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Wikipedia

Gitanos

The Romani in Spain, generally known by the endonym Calé,[6] or the exonym gitanos (Spanish pronunciation: [xiˈtanos]), belong to the Iberian Romani subgroup known as Calé, with smaller populations in Portugal (known as ciganos) and in Southern France. Their sense of identity and cohesion stems from their shared value system, expressed among the gitanos as the leyes gitanas ('Gypsy laws').[7][8]

Romani people in Spain
Calé, Gitanos
Total population
Estimated 720,000-1,500,000[1][2][3][4]
Regions with significant populations
Andalusia, Valencia, Madrid and Catalonia[5]
Languages
Religion
Roman Catholicism, Evangelicalism
Related ethnic groups
Other Romani people

Traditionally, they maintain their social circles strictly within their patrigroups, as interaction between patrigroups increases the risk of feuding, which may result in fatalities.[9] The emergence of Pentecostalism has impacted this practice, as the lifestyle of Pentecostal gitanos involves frequent contact with Calé people from outside their own patrigroups during church services and meetings. Data on ethnicity are not collected in Spain, although the public pollster CIS estimated in 2007 that the number of Calé present in Spain is probably around one million.[1]

Name

The term gitano evolved from the word egiptano[10] ("Egyptian"), which was the Old Spanish demonym for someone from Egipto (Egypt). "Egiptano" was the regular adjective in Old Spanish for someone from Egypt, however, in Middle and Modern Spanish the irregular adjective egipcio supplanted egiptano to mean Egyptian, probably to differentiate Egyptians proper from Gypsys. Meanwhile, the term egiptano evolved through elision into egitano and finally into gitano, losing the meaning of Egyptian and carrying with it a specific meaning of Romanis in Spain. The two peoples are now unambiguously differentiated in modern Spanish, "egipcios" for Egyptians and "gitanos" for Roma in Spain, with "egiptano" being obsolete for either.

Though etymologically the term gitano originally meant "Egyptian",[11] the use itself of the Old Spanish word meaning "Egyptian" (egiptano) to refer to Romanis in Spain developed in the same way that the English word "Gypsy" also evolved from the English adjective "Egyptian" to refer to Romanis in Britain. Some Romanis, a people originating in the northern regions of the Indian subcontinent, upon their first arrivals to Europe, either claimed to be Egyptians for a more favourable treatment by local Europeans, or were mistaken as Egyptians by local Europeans.

Identity

The group's identity is particularly complex in Spain for a variety of reasons which are examined below. Nevertheless, it can be safely said that both from the perspective of gitano and non-gitano (payo) Spaniards, individuals generally considered to belong to this ethnicity are those of full or near-full gitano descent and who also self-identify as such. A confusing element is the thorough hybridization of Andalusian and Roma culture (and some would say identity) at a popular level. This has occurred to the point where Spaniards from other regions of Spain can commonly mistake elements of one for the other. The clearest example of this is flamenco music and Sevillanas, art forms that are Andalusian rather than gitano in origin but, having been strongly marked by gitanos in interpretative style, is now commonly associated to this ethnicity by many Spaniards. The fact that the largest population of gitanos is concentrated in Southern Spain[12] has even led to a confusion between gitano accents and those typical of Southern Spain even though many Kale populations in the northern half of Spain (such as Galicia) do not speak Andalusian Spanish.[13]

Origin

The Romani people originate from northwestern Hindustan,[14][15][16][17][18][19] presumably from the northwestern Indian state of Rajasthan[18][19] and the Punjab region shared between India and Pakistan.[18]

The linguistic evidence has indisputably shown that roots of Romani language lie in the Indian subcontinent: the language has grammatical characteristics of Indic languages and shares with them a big part of the basic lexicon, for example, body parts, daily routines[20] and numerals.

More exactly, Romani shares the basic lexicon with Hindi and Punjabi. It shares many phonetic features with Marwari, while its grammar is closest to Bengali.[21] Linguistic evaluation carried out in the nineteenth century by Pott (1845) and Miklosich (1882–1888) showed that the Romani language is to be classed as a New Indo-Aryan language (NIA), not a Middle Indo-Aryan (MIA), establishing that the ancestors of the Romani could not have left the Indian subcontinent significantly earlier than AD 1000, then finally reaching Europe several hundred years later.

Genetic findings in 2012 suggest the Romani originated in the northwestern region of the Indian subcontinent and migrated as a group.[15][16][22] According to a genetic study in 2012, the ancestors of present scheduled tribes and scheduled caste populations of northern India, traditionally referred to collectively as the "Ḍoma", are the likely ancestral populations of modern "Roma" in Europe.[23]

Migration to Spain

How and when the Romani arrived in the Iberian Peninsula from Northern India is a question whose consensus is far from being reached. A popular theory, although without any documentation, claims they came from North Africa, from where they would have crossed the Strait of Gibraltar to meet again in France with the northern migratory route.[24] Thus, gitanos would be a deformation of Latin Tingitani, that is, from Tingis, today Tangier. Another, more consistent theory, and well documented, is that they entered the Iberian Peninsula from France. Although there is controversy of the date of the first arrival, since there is evidence of a safe conduct granted in Perpignan in 1415 by the infante Alfonso of Aragon to one Tomás, son of Bartolomé de Sanno, who is said to be "Indie Majoris".[25] Or instead, could be the so-called Juan de Egipto Menor, who entered through France, who in 1425 Alfonso V granted him a letter of insurance, which is mostly accepted as the first Romani person to reach the peninsula.[26]

... As our beloved and devoted Don Juan de Egipto Menor ... understands that he must pass through some parts of our kingdoms and lands, and we want him to be well treated and welcomed ... under pain of our wrath and indignation ... the mentioned Don Juan de Egipto and those who will go with him and accompany him, with all their horses, clothes, goods, gold, silver, saddlebags and whatever else they bring with them, let them go, stay and go through any city, town, place and other parts of our lordship safe and secure ... and giving those safe passage and being driven when the aforementioned don Juan requires it through this present safe conduct ... Delivered in Zaragoza with our seal on January 12 of the year of birth of our Lord 1425. King Alfonso.

In 1435 they were seen in Santiago de Compostela. Gitanos were recorded in Barcelona and Zaragoza by 1447,[27] and in 1462 they were received with honors in Jaén. Years later, to the gitanos, the grecianos, pilgrims who penetrated the Mediterranean shore in the 1480s, were added to them, probably because of the fall of Constantinople. Both of them continued to wander throughout the peninsula, being well received at least until 1493, year in which a group of gitanos arrived at Madrid, where the Council agreed to "... give alms to the gitanos because at the request of the City passed ahead, ten reales, to avoid the damages that could be done by three hundred people who came ... ".

In those years safe conducts were granted to supposedly noble Calé pilgrims. The follow-up of these safe-conducts throughout Spain has provided some data to historians according to Teresa San Román:

  • The number of Romani that entered or inhabited the Peninsula in the 15th-century is estimated at 3,000 individuals.
  • The Roma traveled in variable groups, of 80-150 people, led by a man.
  • Each autonomous group maintained relations at a distance with one of the others, there being perhaps relations of kinship among them (something common today among Spanish Romani).
  • The separation between each group was variable and sometimes some followed the others at close range and by the same routes.
  • The most common survival strategy was to present as Christian pilgrims to seek the protection of a noble.
  • The way of life was nomadic and dedicated to divination and performance (spectacle).

