most populous Departments are Cortes 1 2 million Francisco Morazan 1 2 million Yoro 466 000 Olancho 420 000 Choluteca 391 000 and Comayagua 353 000 The least populous are Bay Islands and Gracias a Dios According to the same source the main cities are Tegucigalpa 894 000 Central District only San Pedro Sula 517 000 Choloma 160 000 La Ceiba 140 000 El Progreso 106 000 Choluteca Comayagua Puerto Cortes La Lima and Danli However the main metropolitan areas are Tegucigalpa 1 200 000 est 2007 and San Pedro Sula 900 000 Between the 1988 and 2001 Census San Pedro Sula s population doubled The country has 20 cities with more than 20 000 inhabitants According to the 2013 census Hondurans are citation needed Group Total Mestizo 6 886 470 82 93White 653 637 7 87Indigenous 601 824 7 25Garifuna 61 617 0 74Black 54 178 0 65Other 46 046 0 55Ethnic groups EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mestizos Edit Poet Roberto Sosa The majority of the Honduran population is Mestizo a mixture of Spaniards and Amerindian these people are descended from immigrants from Spain and Amerindian people like the Lencas and Mayans According to studies the Mestizo population makes up 40 of the total population of Honduras Mestizos have also most representation on Media due the fact of being the majority Blacks Edit The Afro Honduran population are around 1 2 7 8 9 They mainly reside on the country s Caribbean or Atlantic coast The black population comes from a number of sources Many are the descendants of the West Indian islands Another large group are the Garifuna descendants of an Afro Carib population which revolted against British authorities on the island of St Vincent and were forcibly moved to Belize and Honduras during the 18th century Garifunas are part of Honduran identity through theatrical presentations such as Louvavagu Amerindian Edit Stele of king Uaxaclajuun Ub aah K awiil of Copan The mayan Chorti presence has been strong in western Honduras The Amerindian population consists of seven indigenous groups recognized by the Confederation of Autochthonous Peoples of Honduras CONPAH and the government of Honduras among them they recognize the Afro Caribbean and Garifuna groups which are not Amerindian The seven indigenous groups are the Ch orti a Mayan group living in the northwest on the border with Guatemala the Garifuna speaking a Carib language which live along the entire Caribbean coastline of Honduras and in the Bay Islands the Pech or Paya Indians living in a small area in the Olancho department the Tolupan also called Jicaque Xicaque or Tol living in the Department of Yoro and in the reserve of the Montana de la Flor and parts of the department of Yoro the Lenca Indians living in the western highlands of Intibuca Lempira La Paz Valle and Choluteca departments and the Miskito Indians living on the northeast coast in the Gracias A Dios department and along the border with Nicaragua Whites Edit Honduran hero Francisco Morazan He was of Italian spaniard ancestry White Hondurans or white people from Honduras colloquially called cheles is a term used to refer to those Hondurans who are cataloged or considered as white people However the term white in Honduras similar to other Latin American countries is quite ambiguous and some white people would not be classified as such in other countries The first whites in Honduras came with Columbus in 1502 during the entire 16th century came a huge spaniard migration to Honduras Whites of Honduran origin are also descended from immigrants who arrived from Europe such as places like Catalonia Germany Italy and East Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries Percentages have varied from 1 to 7 10 Genetics EditA study carried out on general honduran mestizo population and Garifuna samples from the Caribbean coast of Honduras showed the following results 11 Population European African IndigenousHonduras 58 4 5 4 36 2 Garifunas 26 0 62 0 12 0 Religion Edit Cathedral of Santa Rosa de Copan Indigenous faiths Edit Mayan rain god Chaac at a museum in CopanWhile the country is dominated by Christianity indigenous peoples typically maintain elements of their original spiritualities in a sort of syncretism Garifuna religion Edit The Garifuna religion is the Dugu it is a mixture of African Catholic and indigenous beliefs Christianity Edit Today Hondurans are primarily Catholic with 46 and Protestants 41 dividing equally between Protestants and Catholics Historically at the beginning of the 20th century due to the influence of the United States that arrived during this period Protestants outnumbered the Catholics representing two thirds of the country mainly in the north With the loss of the Protestant regions after World War II coupled with the increase in agnosticism and atheism in the eastern region of the country the Protestant population decreased Today there are rural and urban regions where Protestantism has ceased to