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Historical origins and genetics. The Portuguese are a Southwestern European population, with origins predominantly from Southern and Western Europe.
94 % of the population is Portuguese. Brazilians, Black, mixed race and other Europeans each represents about 1.2 % of the total population.
Like all native Europeans, the Portuguese are part of what has been called the Caucasian (or white) race.
This biogeographical region includes the Mediterranean Sea and seven Member States, either partially (France, Portugal, Italy, Spain) or completely (Greece, Malta, Cyprus).
Ethnically the Portuguese people form 95% of the total population in Portugal. The Portuguese people are mainly a combination of ancient paleolithic populations, and the proto-Celtic, Celtic and Iberian tribes, para-Celtic Lusitanians.
Yes, they carry more or less the same Haplogroups. This is a Y-DNA Map of indigenous peoples in the world: As you can see from the above map, Portuguese and Spanish people carry overwhelmingly Y-DNA R1B which is the majority Haplogroup of western Europe.
Most Brazilians have some degree of Portuguese ancestry: some descend from colonial settlers, while others have recent immigrant Portuguese origin, dating back to anywhere between the mid-19th and mid-20th centuries.
White 47.7%, Mulatto (mixed white and black) 43.1%, Black 7.6%, Asian 1.1%, indigenous 0.4% (2010 est.)
40% of Spanish and Portuguese men descend from a common ancestor who lived 4,500 years ago. These are the conclusions of a study published in the journal Scientific Reports based on DNA samples from almost 3,000 men from the Iberian Peninsula and France. In the Basque Country, the percentage increases to 70%.
Because the Iberian Peninsula also contained Portugal, one could argue that people of Portuguese-speaking descent—like Brazilians—are also Hispanic. But commonly considered, Brazilians are Latino but not Hispanic, while people from Spain are Hispanic but not Latino.
Most Portuguese have typical Mediterranean features like brown eyes, brown hair, and a height of less than 6 feet.
Portuguese and Spanish are both Ibero-Romance languages which share the common "Vulgar Latin" ancestor along with French, Catalan, and Italian. Portuguese and Spanish share an 89% lexical similarity, meaning that there are equivalent forms of words in both languages.
No, Portuguese is not Spanish, but they were both born in the Iberian Peninsula somehow isolated from the rest of the land by the Pyrenees so it's only natural for them to resemble in a lot of ways.
Mexicans can be descended from almost any ethnicity, but the odds of having Portuguese ancestors are comparatively high, since Spain and Portugal were under a single monarch for many decades during early colonial times during which, also, many Portuguese Jews fled to the colonies attempting to escape the Inquisition.
Portuguese and Spanish are very similar languages
Portuguese and Spanish are closely related, as they are both Latin-based languages and share many grammatical structures and patterns.
Interestingly Spanish and Portuguese share about 89% lexical similarity. Meaning that 89% of words have a cognate (equivalent) in the other language. On paper, the two language does look very similar.
The Portuguese language originated from Latin in the Western Iberian Peninsula. Roman soldiers and colonists introduced Latin in 216 BCE. The language extended to other regions by Roman soldiers, settlers, and merchants.
The highest concentration of people with green eyes is found in Ireland, Scotland, and northern Europe. In fact, in Ireland and Scotland, more than three-fourths of the population has blue or green eyes – 86 percent!
Grey eyes are one of the rarest eye colors. Less than 3% of the global population has grey eyes. They're most commonly found in people of Northern and Eastern European ancestry. Like all eye colors, they're a product of the amount of melanin in the iris.
Scientists believe that it is possible to trace all blue-eyed people back to a common ancestor, who likely had a genetic mutation that reduced the amount of melanin in the iris. Most people with blue eyes are of European descent.
Ancestry and the Origin of Portuguese People
Being a Southwestern European population, the Portuguese people's origins are mainly from Southern and Western Europe. It is believed that the earliest modern humans who inhabited Portugal were Paleolithic peoples.
Tupian was the principal language of Brazil's native peoples before European contact, and it became the lingua franca between Indians and Portuguese traders, missionaries, adventurers, and administrators; it was widely used in the Amazon region and western Brazil until the 19th century.
Portuguese and Spanish have a lexical similarity of almost 90%. This means that both languages have words that are found in equivalent forms. The 2 languages have a high proportion of cognates, which are words that have the same roots and correspond to each other. Much of the vocabulary is shared.