Sistema de castas
 
  Andrés de Islas, 1774
 
  
 
  
  Ilona Katzew, "Casta Painting: Images of Race in Eighteenth-Century Mexico"
 
  Yale University Press, 2004."
  
 
 
  
   To the reader: please do not take offense at the terminology 
   below. This terminology is clearly racist, and should be insulting 
   to many, many people. This terminology is here as it is a record 
   of how people were viewed.
  
 
 
  Aside from terminology, members of each "casta" were more or less
  distinguishable by their dress. Sumptuary laws specified dress that
  would be illigal for members of specific castas to wear. Other ways
  in which the castas were distinguished were as follows:
  1
   
    - 
      "The viceroy of Peru during the eighteenth century received 
      visitors in two rooms, one for whites, another for Indians 
      and mixed-bloods"
    
- 
      "... the whites went to mass in the cathedral, the pardos 
      to another church, and the Negroes to a third." Note: The 
      use of different churches by different "castas" may be seen 
      in the Brazilian film Xica da Silva. 
    
- 
      "... the elementary school in Buenos aires was strictly 
      discriminatory. The teacher should teach only white and 
      Indian children to read and write, whereas mestizos and 
      mulattoes should be instructed only in Christian dogma, 
      and the groups were to be kept apart when the teacher 
      brought them to public functions."
    
- 
      cofradías (religious brotherhoods) and 
      consulados, and universities, guilds, etc. were 
      also limited to specific castas.
    
   
   
   
     
 
 
   |  | Parents |  | Offspring | 
  
   | Español | × | India | Mestizo | 
  
   | Español | × | Mestiza | Castizo | 
  
   | Castizo | × | Española | Español | 
  
   | Español | × | Negra | Mulata | 
  
   | Español | × | Mulata | Morisco 2 | 
  
   | Español | × | Morisca 2 | Albino | 
  
   | Español | × | Albina | Torna atrás | 
  
   | Indio | × | Negra | Lobo | 
  
   | Indio | × | Mestiza | Coyote | 
  
   | Lobo | × | Negra | Chino | 
  
   | Chino | × | India | Cambujo | 
  
   | Cambujoo | × | India | Tente en el aire | 
  
   | Tente en el aire | × | Mulata | Albarazado | 
  
   | Albarazado | × | India | Barcino | 
  
   | Barcino | × | Cambuja | Calpamulato | 
  
   | Indio | × | India | bárbaros (Barbarian Meco Indians)
 | 
 
   1  
    
     Magnus Mörner, "Race Mixture in the History of 
     Latin America", Little, Brown and Company, Boston, pp. 62-63.
    
 
 
   2  
    
     "Morisco/Morisca" was used in the Iberian peninsula to 
     designate a Muslim, forced to convert to Catholicism (raza).
     Hence, when used to designate complexion (skin color, or casta),
     an ambiguity was created. "A royal decree in 1700 prohibited the use 
     of this term [morisco] to avoid confusion with the identical Spanish 
     word for 'converted Moor'." See Magnus Mörner, 
     "Race Mixture in the History of Latin America", Little, 
     Brown and Company, Boston, p. 58, footnote 21.
    
 
 
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