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Stuck right between regions - sometimes it's the smallest of the Greater Antilles, sometimes the largest of the Lesser - Puerto Rico, a mere 110 miles by 40 miles if measuring loosely, is one of two current UsefulNotes/UnitedStates commonwealths/semi-autonomous territories[[note]]the other is the UsefulNotes/NorthernMarianaIslands, population around 50,000[[/note]]. This has some indefinite difference with simple territories (such as UsefulNotes/{{Guam}}), but legally works out to the same as the United States Constitution does not recognize a "commonwealth" as a true status. This means that the island's population is disenfranchised in presidential elections unless they relocate to one of the states proper, despite the fact that they number almost ''3.2 million'' as of 2020, more than all other territories combined and even several states. However, Puerto Ricans are full US citizens free to live, study, work, and vote in the mainland without dealing with immigration hurdles, resulting in a large-scale exodus year by year. From 2010 to 2020, the territory's population saw a decrease of almost half a million people.

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Stuck right between regions - sometimes it's the smallest of the Greater Antilles, sometimes the largest of the Lesser - Puerto Rico, a mere 110 miles by 40 miles if measuring loosely, is one of two current UsefulNotes/UnitedStates commonwealths/semi-autonomous territories[[note]]the other is the UsefulNotes/NorthernMarianaIslands, population around 50,000[[/note]]. This has some indefinite difference with simple territories (such as UsefulNotes/{{Guam}}), but legally works out to the same as the United States Constitution does not recognize a "commonwealth" as a true status. This means that the island's population is disenfranchised in presidential elections unless they relocate to one of the states proper, despite the fact that they number almost ''3.2 million'' as of 2020, more than all other territories combined and even several states. However, Puerto Ricans are full US citizens free to live, study, work, and vote in the mainland without dealing with immigration hurdles, resulting in a large-scale exodus year by year. From 2010 to 2020, the territory's population saw a decrease of almost half a million people.
people. There are currently around 6 million people in the mainland U.S. who identify as Puerto Ricans, double the number of those who remain on the island.



Most of the late 19th century history of Puerto Rico can be characterized by the development of political organizations seeking autonomous rule for the island. This was finally achieved in 1898, when the first autonomous government of Puerto Rico took power, approximately one month before the United States invasion. It is worth noting that said government was similar, at least in broad strokes, to the Dominion of UsefulNotes/{{Canada}}: the only Spanish military officer on the island was its Governor-General, and served exclusively as the representative of the Crown; Puerto Rico agreed to answer to the Spanish crown on matters of defense and foreign affairs, but retained complete power over internal ones; and for the first time, it could raise its own defense forces, land and sea alike, though it would depend on the Spanish Armed Forces in wartime.

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Most of the late 19th century history of Puerto Rico can be characterized by the development of political organizations seeking autonomous rule for the island. This was finally achieved in 1898, when the first autonomous government of Puerto Rico took power, approximately one month before the United States invasion.UsefulNotes/SpanishAmericanWar. It is worth noting that said government was similar, at least in broad strokes, to the Dominion of UsefulNotes/{{Canada}}: the only Spanish military officer on the island was its Governor-General, and served exclusively as the representative of the Crown; Puerto Rico agreed to answer to the Spanish crown on matters of defense and foreign affairs, but retained complete power over internal ones; and for the first time, it could raise its own defense forces, land and sea alike, though it would depend on the Spanish Armed Forces in wartime.



Puerto Rico is home to many beautiful beaches, 56 animal and 239 plant indigenous species, one of which is the emblematic ''coquí'' frog. Puerto Ricans have distinguished themselves in many fields, including music (Music/TitoPuente, Music/JoseFeliciano, Hector Lavoe), literature (Creator/RosarioFerre, Tato Laviera, Miguel Algarin), the military (RADM Frederick Lois Riefkohl, USN; ADM Horacio Rivera, USN), and beauty pageants, with five victories in Miss Universe (Puerto Rico often sends representatives to international events separate from the American ones), second most successful in that pageant, and not surprisingly as Puerto Rican women have been described as staggeringly beautiful since Columbus' voyage there in 1493. However, poverty remains an ongoing challenge in many areas, and the catastrophic devastation wrought by 2017's Hurricane Maria, followed by a slow recovery (complicated by mainland U.S. political interests seemingly intent on punishing the island) have certainly not helped at all. The Government's response to the disaster inflamed political debate about whether or not Puerto Rico is really seen as a full part of the U.S, or whether the mainland considers Puerto Rican citizens second-class.