predominate Atheists Nonreligious Edit A survey found that 23 of Hondurans are considered without religion 15 non religious and 8 atheists Other religions Edit Honduras has small communities of Jewish and Bahai Faith people Culture EditHonduras is a multi ethnic and multicultural country with a heritage of more than 12 thousand years of history 28 of the Honduran population is indigenous from different groups or ethnicities that have left their mark on both the culture and the gastronomy of the country Another element is Spanish which left a deep mark on the culture of the country The popular culture of the Honduran people as in most countries consists of artistic creations attended by large audiences or shows Such artistic cultural exhibitions are held during certain days of the year through very creative celebrations Holidays Edit Our lady of Suyapa Among the most popular holidays are on September 15 Honduras independence day This commemoration is carried out with parades of schools and colleges throughout the country Some companies also participate who adorn the parade with floats of any kind Since the conquest of Honduras the predominant religion in the country is Catholic because of this special interest is given to the Holy Week celebrations The day of the Virgin of Suyapa is celebrated on February 3 of each year with a great pilgrimage to Tegucigalpa to give it veneration During the Easter holidays most of the population takes advantage of this holiday week that begins on Wednesday and ends on Sunday to walk on the beaches and spas of the country and enjoy the tropical summer that is only enjoyed at this time of year mainly on the North and South Coast of Honduras 12 Literature Edit Literature in Honduras dates back to the Mayan codices although new literary genres were introduced after the conquest Among the most notable writers of Honduras are David Fortin Froylan Turcios Juan Ramon Molina Rafael Heliodoro Valle Antonio Jose Rivas Clementina Suarez Ramon Amaya Amador Marco Antonio Rosa Roberto Sosa Lucila Gamero de Medina Roberto Quezada Armando Garcia Helen Umana Alberto Destephen Argentina Diaz Lozano Rony Bonilla and Julio Escoto Cinema Edit Cinema in the country has its true beginning in 1962 The first official Honduran filmmaker was Sami Kafati who studied cinematography in Rome in the 1960s His first cinematographic work was the experimental short film Mi Amigo Angel Produced in 1962 it is the first fictional cinematographic work produced in Honduras According to the Honduran film historian Marxis Lenin Hernandez the film was not so well received in its time but today it is highly valued This short film has a great expressive force and a great social and artistic sensitivity The most prominent modern Honduran filmmakers are Hispano Duron Rene Pauck and Juan Carlos Fanconi See also EditCulture of Honduras History of Honduras Honduran Americans Human rights in Honduras Arab immigration to Honduras History of the Jews in Honduras Italian migration to Honduras Spaniards in Honduras Honduras portal HispanicsReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Honduras Emigrantes totales expansion com Datosmacro com in Spanish Poblacion por comunidades ines es in Spanish The Latin American Socio Religious Studies Program Programa Latinoamericano de Estudios Sociorreligiosos PROLADES PROLADES Religion in America by country Sanchez Ramirez Roberto El general que trajo a los primeros catrachos La Prensa in Spanish Archived from the original on 2007 11 10 Retrieved 2007 11 27 Senate Roslution No 410 www legis state pa us Retrieved 2020 11 05 Correspondence Scientific American 62 7 103 1890 02 15 doi 10 1038 scientificamerican02151890 103 ISSN 0036 8733 Honduras CIA World Factbook Retrieved 30 October 2016 Louis Appiah Anthony Gates Henry 1999 Africana the encyclopedia of the African and African American experience Basic Civitas Books OCLC 1024166471 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Afro Hondurans 1 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2016 04 25 Honduras Indigenous Mestizo Garifuna Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2023 08 17 Salazar Flores J Zuniga Chiquette F Rubi Castellanos R Alvarez Miranda J L Zetina Hernandez A Martinez Sevilla V M Gonzalez Andrade F Corach D Vullo C Alvarez J C Lorente J A Sanchez Diz P Herrera R J Cerda Flores R M Munoz Valle J F 2015 02 01 Admixture and genetic relationships of Mexican Mestizos regarding Latin American and Caribbean populations based on 13 CODIS STRs HOMO 66 1 44 59 doi 10 1016 j jchb 2014 08 005 ISSN 0018 442X PMID 25435058 Honduras History Geography amp Culture Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 11 05 External links Edit Media related to People of Honduras at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hondurans amp oldid 1172473176, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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