In 1492, the Roma auxiliaries helped the army of the Kingdom of Castile and León in the Reconquista in Granada ending the reign of Muslims in Spain.[28]

Gitanos have a low and little politically committed role, with some particular exceptions, in Andalusian nationalism and identity, which is strongly based on a belief in the oriental basis of Andalusi heritage acted as a bridge between occidental-western and oriental-eastern Andalusian culture at a popular level. The father of such a movement, Blas Infante, in his book Orígenes de lo flamenco y secreto del cante jondo, etymologically, went as far as alleging that the word flamenco derives from Andalusian Arabic fellah mengu, supposedly meaning "escapee peasant". Infante believed that numerous Muslim Andalusians became Moriscos, who were obliged to convert, dispersed and eventually ordered to leave Spain stayed and mixed with the Romani newcomers instead of abandoning their land. These claims have been rejected by many historians and genetic research papers.[29]

 
Spanish Romani people. Yevgraf Sorokin, 1853.
 
A Gypsy dance in the gardens of the Alcázar of Seville.

For about 300 years, Romanies were subject to a number of laws and policies designed to eliminate them from Spain as an identifiable group: Romani settlements were broken up and the residents dispersed; sometimes, Romanies were required to marry non-Roma; they were prohibited from using their language and rituals, and were excluded from public office and from guild membership.[30] In 1749, a major effort to get rid of the Calé population in Spain was carried out through a raid organized by the government.[31]

During the Spanish Civil War, gitanos were not persecuted for their ethnicity by either side.[32] Under the regime of Francisco Franco, gitanos were often harassed or simply ignored, although their children were educated, sometimes forcibly, much as all Spaniards are nowadays.[33]

In the post-Franco era, Spanish government policy has been much more sympathetic, especially in the area of social welfare and social services.[30] In 1977, the last anti-Romani laws were repealed, an action promoted by Juan de Dios Ramírez Heredia, the first Romani deputy.[30]

Beginning in 1983, the government operated a special program of Compensatory Education to promote educational rights for the disadvantaged, including those in Romani communities.[30] During the heroin epidemic that afflicted Spain in the 1980s and 1990s, gitano shanty towns became central to the drug trade, a problem which afflicts Spain to this day.[34] Nevertheless, Spain is still considered a model for integration of gitano communities when compared to other countries with Romani populations in Eastern Europe.[35]

Language

Historically, gitanos spoke Caló fluently, often alongside the language spoken in the region they inhabited. Caló is a type of para-Romani, combining the phonology and grammar of the Catalan or Castilian, with a lexicon derived from Romani. The para-Romani resulting from the combination of Basque and Romani is called Erromintxela. Very few gitanos maintain a comprehensive and functional knowledge of Caló. A study on the actual usage patterns of Caló among a group of mainly Andalusian gitanos concluded that the language currently consists of between 350 and 400 unique terms, the knowledge of which varies considerably among gitanos. This would exclude a similar number of Calo words which have entered mainstream Spanish slang. According to the authors of the study, the majority of gitanos acknowledge that the language is in a terminal state, with many asserting that the language is totally lost.[36]

Religion

In Spain, gitanos were traditionally Roman Catholics who participated in four of the Church's sacraments (baptism, marriage, confirmation, and extreme unction). They follow traditions such as the cult of the Virgin of El Rocío. In 1997, Pope John Paul II beatified the Catholic gitano martyr Ceferino Giménez Malla, in a ceremony reportedly attended by some 3000 Roma.[37] Sara-la-Kali is the patron saint of Romani people.

They rarely go to folk healers, and they participate fully in Spain's state-supported medical system. Gitanos have a special involvement with recently dead kin and visit their graves frequently. They spend more money than non-gitanos of equivalent economic classes in adorning grave sites.[38]

The Spanish New-Protestant/New-Born Federation (mostly composed by members of the Assemblies of God and Pentecostal) claims that 150,000 gitanos have joined their faith in Spain.[39] The Romani Evangelical Assembly is the only religious institution entirely led and composed by Roma. The gitano Evangelical church (Iglesia de Filadelfia) asserts the gitano people originate from a group of Jews who got lost during Moses' lifetime and eventually became the gitanos.[40]

Marriage

The traditional Spanish Romani place a high value on the extended family. Virginity is essential in unmarried women. Both men and women often marry young.[41]

A traditional gitano wedding requires a pedimiento (similar to an engagement party) followed by the casamiento (wedding ceremony), where el yeli must be sung to the bride to celebrate the virginity and honour of the bride (proven by the ritual of the pañuelo). In the pañuelo ritual, a group consisting of an ajuntaora (a professional who is skilled in performing the ritual and is paid by the family), along with the married women of the family, take the bride into a separate room during the wedding and examine her to ascertain that she is a virgin. The ajuntaora is the one who performs the ritual on the bride, as the other women watch to be witnesses that the bride is virgin. The ajuntaora wraps a white, decoratively embroidered cloth (the pañuelo) around her index finger and inserts it shallowly into the vaginal canal of the bride.[42] During this process, the Bartholin's glands are depressed, causing them to secrete a liquid that stains the cloth. This action is repeated with three different sections of the cloth to produce three stains, known as "rosas". This process is conceived by the women as the retrieval of the bride's "honra", her honour, contained within a "grape" inside her genitals which is popped during the examination, and the spillage collected onto the pañuelo.[43]

When finished with the exam, the women come out of the room and sing el yeli to the couple. During this, the men at the wedding rip their shirts and lift the wife onto their shoulders and do the same with the husband, as they sing "el yeli" to them. Weddings can last very long; up to three days is usual in Gitano culture. At weddings, gitanos invite everyone and anyone that they know of (especially other gitanos). On some occasions, payos (gadjos) may attend as well, although this is not common. Through the night, many bulerías are danced and especially sung. Today, rumba gitana or rumba flamenca are a usual party music fixture.

Gitanos may also marry by elopement, an event that garners less approval than a wedding ceremony.[44]

Marginalisation

Marginalisation occurs on an institutional level. Gitano children are regularly segregated from their non-gitano peers and have poorer academic outcomes.[45] In 1978, 68% of adult gitanos were illiterate.[46] Literacy has greatly improved over time, and approximately 10% of gitanos were illiterate as of 2006-2007 (with older gitanos much more likely than younger gitanos to be illiterate).[47] Ninety-eight percent of gitanos live below the poverty line.[48] Health outcomes and housing - including reduced access to clean water and electricity supplies - is poorer amongst Roma compared to non-Roma in Spain and Portugal, in common with the other surveyed European countries.[45]

Roma continue to experience discrimination on an interpersonal level, such as by being refused entry to bars and clubs or losing their jobs if their ethnicity is made known to their employer. In 2016, the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights reported that its survey showed 71 percent of Portuguese cigano, and 51 percent of Spanish gitano had suffered an episode of discrimination within the previous five years.[45] A traditional discriminatory practice in Portugal, where shops and businesses display toad figurines at entrances to dissuade ciganos from entering, was reported as being still widely seen in Portugal in 2019. (Toads are viewed as symbolic of evil and ill-omen in Roma communities in Portugal.) Ciganos and anti-discrimination activists complained of hostility to Roma being commonplace and unremarkable. Some shopkeepers were noted as defending their discouragement of Roma as appropriate.[49][50]

The 2016 Pew Research poll found that 49% of Spaniards held unfavorable views of Roma.[51]

In literature

The gitano in Spanish society have inspired several authors:

The Roma is the most basic, most profound, the most aristocratic of my country, as representative of their way and whoever keeps the flame, blood, and the alphabet of the universal Andalusian truth.