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Puerto Rico is home to many beautiful beaches, 56 animal and 239 plant indigenous species, one of which is the emblematic ''coquí'' frog. Puerto Ricans have distinguished themselves in many fields, including music (Music/TitoPuente, Music/JoseFeliciano, Hector Lavoe), literature (Creator/RosarioFerre, Tato Laviera, Miguel Algarin), the military (RADM Frederick Lois Riefkohl, USN; ADM Horacio Rivera, USN), and beauty pageants, with five victories in Miss Universe (Puerto Rico often sends representatives to international events separate from the American ones), second most successful in that pageant, and not surprisingly as Puerto Rican women have been described as staggeringly beautiful since Columbus' voyage there in 1493. After Mexicans, Puerto Ricans form the largest Hispanic/Latino ethnic group in the mainland U.S., and they are well-represented in all sectors of society, from entertainment to politics. However, poverty remains an ongoing challenge in many areas, and the catastrophic devastation wrought by 2017's Hurricane Maria, followed by a slow recovery (complicated by mainland U.S. political interests seemingly intent on punishing the island) have certainly not helped at all. The Government's response to the disaster inflamed political debate about whether or not Puerto Rico is really seen as a full part of the U.S, or whether the mainland considers Puerto Rican citizens second-class.



* ''Literature/TheHeroesOfOlympus'': Reyna and her sister, Hylla, are Puerto Ricans. In ''The Blood of Olympus'', Reyna, Nico, and Coach Hedge visit San Juan to meet with Hylla during their journey to bring the Athena Parthenos to Camp Half-Blood.



* '''Area:''' 9,104 km
(3,515 sq mi)

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* '''Area:''' 9,104 km
sq km (3,515 sq mi)
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General clarification on works content


Puerto Rico is home to many beautiful beaches, 56 animal and 239 plant indigenous species, one of which is the emblematic ''coquí'' frog. Puerto Ricans have distinguished themselves in many fields, including music (Music/TitoPuente, Music/JoseFeliciano, Hector Lavoe), literature ([[Creator/RosarioFerre Rosario Ferré]], Tato Laviera, Miguel Algarin), the military (RADM Frederick Lois Riefkohl, USN; ADM Horacio Rivera, USN), and beauty pageants, with five victories in Miss Universe (Puerto Rico often sends representatives to international events separate from the American ones), second most successful in that pageant, and not surprisingly as Puerto Rican women have been described as staggeringly beautiful since Columbus' voyage there in 1493. However, poverty remains an ongoing challenge in many areas, and the catastrophic devastation wrought by 2017's Hurricane Maria, followed by a slow recovery (complicated by mainland U.S. political interests seemingly intent on punishing the island) have certainly not helped at all. The Government's response to the disaster inflamed political debate about whether or not Puerto Rico is really seen as a full part of the U.S, or whether the mainland considers Puerto Rican citizens second-class.

to:

