Afro-Hispanic people
    |
Notable Afro-Hispanic Americans: Celia Cruz, Nicolás Guillén, Piedad Córdoba, Christina Milian |
| Total population |
|---|
Sub Saharan African >32,650,000 Afro Hispanics |
| Regions with significant populations |
|---|
Colombia |
11,703,555 |
|
Dominican Republic |
9,455,071 |
|
Cuba |
1,126,894 |
|
United States |
984,151 |
|
Puerto Rico |
875,662 |
|
Peru |
871,427 |
|
Ecuador |
680,000 |
|
Nicaragua |
520,786 |
|
Panama |
460,977 |
|
Spain |
275,000 |
|
Uruguay |
200,000 |
|
Venezuela |
181,157 |
[1] |
Honduras |
152,787 |
|
Costa Rica |
125,877 |
|
Bolivia |
108,000 |
|
Mexico |
103,000 |
|
Argentina |
100,000 |
|
Guatemala |
100,000 |
|
|
| Languages |
|---|
|
Spanish, English creole
|
| Religion |
|---|
|
Christianity, Afro-American religion, Islam
|
| Related ethnic groups |
|---|
|
African diaspora, African Latin American
|
An Afro-Hispanic American (also Afro-Hispanic) is an Hispanic American with black African ancestry. They are more common in the Hispanic Caribbean and Northern South America. There are many communities of full and partial black African ancestry in those regions, such as the Mulattos, Mestizos, Zambos, Muzambos, etc.