— Federico García Lorca

Music and dance

The art of Flamenco was developed in the Calé Romani culture of Southern Spain. Many famous Spanish flamenco musicians are of Romani ethnicity.[52]

Notable gitanos

 
The ballet dancer Carlotta Grisi as the Romani Paquita (1844).

Following are notable Spanish people of Calé (gitano) ethnicity:

Leaders and politicians

Historians, philologists and writers

  • Silvia Agüero, feminist writer
  • Joaquín Albaicín, writer, lecturer and columnist for the artistic life
  • Matéo Maximoff, French writer born in Barcelona

Poets, novelists and playwrights

  • José Heredia Maya, poet and dramaturge
  • Luis Heredia Amaya, sculptor
  • Antonio Maya Cortés, artist painter and sculptor
  • Fabian de Castro, artist painter

Catholic saints and martyrs

Painters and sculptors

Actors, comedians and entertainers

  • Rogelio Durán, theatre actor and father of Swedish actress Noomi Rapace
  • Pastora Vega, actress
  • Alba Flores, actress; granddaughter of Antonio González (El Pescaílla) and daughter of singer Antonio Flores
  • Jesús Castro (actor), actor of film The Niño.
  • El Comandante Lara, comedian and singer
  • Juan Rosa Mateo, comedian of Duo Sacapuntas

Footballers and football coaches

Other athletes

  • Rafael Soto, equestrian and Olympic medalist
  • Faustino Reyes, boxer
  • José Antonio Jiménez, boxer
  • Patxi Ruiz Giménez, Basque pelota champion

Singers and musicians

Gitano surnames

Due to endogamy, several Spanish surnames are more frequent among the Gitanos,[53][54] though they are not exclusive to them:

See also

  • Triana, Seville, a neighbourhood traditionally linked to Gitano history.
  • Sacromonte, the traditional Gitano quarter of Granada.
  • George Borrow, an English missionary and traveller who studied the Calé of Spain and other parts of Europe.
  • Quinqui, a nomad community of Spain with a similar lifestyle, but of unrelated origin.
  • Cagot, similarly historically persecuted people in France and Spain.
  • Cascarots, an ethnic group in the Spanish Basque country and the French Basque coast sometimes linked to the Cagots.
  • Cleanliness of blood, ethnic discrimination in the Spanish Old Regime.
  • Maragato [es], an ethnic group in Spain who were also discriminated against and have unknown origins.
  • Vaqueiros de alzada, a discriminated group of cowherders in Northern Spain.
  • Xueta a persecuted ethnic minority in Mallorca, often referenced in works discussing the persecution of Cagots in Spain.

References

Sources

  • The Situation of Roma in Spain. The Open Society Institute, 2002 (PDF).
  • Worth, Susannah and Sibley, Lucy R. "Maja Dress and the Andalusian Image of Spain." Clothing and Textiles Research Journal, Summer 1994, Vol. 12, pp. 51–60.