Puerto Rico is home to many beautiful beaches, 56 animal and 239 plant indigenous species, one of which is the emblematic ''coquí'' frog. Puerto Ricans have distinguished themselves in many fields, including music (Music/TitoPuente, Music/JoseFeliciano, Hector Lavoe), literature ([[Creator/RosarioFerre Rosario Ferré]], (Creator/RosarioFerre, Tato Laviera, Miguel Algarin), the military (RADM Frederick Lois Riefkohl, USN; ADM Horacio Rivera, USN), and beauty pageants, with five victories in Miss Universe (Puerto Rico often sends representatives to international events separate from the American ones), second most successful in that pageant, and not surprisingly as Puerto Rican women have been described as staggeringly beautiful since Columbus' voyage there in 1493. However, poverty remains an ongoing challenge in many areas, and the catastrophic devastation wrought by 2017's Hurricane Maria, followed by a slow recovery (complicated by mainland U.S. political interests seemingly intent on punishing the island) have certainly not helped at all. The Government's response to the disaster inflamed political debate about whether or not Puerto Rico is really seen as a full part of the U.S, or whether the mainland considers Puerto Rican citizens second-class.
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Since 1898, Puerto Rico's relationship with the U.S. has been alternately good (sugar boom in the 1920s, ratification of the Puerto Rican Constitution and Operation Bootstrap in the 1950s, modern-day pharmaceutical and manufacturing boom) and bad (Governors Guy V. Henry, E. Montgomery Reilly, Blanton Winship). A recent report on the island reveals that the United States does not and will not consider the current status as "commonwealth" a viable option for the island's permanent future. The generally-accepted options for Puerto Rico's future (besides the status quo) are independence (which has a small but significant following) and statehood (which has a fairly large following but not a majority). The US Army has designed a 51-star flag just in case the latter happens. Various presidents and presidential candidates in the U.S. have actually expressed support in favour of statehood, and Puerto Rico voted to seek statehood in a referendum held in November of 2012. A second referendum held in 2017 revealed that an overwhelming 97% of Puerto Ricans support statehood... out of those who voted, which is significant because there was historically low voter turnout.[[note]]Less than a quarter of the population actually went to the polls[[/note]] Whether either of these referendums will hold any weight in the future remains to be seen; given the current extremely divided state of the U.S. Congress, the issue remains up in the air.

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Since 1898, Puerto Rico's relationship with the U.S. has been alternately good (sugar boom in the 1920s, ratification of the Puerto Rican Constitution and Operation Bootstrap in the 1950s, TheFifties, modern-day pharmaceutical and manufacturing boom) and bad (Governors Guy V. Henry, E. Montgomery Reilly, Blanton Winship). A recent report on the island reveals that the United States does not and will not consider the current status as "commonwealth" a viable option for the island's permanent future. The generally-accepted options for Puerto Rico's future (besides the status quo) are independence (which has a small but significant following) and statehood (which has a fairly large following following, but not a majority). The US Army has designed a 51-star flag just in case the latter happens. Various presidents and presidential candidates in the U.S. have actually expressed support in favour of statehood, and Puerto Rico voted to seek statehood in a referendum held in November of 2012. A second referendum held in 2017 revealed that an overwhelming 97% of Puerto Ricans support statehood... out of those who voted, which is significant because there was historically low voter turnout.[[note]]Less than a quarter of the population actually went to the polls[[/note]] Whether either of these referendums will hold any weight in the future remains to be seen; given the current extremely divided state of the U.S. Congress, the issue remains up in the air.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Most of the late 19th century history of Puerto Rico can be characterized by the development of political organizations seeking autonomous rule for the island. This was finally achieved in 1898, when the first autonomous government of Puerto Rico took power approximately one month before the United States invasion. It is worth noting that said government was similar, at least in broad strokes, to the Dominion of UsefulNotes/{{Canada}}: the only Spanish military officer on the island was its Governor-General, and served exclusively as the representative of the Crown; Puerto Rico agreed to answer to the Spanish crown on matters of defense and foreign affairs, but retained complete power over internal ones; and for the first time, could raise its own defense forces, land and sea alike, though it would depend on the Spanish Armed Forces in wartime.

to:

Most of the late 19th century history of Puerto Rico can be characterized by the development of political organizations seeking autonomous rule for the island. This was finally achieved in 1898, when the first autonomous government of Puerto Rico took power power, approximately one month before the United States invasion. It is worth noting that said government was similar, at least in broad strokes, to the Dominion of UsefulNotes/{{Canada}}: the only Spanish military officer on the island was its Governor-General, and served exclusively as the representative of the Crown; Puerto Rico agreed to answer to the Spanish crown on matters of defense and foreign affairs, but retained complete power over internal ones; and for the first time, it could raise its own defense forces, land and sea alike, though it would depend on the Spanish Armed Forces in wartime.
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None


Settled in 1508 by UsefulNotes/JuanPonceDeLeon, its first governor, Puerto Rico was ruled for most of its history by UsefulNotes/{{Spain}}, with the exact quality of said rule depending on the King (or later Queen) in power. The 19th century was an especially troubled time, with several succeeding monarchs and their Prime Ministers allowing reforms, only to later rescind them and later reinstate them. One high point came when Ramón Power, a Puerto Rican officer in the Spanish Navy descended from Irish immigrants, served as vice-president of the Spanish ''Cortes'' (equivalent to Parliament) during the Napoleonic Wars.

