Portuguese Venezuelans
Portuguese Venezuelans (or Luso-Venezuelans) are Portuguese-born citizens with Venezuelan citizenship or Venezuelan-born citizens of Portuguese ancestry or citizenship. Mostly located in Caracas, Valencia and Maracaibo, also Barquisimeto,[5] the Portuguese community of Venezuela are among the largest ethnic groups in the country. The State of Portuguesa takes its name from the Portuguesa River, in which a Portuguese women is said to have drowned.
| |
---|---|
Total population | |
1,3 million [1](Portuguese ancestry) 55,441(Portuguese born)[2] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Portugal: 24,603[3] | |
Venezuela | 1,300,000 [1][4] |
United States | 80,500[3] |
Peru | 40,000[3] |
Colombia | 20,500[3] |
Chile | 20,300[3] |
Ecuador | 10,800[3] |
Languages | |
Spanish and/or Portuguese | |
Religion | |
Roman Catholicism |
Portuguese arrived to Venezuela in the early and middle 20th century, as immigrants, mostly from Madeira Island. Venezuela has the second largest Portuguese diaspora in America, after Brazil. There is strong interest among a large segment of the Portuguese in Venezuela to preserve the culture and familial bond with the old country Portugal, while they have been important in the development of Venezuela holding a substantial number of businesses in the retail trade. The Portuguese language in Venezuela influences Venezuelan Spanish with some neologisms and loanwords.
Notable Portuguese Venezuelans
- Danny Alves, footballer
- Nico Castel, lyric singer
- Vanessa Gonçalves, Miss Venezuela 2010
- Laura Gonçalves, Miss Portugal 2011
- Marjorie de Sousa, model and actress
- Osmel Sousa, Miss Venezuela president (born in Cuba)
- Fernando de Ornelas, former footballer
- Leonardo Jardim, football manager
- Lance dos Ramos, actor, model and animator
- Kimberly dos Ramos, actress, model and singer
- Catherine Joy Perry, Competes as Lana in WWE - professional wrestling valet, actress, model and singer (born in Florida, United States)
- La Divaza, Internet personality
See also
References
- "Maior comunidade portuguesa da América Latina esperançada numa nova Venezuela". April 13, 2013.
- Emigração, Observatório da. "Observatório da Emigração". observatorioemigracao.pt/np4/paises.html?id=235. Retrieved 28 August 2017.
- Gortázar, Naiara Galarraga (March 26, 2018). "Radiografía del gran éxodo venezolano" – via elpais.com.
- Emigração, Observatório da. "Observatório da Emigração". Observatorioemigracao.pt/np4/paises.html. Retrieved 28 August 2017.
- Ramos-Rodríguez, Froilán (2018). Travesía de la esperanza. La inmigración portuguesa en Barquisimeto. FEDUPEL (Pedagogic University). ISBN 978-980-273-534-1.