Notes

  1. ^ a b (PDF). Msc.es. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-10-10. Retrieved 2016-05-21.
  2. ^ "Estimations" (JPG). Gfbv.it. Retrieved 2016-05-21.
  3. ^ (PDF). Open Society Institute. 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 December 2007. Retrieved 15 September 2010. The Spanish government estimates the number of Gitanos at a maximum of 650,000.
  4. ^ Recent Migration of Roma in Europe, A study by Mr. Claude Cahn and Professor Elspeth Guild, page 87-8 (09.2010 figures)
  5. ^ "Roma/Gypsies". Minority Rights Group. 19 June 2015.
  6. ^ West, Christina (2011). "Memory—Recollection—Culture—Identity—Space: Social Context, Identity Formation, and Self-construction of the Calé (Gitanos) in Spain". In Meusburger P.; Heffernan M.; Wunder E. (eds.). Cultural Memories. Knowledge and Space (Klaus Tschira Symposia) (PDF). Knowledge and Space. Vol. 4. Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 101–118. doi:10.1007/978-90-481-8945-8_7. ISBN 978-90-481-8945-8.
  7. ^ Gay y Blasco, Paloma (20 December 2002). "'We don't know our descent': how the Gitanos of Jarana manage the past". Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 7 (4): 631–647. doi:10.1111/1467-9655.00081.
  8. ^ Gay y Blasco, Paloma (September 2011). "Agata's story: singular lives and the reach of the 'Gitano law'". Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 17 (3): 445–461. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9655.2011.01701.x.
  9. ^ Gay y Blasco, Paloma (2000). "The Politics of Evangelism: Hierarchy, Masculinity and Religious Conversion Among Gitanos". Romani Studies. 10 (1): 4.
  10. ^ "egiptano - Diccionario Dirae". Dirae.es. Retrieved 23 December 2017.
  11. ^ "Diccionario de la lengua española - Vigésima segunda edición". Buscon.rae.es. Retrieved 2013-08-15.
  12. ^ THE STATE AND THE ROMA IN SPAIN
  13. ^ Labanyi, Jo (2002). Constructing Identity in Contemporary Spain. ISBN 978-0-19-815993-3.
  14. ^ Hancock, Ian F. (2005) [2002]. We are the Romani People. Univ of Hertfordshire Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-902806-19-8: 'While a nine century removal from India has diluted Indian biological connection to the extent that for some Romani groups, it may be hardly representative today, Sarren (1976:72) concluded that we still remain together, genetically, Asian rather than European'{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  15. ^ a b Mendizabal, Isabel (6 December 2012). "Reconstructing the Population History of European Romani from Genome-wide Data". Current Biology. 22 (24): 2342–2349. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2012.10.039. PMID 23219723.
  16. ^ a b Bhanoo, Sindya N. (11 December 2012). "Genomic Study Traces Roma to Northern India". The New York Times.
  17. ^ Current Biology.
  18. ^ a b c K. Meira Goldberg; Ninotchka Devorah Bennahum; Michelle Heffner Hayes (2015-09-28). Flamenco on the Global Stage: Historical, Critical and Theoretical Perspectives. p. 50. ISBN 9780786494705. Retrieved 2016-05-21.
  19. ^ a b Broughton, Simon; Ellingham, Mark; Trillo, Richard (1999). World Music: Africa, Europe and the Middle East. p. 147. ISBN 9781858286358. Retrieved 2016-05-21.
  20. ^ Šebková, Hana; Žlnayová, Edita (1998), (PDF), Ústí nad Labem: Pedagogická fakulta Univerzity J. E. Purkyně v Ústí nad Labem, p. 4, ISBN 978-80-7044-205-0, archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04
  21. ^ Hübschmannová, Milena (1995). "Romaňi čhib – romština: Několik základních informací o romském jazyku". Bulletin Muzea Romské Kultury. Brno: Muzeum romské kultury (4/1995). Zatímco romská lexika je bližší hindštině, marvárštině, pandžábštině atd., v gramatické sféře nacházíme mnoho shod s východoindickým jazykem, s bengálštinou.
  22. ^ "5 Intriguing Facts About the Roma". Live Science. 23 October 2013.
  23. ^ Rai, N; Chaubey, G; Tamang, R; Pathak, AK; Singh, VK (2012), "The Phylogeography of Y-Chromosome Haplogroup H1a1a-M82 Reveals the Likely Indian Origin of the European Romani Populations", PLOS ONE, 7 (11): e48477, Bibcode:2012PLoSO...748477R, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0048477, PMC 3509117, PMID 23209554
  24. ^ DIÁLOGOS. REVISTA ELECTRÓNICA DE HISTORIA
  25. ^ Viellieard, Jeanne, (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-08-20, retrieved 2018-05-20
  26. ^ Unión Romaní 2008-05-09 at the Wayback Machine.
  27. ^ World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples - Spain : Roma/Gypsies
  28. ^ Alejandro Martínez Dhier, La condición social y jurídica de los gitanos en la legislación histórica española (PDF), Universidad de Granada, p. 53
  29. ^ Gusmão, A.; Gusmão, L.; Gomes, V.; Alves, C.; Calafell, F.; Amorim, A.; Prata, M. J. (2008), "A perspective on the history of the Iberian gypsies provided by phylogeographic analysis of Y-chromosome lineages", Annals of Human Genetics, Annals of Human Genetics: Wiley Publishing, 72 (Pt 2): 215–27, doi:10.1111/j.1469-1809.2007.00421.x, PMID 18205888, S2CID 36365458
  30. ^ a b c d Library of Congress Federal Research Division (December 1988). "The Gypsies". Spain: A Country Study. p. 99.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  31. ^ The Great “Gypsy” Round-up in Spain
  32. ^ Resisting Respectability: Gypsies In Saragossa
  33. ^ Flamenco and Its Gitanos An Investigation of the Paradox of Andalusia: History, Politics and Dance Art
  34. ^ Roma in an Expanding Europe: Breaking the Poverty Cycle
  35. ^ The Situation of Roma in Spain
  36. ^ Gamella, Juan F; Fernández, Cayetano; Nieto, Magdalena; Adiego, Ignasi-Xavier (December 2011). "La agonía de una lengua. Lo que queda del caló en el habla de los gitanos. Parte I. Métodos, fuentes y resultados generales". Gazeta de Antropologia (in Spanish). Universidad de Granada. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  37. ^ Bohlen, Celestine (5 May 1997). "Spanish Martyr Is First Gypsy Beatified by Catholic Church". The New York Times.
  38. ^ Gitanos
  39. ^ "Evangelics fish faithful in catholic crisis" 2009-02-28 at the Wayback Machine; FEREDE, October 2008 (in Spanish)
  40. ^ Gay y Blasco 2002 p. 634
  41. ^ A `Different' Body? Desire and Virginity Among Gitanos
  42. ^ "Mujeres Gitanas Documental". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-19.
  43. ^ Gay y Blasco, Paloma (September 1997). "A 'Different' Body? Desire and Virginity Among gitanos". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 3 (3): 517–535. doi:10.2307/3034765. JSTOR 3034765.
  44. ^ Gay y Blasco 1997, p. 528
  45. ^ a b c European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (2016). Second European Union minorities and discrimination survey: Roma - selected findings (PDF) (2nd ed.). Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union. pp. 36–37. ISBN 978-92-9491-871-0. Archived from the original on 2018. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
  46. ^ Experiencias y trayectorias de éxito escolar de gitanas y gitanos en España, p. 100.
  47. ^ Historias de éxito: Modelos para reducir el abandono escolar de la adolescencia gitana, p. 120.
  48. ^ Gay y Blasco, Paloma; Hernández, Liria (24 November 2019). Writing Friendship: a reciprocal ethnography. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-3-030-26542-7.
  49. ^ Vidal, Marta (4 February 2019). "Portuguese shopkeepers using ceramic frogs to 'scare away' Roma". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
  50. ^ Silva, Claudia Carvalho (28 June 2019). "Minipreço retira sapo de loiça usado para afastar ciganos e pede desculpa". PÚBLICO (in Portuguese). Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  51. ^ "Negative opinions about Roma, Muslims in several European nations". Pew Research Center. 11 July 2016.
  52. ^ Leblon, Bernard (2003). Gypsies and Flamenco: The Emergence of the Art of Flamenco in Andalusia. Translated by Ni Shuinear, Sinead. Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press. ISBN 9781902806051.
  53. ^ Diccionario de apellidos españoles, Roberto Faure, María Asunción Ribes, Antonio García, Editorial Espasa, Madrid 2001. ISBN 84-239-2289-8. Section III.3.8 page XXXIX.
  54. ^ Gamella, Juan F.; Gómez Alfaro, Antonio; Pérez Pérez, Juan. "Los apellidos de los gitanos españoles en los censos de 1783-85 - Artículos - Revista de Humanidades". www.revistadehumanidades.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 February 2020.
  55. ^ Nominal Assimilation: The Ethnic and National Identities of the Gitanos or Calé of Spain as Shown by their Surnames in the 1783–1785 Census

External links

  • Romani union (in English)(English exonym present)
  • Romani presence in European Music (in Spanish)