to:

Settled in 1508 by UsefulNotes/JuanPonceDeLeon, its first governor, Puerto Rico was ruled for most of its history by UsefulNotes/{{Spain}}, with the exact quality of said rule depending on the King (or later Queen) in power. The 19th century was an especially troubled time, with several succeeding monarchs and their Prime Ministers allowing reforms, only to later rescind them and later reinstate them. One high point came when Ramón Power, a Puerto Rican officer in the Spanish Navy descended from Irish immigrants, served as vice-president of the Spanish ''Cortes'' (equivalent to Parliament) during the Napoleonic Wars.
UsefulNotes/TheNapoleonicWars.
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Settled in 1508 by Juan Ponce de León, its first governor, Puerto Rico was ruled for most of its history by UsefulNotes/{{Spain}}, with the exact quality of said rule depending on the King (or later Queen) in power. The 19th century was an especially troubled time, with several succeeding monarchs and their Prime Ministers allowing reforms, only to later rescind them and later reinstate them. One high point came when Ramón Power, a Puerto Rican officer in the Spanish Navy descended from Irish immigrants, served as vice-president of the Spanish ''Cortes'' (equivalent to Parliament) during the Napoleonic Wars.

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Settled in 1508 by Juan Ponce de León, UsefulNotes/JuanPonceDeLeon, its first governor, Puerto Rico was ruled for most of its history by UsefulNotes/{{Spain}}, with the exact quality of said rule depending on the King (or later Queen) in power. The 19th century was an especially troubled time, with several succeeding monarchs and their Prime Ministers allowing reforms, only to later rescind them and later reinstate them. One high point came when Ramón Power, a Puerto Rican officer in the Spanish Navy descended from Irish immigrants, served as vice-president of the Spanish ''Cortes'' (equivalent to Parliament) during the Napoleonic Wars.
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The island's first inhabitants were the Tainos, an indigenous tribe similar to those of South America, but less aggressive. When the Spanish found the island (in UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus' second trip to the New World) the Tainos believed them to be gods and submitted to them, until they got suspicious and decided to try drowning one of them to see if he was immortal. Of course, he proved not to be, leading to an uprising against the invaders, but they were no match and ended up enslaved and eventually absorbed into the local gene pool (a similar fate was suffered by the African slaves). Puerto Ricans today are proud of their multicultural origins, as can be seen in everything from its towns (some still bearing Taino names) to the African rhythms of the local music.

to:

The island's first inhabitants were the Tainos, an indigenous tribe similar to those of South America, UsefulNotes/SouthAmerica, but less aggressive. When the Spanish found the island (in UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus' second trip to the New World) the Tainos believed them to be gods and submitted to them, until they got suspicious and decided to try drowning one of them to see if he was immortal. Of course, he proved not to be, leading to an uprising against the invaders, but they were no match and ended up enslaved and eventually absorbed into the local gene pool (a similar fate was suffered by the African slaves). Puerto Ricans today are proud of their multicultural origins, as can be seen in everything from its towns (some still bearing Taino names) to the African rhythms of the local music.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Puerto Rico is home to many beautiful beaches, 56 animal and 239 plant indigenous species, one of which is the emblematic ''coquí'' frog. Puerto Ricans have distinguished themselves in many fields, including music (Music/TitoPuente, Jose Feliciano, Hector Lavoe), literature ([[Creator/RosarioFerre Rosario Ferré]], Tato Laviera, Miguel Algarin), the military (RADM Frederick Lois Riefkohl, USN; ADM Horacio Rivera, USN), and beauty pageants, with five victories in Miss Universe (Puerto Rico often sends representatives to international events separate from the American ones), second most successful in that pageant, and not surprisingly as Puerto Rican women have been described as staggeringly beautiful since Columbus' voyage there in 1493. However, poverty remains an ongoing challenge in many areas, and the catastrophic devastation wrought by 2017's Hurricane Maria, followed by a slow recovery (complicated by mainland U.S. political interests seemingly intent on punishing the island) have certainly not helped at all. The Government's response to the disaster inflamed political debate about whether or not Puerto Rico is really seen as a full part of the U.S, or whether the mainland considers Puerto Rican citizens second-class.

to:

