Social Hierarchy in Latin America
Haitian Revolution
South America
Misc.
100

These people were enslaved, brought to Latin America, and forced to complete manual labor.

Africans

100

The MAIN money-making crop on Haiti

Sugar

100

The name of the official currency of Venezuela

Bolivar

100

This "H" word describes a system of ranking people, based on their privilege (or lack of it).

Hierarchy

200

These people were born in Latin America, but could directly trace their lineage to Spain.

Creoles

200

Haiti's name as a French colony.

Saint-Domingue

200

Simon Bolivar was known as the [Blank] of Latin America

George Washington of Latin America

200

The present-day name of the country neighboring Haiti

Dominican Republic

300

These people were at the top of the social hierarchy, holding valuable government and administrative positions.


Peninsulares

300

This document, written during the French Revolution, influenced the slave revolt on Saint-Domingue

Declaration of the Rights of Man

300

Name one of the countries (other than Venezuela) Bolivar led to independence from Spain

Colombia, Panama, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia

300

The basis for the ranking of people in Latin America's hierarchy 

Race/Ethnicity

400

The (no longer appropriate) term for people of mixed European and African heritage.

Mulattos

400

Toussaint Louverture's nickname

The Black Napoleon or Black George Washington

400

This is how Bolivar treated the Spanish while leading his revolution.

He offered them the chance to surrender and be spared.

400

The basis for the ranking of people in France's hierarchy

Social class

500

These people were ethnically mixed, with European and Indigenous heritage.

Mestizos

500

The name of the original, indigenous people living on Hispaniola

Taino

500

One reason why Creoles led the fight for independence. 

- Conflict with Peninsulares over being second place to them.

- Frustration with Spanish control over their economy.

- Napoleon's invasion of the Iberian Peninsula (Spain/Portugal) helped to sever (cut) the connection between Creoles and their ethnic, home country.

500

The reason the US refused to recognize Haiti.

They were practicing slavery, too.  And did not want to empower a black state.

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