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gitanos news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Romani in Spain generally known by the endonym Cale 6 or the exonym gitanos Spanish pronunciation xiˈtanos belong to the Iberian Romani subgroup known as Cale with smaller populations in Portugal known as ciganos and in Southern France Their sense of identity and cohesion stems from their shared value system expressed among the gitanos as the leyes gitanas Gypsy laws 7 8 Romani people in SpainCale GitanosTotal populationEstimated 720 000 1 500 000 1 2 3 4 Regions with significant populationsAndalusia Valencia Madrid and Catalonia 5 LanguagesCaloSpanishCatalanBasque Erromintxela GalicianAsturianAragoneseRomaOccitan Aranese ReligionRoman Catholicism EvangelicalismRelated ethnic groupsOther Romani peopleTraditionally they maintain their social circles strictly within their patrigroups as interaction between patrigroups increases the risk of feuding which may result in fatalities 9 The emergence of Pentecostalism has impacted this practice as the lifestyle of Pentecostal gitanos involves frequent contact with Cale people from outside their own patrigroups during church services and meetings Data on ethnicity are not collected in Spain although the public pollster CIS estimated in 2007 that the number of Cale present in Spain is probably around one million 1 Contents 1 Name 2 Identity 2 1 Origin 2 2 Migration to Spain 3 Language 4 Religion 5 Marriage 6 Marginalisation 7 In literature 8 Music and dance 9 Notable gitanos 9 1 Leaders and politicians 9 2 Historians philologists and writers 9 3 Poets novelists and playwrights 9 4 Catholic saints and martyrs 9 5 Painters and sculptors 9 6 Actors comedians and entertainers 9 7 Footballers and football coaches 9 8 Other athletes 9 9 Singers and musicians 9 10 Gitano surnames 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Sources 11 2 Notes 12 External linksName EditThe term gitano evolved from the word egiptano 10 Egyptian which was the Old Spanish demonym for someone from Egipto Egypt Egiptano was the regular adjective in Old Spanish for someone from Egypt however in Middle and Modern Spanish the irregular adjective egipcio supplanted egiptano to mean Egyptian probably to differentiate Egyptians proper from Gypsys Meanwhile the term egiptano evolved through elision into egitano and finally into gitano losing the meaning of Egyptian and carrying with it a specific meaning of Romanis in Spain The two peoples are now unambiguously differentiated in modern Spanish egipcios for Egyptians and gitanos for Roma in Spain with egiptano being obsolete for either Though etymologically the term gitano originally meant Egyptian 11 the use itself of the Old Spanish word meaning Egyptian egiptano to refer to Romanis in Spain developed in the same way that the English word Gypsy also evolved from the English adjective Egyptian to refer to Romanis in Britain Some Romanis a people originating in the northern regions of the Indian subcontinent upon their first arrivals to Europe either claimed to be Egyptians for a more favourable treatment by local Europeans or were mistaken as Egyptians by local Europeans Identity EditThe group s identity is particularly complex in Spain for a variety of reasons which are examined below Nevertheless it can be safely said that both from the perspective of gitano and non gitano payo Spaniards individuals generally considered to belong to this ethnicity are those of full or near full gitano descent and who also self identify as such A confusing element is the thorough hybridization of Andalusian and Roma culture and some would say identity at a popular level This has occurred to the point where Spaniards from other regions of Spain can commonly mistake elements of one for the other The clearest example of this is flamenco music and Sevillanas art forms that are Andalusian rather than gitano in origin but having been strongly marked by gitanos in interpretative style is now commonly associated to this ethnicity by many Spaniards The fact that the largest population of gitanos is concentrated in Southern Spain 12 has even led to a confusion between gitano accents and those typical of Southern Spain even though many Kale populations in the northern half of Spain such as Galicia do not speak Andalusian Spanish 13 Origin Edit Main article History of the Romani people The Romani people originate from northwestern Hindustan 14 15 16 17 18 19 presumably from the northwestern Indian state of Rajasthan 18 19 and the Punjab region shared between India and Pakistan 18 The linguistic evidence has indisputably shown that roots of Romani language lie in the Indian subcontinent the language has grammatical characteristics of Indic languages and shares with them a big part of the basic lexicon for example body parts daily routines 20 and numerals More exactly Romani shares the basic lexicon with Hindi and Punjabi It shares many phonetic features with Marwari while its grammar is closest to Bengali 21 Linguistic evaluation carried out in the nineteenth century by Pott 1845 and Miklosich 1882 1888 showed that the Romani language is to be classed as a New Indo Aryan language NIA not a Middle Indo Aryan MIA establishing that the ancestors of the Romani could not have left the Indian subcontinent significantly earlier than AD 1000 then finally reaching Europe several hundred years later Genetic findings in 2012 suggest the Romani originated in the northwestern region of the Indian subcontinent and migrated as a group 15 16 22 According to a genetic study in 2012 the ancestors of present scheduled tribes and scheduled caste populations of northern India traditionally referred to collectively as the Ḍoma are the likely ancestral populations of modern Roma in Europe 23 Migration to Spain Edit How and when the Romani arrived in the Iberian Peninsula from Northern India is a question whose consensus is far from being reached A popular theory although without any documentation claims they came from North Africa from where they would have crossed the Strait of Gibraltar to meet again in France with the northern migratory route 24 Thus gitanos would be a deformation of Latin Tingitani that is from Tingis today Tangier Another more consistent theory and well documented is that they entered the Iberian Peninsula from France Although there is controversy of the date of the first arrival since there is evidence of a safe conduct granted in Perpignan in 1415 by the infante Alfonso of Aragon to one Tomas son of Bartolome de Sanno who is said to be Indie Majoris 25 Or instead could be the so called Juan de Egipto Menor who entered through France who in 1425 Alfonso V granted him a letter of insurance which is mostly accepted as the first Romani person to reach the peninsula 26 As our beloved and devoted Don Juan de Egipto Menor understands that he must pass through some parts of our kingdoms and lands and we want him to be well treated and welcomed under pain of our wrath and indignation the mentioned Don Juan de Egipto and those who will go with him and accompany him with all their horses clothes goods gold silver saddlebags and whatever else they bring with them let them go stay and go through any city town place and other parts of our lordship safe and secure and giving those safe passage and being driven when the aforementioned don Juan requires it through this present safe conduct Delivered in Zaragoza with our seal on January 12 of the year of birth of our Lord 1425 King Alfonso In 1435 they were seen in Santiago de Compostela Gitanos were recorded in Barcelona and Zaragoza by 1447 27 and in 1462 they were received with honors in Jaen Years later to the gitanos the grecianos pilgrims who penetrated the Mediterranean shore in the 1480s were added to them probably because of the fall of Constantinople Both of them continued to wander throughout the peninsula being well received at least until 1493 year in which a group of gitanos arrived at Madrid where the Council agreed to give alms to thegitanosbecause at the request of the City passed ahead ten reales to avoid the damages that could be done by three hundred people who came In those years safe conducts were