Tornatrás
Tornatrás (Spanish pronunciation: [toɾnaˈtɾas]) is a term once used in Spain and its overseas colonies to describe a mixed race person (mestizo) that showed phenotypic characteristics of only one of the "original races",[1] that is, white, black, Amerindian or Asian. The term was also used to describe an individual of mixed European and "albino" ancestry.[1]
Colonial Spanish America
Under the casta system of colonial Spanish America, the torna atrás (lit. return backwards, hark back to) could also make reference to the appearance of racial characteristics not present in the parents. Such as in the colored child of a white person and albino. The albino casta refers to the seemingly white offspring of a white and black-descended parent.
Philippines
It was also used in the Philippines during the Spanish colonial era from the 16th to 19th century, to describe persons of mixed indigenous Malay (referred to as Indio), Chinese (referred to as Sangley), and Spanish ancestry (referred to as Filipino or Peninsular).
There are no official statistics on the number of people of Tornatrás ancestry around the world, although it is believed that most are to be found in South America and the Philippines.
History
Although Tornatrás was originally used to describe a descendant of mestizos, albinos and Europeans, in the Philippines they were commonly known as those born from a Spanish father ('Filipino' or 'peninsular') and a Malay-Chinese (mestiza de sangley) mother.
Most people of the Tornatrás caste in the Philippines used Spanish as their primary language and in many cases converted to the Catholic faith.
See also
- Casta
- Filipino mestizo
- Eurasian
- Chinese Filipino
- Spanish settlement in the Philippines
- Criollo people
- White Latin American
- Mestizo
References
Miscegenation in the Spanish Philippines
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