Indigenous peoples of Mexico
Indigenous peoples of Mexico, also known as Native Mexicans, are those who are part of communities that trace their roots back to populations and communities that existed in what is now Mexico before the arrival of Europeans.
The number of Indigenous Mexicans is defined through the second article of the Mexican Constitution. The Mexican census does not classify individuals by race, using the cultural-ethnicity of Indigenous communities that preserve their Indigenous languages, traditions, beliefs, and cultures. As a result, the count of Indigenous peoples in Mexico does not include those of mixed Indigenous and European heritage who have not preserved their Indigenous cultural practices. Genetic studies have found that most Mexicans are of partial Indigenous heritage. According to the National Indigenous Institute and the National Institute of Indigenous Peoples, in 2012 the Indigenous population was approximately 15 million people, divided into 68 ethnic groups. The 2020 Censo General de Población y Vivienda reported 11,132,562 people living in households where someone speaks an Indigenous language, and 23,232,391 people who were identified as Indigenous based on self-identification.
The Indigenous population is distributed throughout the territory of Mexico but is especially concentrated in the Sierra Madre del Sur, the Yucatán Peninsula, the Sierra Madre Oriental, the Sierra Madre Occidental, and neighboring areas. The states with the largest Indigenous population are Oaxaca and Yucatán, both having Indigenous majorities, with the former having the highest percentage of Indigenous population. Since the Spanish colonization, the northern, western and Bajio regions of Mexico have had lower percentages of Indigenous peoples, but some notable groups include the Rarámuri, the Tepehuán, the Yaquis, and the Yoreme.
Definition
In the second article of the Mexican Constitution, Mexico defines itself as a pluricultural nation in recognition of the diverse ethnic groups that constitute it and where the Indigenous peoples are the original foundation. The number of Indigenous Mexicans is measured using constitutional criteria.The category of Indigena can be defined narrowly according to linguistic criteria, including only persons that speak one of Mexico's 89 Indigenous languages; this is the categorization used by the National Mexican Institute of Statistics. It can also be defined broadly to include all persons who self-identify as having an Indigenous cultural background, whether or not they speak the language of the Indigenous group they identify with. This means that the percentage of the Mexican population defined as "Indigenous" varies according to the definition applied; cultural activists have referred to the usage of the narrow definition of the term for census purposes as "statistical genocide."
The Indigenous peoples in Mexico have the right of free determination under the second constitution article. According to this article, Indigenous peoples are granted:
- the right to decide the internal forms of social, economic, political, and cultural organization;
- the right to apply their normative systems of regulation as long as human rights and gender equality are respected;
- the right to preserve and enrich their languages and cultures;
- the right to elect representatives before the municipal council where their territories are located;
History
Pre-Columbian civilizations
The prehispanic civilizations of what now is known as Mexico are often divided into two regions: Mesoamerica, the cultural area where several complex civilizations developed before the arrival of the Spanish in the sixteenth century, and Aridoamerica, the arid region north of the Tropic of Cancer which was less densely populated. Despite the conditions, the Mogollon culture and peoples established urban population centers at Casas Grandes and Cuarenta Casas in a vast territory that encompassed northern Chihuahua state and parts of Arizona and New Mexico in the United States.Mesoamerica was densely populated by diverse Indigenous ethnic groups which, although sharing common cultural characteristics, spoke different languages and developed unique civilizations.
One of the most influential civilizations in Mesoamerica was the Olmec civilization, sometimes referred to as the "Mother Culture of Mesoamerica." The later civilization in Teotihuacan reached its peak around 600 AD when the city possibly became the sixth largest city in the world, whose cultural and theological systems influenced the Toltec and Aztec civilizations in later centuries. Evidence has been found on the existence of polyethnic communities or neighborhoods in Teotihuacan.
The Maya civilization, influenced by other Mesoamerican civilizations, developed a vast cultural region in southeast Mexico and northern Central America. In contrast, the Zapotec and Mixtec cultures dominated the valley of Oaxaca and the Purépecha in western Mexico.
Trade
Scholars agree that significant systems of trading existed between the cultures of Mesoamerica, Aridoamerica, and the American Southwest, and the architectural remains and artifacts share a commonality of knowledge attributed to this trade network. The routes stretched far into Mesoamerica and reached as far north as ancient communities that included such population centers in the United States such as Snaketown, Chaco Canyon, and Ridge Ruin near Flagstaff.Colonial era
By the time of the arrival of the Spanish in central Mexico, many peoples of Mesoamerica were loosely joined under the Aztec Empire, the last Nahua civilization to flourish in Central Mexico. The capital of the empire, Tenochtitlan, became one of the largest urban centers in the world, with an estimated population of 350,000 inhabitants.During the conquest of the Aztec Empire, the Spanish conquistadors allied with other ethnic groups in the region, including the Tlaxcaltecs. This strategy succeeded due to discontent with Aztec rule, which demanded tributes and used conquered peoples for ritual sacrifice. During the following decades, the Spanish consolidated their rule in what became the viceroyalty of New Spain. Through the Valladolid Debate, the crown recognized the Indigenous nobility in Mesoamerica as nobles, freed Indigenous slaves, and kept the existing basic structure of Indigenous city-states. Indigenous communities were incorporated as communities under Spanish rule.
As Indigenous peoples were drawn into the colonial system, friars taught native scribes to write their languages using Latin letters so that there is a large corpus of colonial-era documentation in the Nahuatl language, Mixtec, Zapotec, Yucatec Maya, and others. Such a written tradition likely took hold through existing practices of pictorial writing found in many Indigenous codices. New Philology scholars have utilized the colonial-era alphabetic documentation to illuminate the colonial experience of Mesoamerican peoples from their viewpoints.
Image:Posada guadalupe.jpg|thumb|upright|Juan Diego, hoja religiosa, etching by José Guadalupe Posada.
The encomienda system exploited the labor and tribute of Indigenous peoples for financial gain. This system was built upon pre-existing Mesoamerican labor duty and tribute practices, with Indigenous officials managing its continuation within their communities. There was a precipitous decline in Indigenous populations, mainly due to the spread of European diseases previously unknown in the Americas but also through war and forced labor. Pandemics wrought havoc, but Indigenous communities recovered with fewer members.
The colonial period in Mexico saw the convergence of diverse groups, including Indigenous peoples, Spaniards, enslaved Africans, and, from the late sixteenth century, Asian slaves introduced via the Manila Galleon. There was an intermingling of groups, with mixed-race castas, particularly mestizos, becoming a component of Spanish cities and, to a lesser extent, Indigenous communities. The Spanish legal structure formally separated what they called the República de Indios from the República de Españoles, with the latter encompassing all those in the Hispanic sphere: Spaniards, Africans, and mixed-race castas. Although Indigenous peoples were marginalized in the colonial system, and often rebelled, the paternalistic structure of colonial rule supported the continued existence and structure of Indigenous communities. The Spanish crown protected the land holdings of Indigenous communities. Communities and individuals had access to the Spanish legal system. However, these codes were often ignored in practice, and racial discrimination was prevalent in New Spain.
In the religious sphere, Indigenous men were banned from Christian priesthood following an early Franciscan attempt that included fray Bernardino de Sahagún to train an Indigenous group. Mendicants of the Franciscan, Dominican, and Augustinian orders initially evangelized Indigenous in their communities in what is often called the "spiritual conquest." On the northern frontiers, the Spanish created missions and settled Indigenous populations in these complexes, which prompted raids from those who resisted settlement. The Jesuits were prominent in this enterprise until their expulsion from Spanish America in 1767. Catholicism, often with local characteristics, was the only permissible religion in the colonial era.