granted to supposedly noble Cale pilgrims The follow up of these safe conducts throughout Spain has provided some data to historians according to Teresa San Roman The number of Romani that entered or inhabited the Peninsula in the 15th century is estimated at 3 000 individuals The Roma traveled in variable groups of 80 150 people led by a man Each autonomous group maintained relations at a distance with one of the others there being perhaps relations of kinship among them something common today among Spanish Romani The separation between each group was variable and sometimes some followed the others at close range and by the same routes The most common survival strategy was to present as Christian pilgrims to seek the protection of a noble The way of life was nomadic and dedicated to divination and performance spectacle In 1492 the Roma auxiliaries helped the army of the Kingdom of Castile and Leon in the Reconquista in Granada ending the reign of Muslims in Spain 28 Gitanos have a low and little politically committed role with some particular exceptions in Andalusian nationalism and identity which is strongly based on a belief in the oriental basis of Andalusi heritage acted as a bridge between occidental western and oriental eastern Andalusian culture at a popular level The father of such a movement Blas Infante in his book Origenes de lo flamenco y secreto del cante jondo etymologically went as far as alleging that the word flamenco derives from Andalusian Arabic fellah mengu supposedly meaning escapee peasant Infante believed that numerous Muslim Andalusians became Moriscos who were obliged to convert dispersed and eventually ordered to leave Spain stayed and mixed with the Romani newcomers instead of abandoning their land These claims have been rejected by many historians and genetic research papers 29 Spanish Romani people Yevgraf Sorokin 1853 A Gypsy dance in the gardens of the Alcazar of Seville For about 300 years Romanies were subject to a number of laws and policies designed to eliminate them from Spain as an identifiable group Romani settlements were broken up and the residents dispersed sometimes Romanies were required to marry non Roma they were prohibited from using their language and rituals and were excluded from public office and from guild membership 30 In 1749 a major effort to get rid of the Cale population in Spain was carried out through a raid organized by the government 31 During the Spanish Civil War gitanos were not persecuted for their ethnicity by either side 32 Under the regime of Francisco Franco gitanos were often harassed or simply ignored although their children were educated sometimes forcibly much as all Spaniards are nowadays 33 In the post Franco era Spanish government policy has been much more sympathetic especially in the area of social welfare and social services 30 In 1977 the last anti Romani laws were repealed an action promoted by Juan de Dios Ramirez Heredia the first Romani deputy 30 Beginning in 1983 the government operated a special program of Compensatory Education to promote educational rights for the disadvantaged including those in Romani communities 30 During the heroin epidemic that afflicted Spain in the 1980s and 1990s gitano shanty towns became central to the drug trade a problem which afflicts Spain to this day 34 Nevertheless Spain is still considered a model for integration of gitano communities when compared to other countries with Romani populations in Eastern Europe 35 Language EditMain article Calo language Historically gitanos spoke Calo fluently often alongside the language spoken in the region they inhabited Calo is a type of para Romani combining the phonology and grammar of the Catalan or Castilian with a lexicon derived from Romani The para Romani resulting from the combination of Basque and Romani is called Erromintxela Very few gitanos maintain a comprehensive and functional knowledge of Calo A study on the actual usage patterns of Calo among a group of mainly Andalusian gitanos concluded that the language currently consists of between 350 and 400 unique terms the knowledge of which varies considerably among gitanos This would exclude a similar number of Calo words which have entered mainstream Spanish slang According to the authors of the study the majority of gitanos acknowledge that the language is in a terminal state with many asserting that the language is totally lost 36 Religion EditIn Spain gitanos were traditionally Roman Catholics who participated in four of the Church s sacraments baptism marriage confirmation and extreme unction They follow traditions such as the cult of the Virgin of El Rocio In 1997 Pope John Paul II beatified the Catholic gitano martyr Ceferino Gimenez Malla in a ceremony reportedly attended by some 3000 Roma 37 Sara la Kali is the patron saint of Romani people They rarely go to folk healers and they participate fully in Spain s state supported medical system Gitanos have a special involvement with recently dead kin and visit their graves frequently They spend more money than non gitanos of equivalent economic classes in adorning grave sites 38 The Spanish New Protestant New Born Federation mostly composed by members of the Assemblies of God and Pentecostal claims that 150 000 gitanos have joined their faith in Spain 39 The Romani Evangelical Assembly is the only religious institution entirely led and composed by Roma The gitano Evangelical church Iglesia de Filadelfia asserts the gitano people originate from a group of Jews who got lost during Moses lifetime and eventually became the gitanos 40 Marriage EditThe traditional Spanish Romani place a high value on the extended family Virginity is essential in unmarried women Both men and women often marry young 41 A traditional gitano wedding requires a pedimiento similar to an engagement party followed by the casamiento wedding ceremony where el yeli must be sung to the bride to celebrate the virginity and honour of the bride proven by the ritual of the panuelo In the panuelo ritual a group consisting of an ajuntaora a professional who is skilled in performing the ritual and is paid by the family along with the married women of the family take the bride into a separate room during the wedding and examine her to ascertain that she is a virgin The ajuntaora is the one who performs the ritual on the bride as the other women watch to be witnesses that the bride is virgin The ajuntaora wraps a white decoratively embroidered cloth the panuelo around her index finger and inserts it shallowly into the vaginal canal of the bride 42 During this process the Bartholin s glands are depressed causing them to secrete a liquid that stains the cloth This action is repeated with three different sections of the cloth to produce three stains known as rosas This process is conceived by the women as the retrieval of the bride s honra her honour contained within a grape inside her genitals which is popped during the examination and the spillage collected onto the panuelo 43 When finished with the exam the women come out of the room and sing el yeli to the couple During this the men at the wedding rip their shirts and lift the wife onto their shoulders and do the same with the husband as they sing el yeli to them Weddings can last very long up to three days is usual in Gitano culture At weddings gitanos invite everyone and anyone that they know of especially other gitanos On some occasions payos gadjos may attend as well although this is not common Through the night many bulerias are danced and especially sung Today rumba gitana or rumba flamenca are a usual party music fixture Gitanos may also marry by elopement an event that garners less approval than a wedding ceremony 44 Marginalisation EditMarginalisation occurs on an institutional level Gitano children are regularly segregated from their non gitano peers and have poorer academic outcomes 45 In 1978 68 of adult gitanos were illiterate 46 Literacy has greatly improved over time and approximately 10 of gitanos were illiterate as of 2006 2007 with older gitanos much more likely than younger gitanos to be illiterate 47 Ninety eight percent of gitanos live below the poverty line 48 Health outcomes and housing including reduced access to clean water and electricity supplies is poorer amongst Roma compared to non Roma in Spain and Portugal in common with the other surveyed European countries 45 Roma continue to experience discrimination on an interpersonal level such as by being refused entry to bars and clubs or losing their jobs if their ethnicity is made known to their employer In 2016 the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights reported that its survey showed 71 percent of Portuguese cigano and 51 percent of Spanish gitano had suffered an episode of discrimination within the previous five years 45 A traditional discriminatory practice in Portugal where shops and businesses display toad figurines at entrances to dissuade ciganos from entering was reported as being still widely seen in Portugal in 2019 Toads are viewed as symbolic of evil and ill omen in Roma communities in Portugal Ciganos and anti discrimination activists complained of hostility to Roma being commonplace and unremarkable Some shopkeepers were noted as defending their discouragement of Roma as appropriate 49 50 The 2016 Pew Research poll found that 49 of Spaniards held unfavorable views of Roma 51 In literature EditThe gitano in Spanish society have inspired several authors Federico Garcia Lorca a great Spanish poet of the 20th century wrote Romancero Gitano Gypsy Ballad Book The Roma is the most basic most profound the most aristocratic of my country as representative of their way and whoever keeps the flame blood and the alphabet of the universal Andalusian truth Federico Garcia Lorca Candela the female protagonist of the story El Amor Brujo by Manuel de Falla is Romani Prosper Merimee s Carmen 1845 features the protagonist as a femme fatale ready to lie or attack and degrade men s lives His work was adapted for Georges Bizet s opera of the same name The beauty of a dark haired Gitana has inspired artists such as Julio Romero de Torres La Gitanilla The little Gypsy girl short story by Miguel de Cervantes and part of his Exemplary Novels Rocio Eva Granada the escort in the novel Digital Fortress by Dan BrownMusic and dance EditThe art of Flamenco was developed in the Cale Romani culture of Southern Spain Many famous Spanish flamenco musicians are of Romani ethnicity 52 Notable gitanos Edit The ballet dancer Carlotta Grisi as the Romani Paquita 1844 Following are notable Spanish people of Cale gitano ethnicity Leaders and politicians Edit Juan de Dios Ramirez Heredia Spanish Socialist Workers Party MEP Sara Gimenez Gimenez Spanish Roma politician in Citizens political party Sefora Vargas Spanish Gypsy political activist and lawyerHistorians philologists and writers Edit Silvia Aguero feminist writer Joaquin Albaicin writer lecturer and columnist for the artistic life Mateo Maximoff French writer born in BarcelonaPoets novelists and playwrights Edit Jose Heredia Maya poet and dramaturge Luis Heredia Amaya sculptor Antonio Maya Cortes artist painter and sculptor Fabian de Castro artist painterCatholic saints and martyrs Edit Ceferino Gimenez Malla blessedPainters and sculptors Edit Helios Gomez artist writer and poet Juan Vargas sculptorActors comedians and entertainers Edit Rogelio Duran theatre actor and father of Swedish actress Noomi Rapace Pastora Vega actress Alba Flores actress granddaughter of Antonio Gonzalez El Pescailla and daughter of singer Antonio Flores Jesus Castro actor actor of film The Nino El Comandante Lara comedian and singer Juan Rosa Mateo comedian of Duo SacapuntasFootballers and football coaches Edit Jose Antonio Reyes ex footballer for Arsenal F C Sevilla FC Jose Rodriguez Martinez footballer currently plays for Maccabi Haifa F C Jesus Seba footballer ex Real Zaragoza Diego former footballer with Sevilla Futbol Club Sevilla FC Carlos Munoz former footballer with Real Oviedo Carlos Aranda former footballer with Sevilla FC Ivan Amaya former footballer with Atletico Madrid Antonio Amaya footballer for Rayo Vallecano Marcos Marquez footballer ex UD Las Palmas Lopez Ramos footballer ex UD Las Palmas Antonio Cortes Heredia footballer for Malaga Ezequiel Calvente ex footballer Real Betis Teji Savanier footballer frech of the origin calo Spanish footballer Montpellier Jesus Navas footballer with Sevilla FCOther athletes Edit Rafael Soto equestrian and Olympic medalist Faustino Reyes boxer Jose Antonio Jimenez boxer Patxi Ruiz Gimenez Basque pelota championSingers and musicians Edit Carmen Amaya Flamenco dancer Isabel Pantoja singer partially Cale Los Chunguitos singers brother duet Azucar Moreno singers sister duet Manolo Caracol Flamenco singer El Pescailla singer and composer husband of Lola Flores Lolita Flores singer and actress daughter of Lola Flores and El Pescailla Antonio Flores singer and actor son of Lola Flores and El Pescailla Rosario Flores singer and actress daughter of Lola Flores and El Pescailla Vicente Escudero dancer and choreographer of Spanish Flamenco occasionally painter writer cinematographic actor and flamenco singer Gipsy Kings French group of Flamenco Rumba Nicolas Reyes lead vocalist of the Gipsy Kings Camaron de la Isla Flamenco singer Farruquito Flamenco dancer Los Ninos de Sara French fusion musicians Ketama fusion musicians Kendji Girac French singer Diego El Cigala Flamenco singer Joaquin Cortes star flamenco dancer Beatriz Luengo singer and actress Natalia Jimenez singer and vocalist of La quinta estacion Jorge Gonzalez singer Manitas de Plata guitar player Peret Catalan singer guitar player and composer of Catalan rumba Camela singers of Spanish musical group of techno rumba and flamenco pop Los Chichos singers Las Grecas singers Estrella Morente singer Nina Pastori singer and composer Belen Maya bailaora Flamenco dancer Juan Villar cantaor Flamenco singer Jose Merce cantaor Flamenco singer El Principe Gitano cantaor Flamenco singer and bailaor Flamenco dancer Dolores Vargas La Terremoto cantaora Flamenco singer and bailaora Flamenco dancer Gerardo Nunez guitarist and composer Mario Maya cantaor and bailaor Tomatito Flamenco guitarist and composer Remedios Amaya cantaora Falete cantaor Flamenco singer La Chunga bailaora Flamenco dancer Manuel Agujetas cantaor Antonio Mairena cantaor Manuel Torre cantaor La Nina de los Peines cantaora Flamenco singer Pastora Imperio bailaora Chiquetete cantaor El Lebrijano Flamenco guitarist Paco Cepero Flamenco guitarist Vicente Soto Sordera cantaor Cancanilla de Marbella cantaor and bailaor Perla de Cadiz cantaora Manzanita singer and guitarist Moraito Chico guitarist of Flamenco Diego Carrasco cantaor and guitarist Mala Rodriguez singer La Serneta cantaora Antonia La Negra cantaora Lole y Manuel Flamenco singers Alba Molina singer Rancapino cantaor Sabicas Flamenco musician Pilar Montoya bailaora Juana la Macarrona cantaora Antonio Carmona singer of Flamenco La Macanita cantaora Pansequito cantaorGitano surnames Edit Due to endogamy several Spanish surnames are more frequent among the Gitanos 53 54 though they are not exclusive to them Altamira or Altamirano Amaya Antunes or Antunez alternatively Antunez Calaf Catalan Gypsy Cortes Fernandez Flores Gabarri Catalan Gypsy Gutierrez or Guiterez Heredia Jimenez or Gimenez Malla or Maya Molina Montoya Monge or Monje Moreno Morgade Motos Pereiro or Pereira Pubill Catalan Gypsy Ravelino or Rabellino Reyes Salazar Santi Santiago Vargas LP Villar or Vilar Carretero Perez Gonzalez Escudero Ximenez 55 See also EditTriana Seville a neighbourhood traditionally linked to Gitano history Sacromonte the traditional Gitano quarter of Granada George Borrow an English missionary and traveller who studied the Cale of Spain and other parts of Europe Quinqui a nomad community of Spain with a similar lifestyle but of unrelated origin Cagot similarly historically persecuted people in France and Spain Cascarots an ethnic group in the Spanish Basque country and the French Basque coast sometimes linked to the Cagots Cleanliness of blood ethnic discrimination in the Spanish Old Regime Maragato es an ethnic group in Spain who were also discriminated against and have unknown origins Vaqueiros de alzada a discriminated group of cowherders in Northern Spain Xueta a persecuted ethnic minority in Mallorca often referenced in works discussing the persecution of Cagots in Spain References EditSources Edit The Situation of Roma in Spain The Open Society Institute 2002 PDF Worth Susannah and Sibley Lucy R Maja Dress and the Andalusian Image of Spain Clothing and Textiles Research Journal Summer 1994 Vol 12 pp 51 60 Notes Edit a b Diagnostico social de la comunidad gitana en Espana PDF Msc es Archived from the original PDF on 2017 10 10 Retrieved 2016 05 21 Estimations JPG Gfbv it Retrieved 2016 05 21 The Situation of Roma in Spain PDF Open Society Institute 2002 Archived from the original PDF on 1 December 2007 Retrieved 15 September 2010 The Spanish government estimates the number of Gitanos at a maximum of 650 000 Recent Migration of Roma in Europe A study by Mr Claude Cahn and Professor Elspeth Guild page 87 8 09 2010 figures Roma Gypsies Minority Rights Group 19 June 2015 West Christina 2011 Memory Recollection Culture Identity Space Social Context Identity Formation and Self construction of the Cale Gitanos in Spain In Meusburger P Heffernan M Wunder E eds Cultural Memories Knowledge and Space Klaus Tschira Symposia PDF Knowledge and Space Vol 4 Springer Science Business Media pp 101 118 doi 10 1007 978 90 481 8945 8 7 ISBN 978 90 481 8945 8 Gay y Blasco Paloma 20 December 2002 We don t know our descent how the Gitanos of Jarana manage the past Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 7 4 631 647 doi 10 1111 1467 9655 00081 Gay y Blasco Paloma September 2011 Agata s story singular lives and the reach of the Gitano law Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 17 3 445 461 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9655 2011 01701 x Gay y Blasco Paloma 2000 The Politics of Evangelism Hierarchy Masculinity and Religious Conversion Among Gitanos Romani Studies 10 1 4 egiptano Diccionario Dirae Dirae es Retrieved 23 December 2017 Diccionario de la lengua espanola Vigesima segunda edicion Buscon rae es Retrieved 2013 08 15 THE STATE AND THE ROMA IN SPAIN Labanyi Jo 2002 Constructing Identity in Contemporary Spain ISBN 978 0 19 815993 3 Hancock Ian F 2005 2002 We are the Romani People Univ of Hertfordshire Press p 70 ISBN 978 1 902806 19 8 While a nine century removal from India has diluted Indian biological connection to the extent that for some Romani groups it may be hardly representative today Sarren 1976 72 concluded that we still remain together genetically Asian rather than European a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link a b Mendizabal Isabel 6 December 2012 Reconstructing the Population History of European Romani from Genome wide Data Current Biology 22 24 2342 2349 doi 10 1016 j cub 2012 10 039 PMID 23219723 a b Bhanoo Sindya N 11 December 2012 Genomic Study Traces Roma to Northern India The New York Times Current Biology a b c K Meira Goldberg Ninotchka Devorah Bennahum Michelle Heffner Hayes 2015 09 28 Flamenco on the Global Stage Historical Critical and Theoretical Perspectives p 50 ISBN 9780786494705 Retrieved 2016 05 21 a b Broughton Simon Ellingham Mark Trillo Richard 1999 World Music Africa Europe and the Middle East p 147 ISBN 9781858286358 Retrieved 2016 05 21 Sebkova Hana Zlnayova Edita 1998 Nastin mluvnice slovenske romstiny pro pedagogicke ucely PDF Usti nad Labem Pedagogicka fakulta Univerzity J E Purkyne v Usti nad Labem p 4 ISBN 978 80 7044 205 0 archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Hubschmannova Milena 1995 Romani chib romstina Nekolik zakladnich informaci o romskem jazyku Bulletin Muzea Romske Kultury Brno Muzeum romske kultury 4 1995 Zatimco romska lexika je blizsi hindstine marvarstine pandzabstine atd v gramaticke sfere nachazime mnoho shod s vychodoindickym jazykem s bengalstinou 5 Intriguing Facts About the Roma Live Science 23 October 2013 Rai N Chaubey G Tamang R Pathak AK Singh VK 2012 The Phylogeography of Y Chromosome Haplogroup H1a1a M82 Reveals the Likely Indian Origin of the European Romani Populations PLOS ONE 7 11 e48477 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 748477R doi 10 1371 journal pone 0048477 PMC 3509117 PMID 23209554 DIALOGOS REVISTA ELECTRoNICA DE HISTORIA Viellieard Jeanne Pelerins d Espagne a la fin de Moten age PDF archived from the original PDF on 2016 08 20 retrieved 2018 05 20 Union Romani Archived 2008 05 09 at the Wayback Machine World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples Spain Roma Gypsies Alejandro Martinez Dhier La condicion social y juridica de los gitanos en la legislacion historica espanola PDF Universidad de Granada p 53 Gusmao A Gusmao L Gomes V Alves C Calafell F Amorim A Prata M J 2008 A perspective on the history of the Iberian gypsies provided by phylogeographic analysis of Y chromosome lineages Annals of Human Genetics Annals of Human Genetics Wiley Publishing 72 Pt 2 215 27 doi 10 1111 j 1469 1809 2007 00421 x PMID 18205888 S2CID 36365458 a b c d Library of Congress Federal Research Division December 1988 The Gypsies Spain A Country Study p 99 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain The Great Gypsy Round up in Spain Resisting Respectability Gypsies In Saragossa Flamenco and Its Gitanos An Investigation of the Paradox of Andalusia History Politics and Dance Art Roma in an Expanding Europe Breaking the Poverty Cycle The Situation of Roma in Spain Gamella Juan F Fernandez Cayetano Nieto Magdalena Adiego Ignasi Xavier December 2011 La agonia de una lengua Lo que queda del calo en el habla de los gitanos Parte I Metodos fuentes y resultados generales Gazeta de Antropologia in Spanish Universidad de Granada Retrieved 13 February 2020 Bohlen Celestine 5 May 1997 Spanish Martyr Is First Gypsy Beatified by Catholic Church The New York Times Gitanos Evangelics fish faithful in catholic crisis Archived 2009 02 28 at the Wayback Machine FEREDE October 2008 in Spanish Gay y Blasco 2002 p 634 A Different Body Desire and Virginity Among Gitanos Mujeres Gitanas Documental YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 19 Gay y Blasco Paloma September 1997 A Different Body Desire and Virginity Among gitanos The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 3 3 517 535 doi 10 2307 3034765 JSTOR 3034765 Gay y Blasco 1997 p 528 a b c European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights 2016 Second European Union minorities and discrimination survey Roma selected findings PDF 2nd ed Luxembourg Publications Office of the European Union pp 36 37 ISBN 978 92 9491 871 0 Archived from the original on 2018 Retrieved 4 May 2021 Experiencias y trayectorias de exito escolar de gitanas y gitanos en Espana p 100 Historias de exito Modelos para reducir el abandono escolar de la adolescencia gitana p 120 Gay y Blasco Paloma Hernandez Liria 24 November 2019 Writing Friendship a reciprocal ethnography Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 3 030 26542 7 Vidal Marta 4 February 2019 Portuguese shopkeepers using ceramic frogs to scare away Roma www aljazeera com Retrieved 4 May 2021 Silva Claudia Carvalho 28 June 2019 Minipreco retira sapo de loica usado para afastar ciganos e pede desculpa PUBLICO in Portuguese Retrieved 13 February 2020 Negative opinions about Roma Muslims in several European nations Pew Research Center 11 July 2016 Leblon Bernard 2003 Gypsies and Flamenco The Emergence of the Art of Flamenco in Andalusia Translated by Ni Shuinear Sinead Hatfield University of Hertfordshire Press ISBN 9781902806051 Diccionario de apellidos espanoles Roberto Faure Maria Asuncion Ribes Antonio Garcia Editorial Espasa Madrid 2001 ISBN 84 239 2289 8 Section III 3 8 page XXXIX Gamella Juan F Gomez Alfaro Antonio Perez Perez Juan Los apellidos de los gitanos espanoles en los censos de 1783 85 Articulos Revista de Humanidades www revistadehumanidades com in Spanish Retrieved 3 February 2020 Nominal Assimilation The Ethnic and National Identities of the Gitanos or Cale of Spain as Shown by their Surnames in the 1783 1785 CensusExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gitanos Romani union in English English exonym present Romani presence in European Music in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gitanos amp oldid 1164094739, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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