Puerto Rico is home to many beautiful beaches, 56 animal and 239 plant indigenous species, one of which is the emblematic ''coquí'' frog. Puerto Ricans have distinguished themselves in many fields, including music (Music/TitoPuente, Jose Feliciano, Music/JoseFeliciano, Hector Lavoe), literature ([[Creator/RosarioFerre Rosario Ferré]], Tato Laviera, Miguel Algarin), the military (RADM Frederick Lois Riefkohl, USN; ADM Horacio Rivera, USN), and beauty pageants, with five victories in Miss Universe (Puerto Rico often sends representatives to international events separate from the American ones), second most successful in that pageant, and not surprisingly as Puerto Rican women have been described as staggeringly beautiful since Columbus' voyage there in 1493. However, poverty remains an ongoing challenge in many areas, and the catastrophic devastation wrought by 2017's Hurricane Maria, followed by a slow recovery (complicated by mainland U.S. political interests seemingly intent on punishing the island) have certainly not helped at all. The Government's response to the disaster inflamed political debate about whether or not Puerto Rico is really seen as a full part of the U.S, or whether the mainland considers Puerto Rican citizens second-class.
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[[folder:Toys]]
* [[RoyaltiesHeir Jewel Richie]] from Toys/RainbowHigh was born in Puerto Rico before transferring to the titular school in California, and is an heir to her family's local fashion empire, House of Richie.
[[/folder]]
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IUEO now


Settled in 1508 by Juan Ponce de León, its first governor, Puerto Rico was ruled for most of its history by UsefulNotes/{{Spain}}, with the exact quality of said rule depending on the King (or later Queen) in power. The 19th century was an especially troubled time, with several succeeding monarchs and their Prime Ministers allowing reforms, only to later rescind them and later reinstate them. One high point came when [[AwesomeMcCoolName Ramón Power]], a Puerto Rican officer in the Spanish Navy descended from Irish immigrants, served as vice-president of the Spanish ''Cortes'' (equivalent to Parliament) during the Napoleonic Wars.

to:

Settled in 1508 by Juan Ponce de León, its first governor, Puerto Rico was ruled for most of its history by UsefulNotes/{{Spain}}, with the exact quality of said rule depending on the King (or later Queen) in power. The 19th century was an especially troubled time, with several succeeding monarchs and their Prime Ministers allowing reforms, only to later rescind them and later reinstate them. One high point came when [[AwesomeMcCoolName Ramón Power]], Power, a Puerto Rican officer in the Spanish Navy descended from Irish immigrants, served as vice-president of the Spanish ''Cortes'' (equivalent to Parliament) during the Napoleonic Wars.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The island's first inhabitants were the Tainos, an indigenous tribe similar to those of South America, but less aggressive. When the Spanish found the island (in UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus' second trip to the New World) the Tainos believed them to be gods (similar to what happened with UsefulNotes/HernanCortez in UsefulNotes/{{Mexico}}) and submitted to them, until they got suspicious and decided to try drowning one of them to see if he was immortal. Of course, he proved not to be, leading to an uprising against the invaders, but they were no match and ended up enslaved and eventually absorbed into the local gene pool (a similar fate was suffered by the African slaves). Puerto Ricans today are proud of their multicultural origins, as can be seen in everything from its towns (some still bearing Taino names) to the African rhythms of the local music.

to:

The island's first inhabitants were the Tainos, an indigenous tribe similar to those of South America, but less aggressive. When the Spanish found the island (in UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus' second trip to the New World) the Tainos believed them to be gods (similar to what happened with UsefulNotes/HernanCortez in UsefulNotes/{{Mexico}}) and submitted to them, until they got suspicious and decided to try drowning one of them to see if he was immortal. Of course, he proved not to be, leading to an uprising against the invaders, but they were no match and ended up enslaved and eventually absorbed into the local gene pool (a similar fate was suffered by the African slaves). Puerto Ricans today are proud of their multicultural origins, as can be seen in everything from its towns (some still bearing Taino names) to the African rhythms of the local music.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* ''Series/RuPaulsDragRace'': Puerto Ricans are eligible to compete on the show, and due to the island's vibrant LGBT community, several have done so. While no Puerto Rican queen has won the crown thus far, a few have become fan-favorites like Nina Flowers, Alexis Matteo, and Yara Sofia.
[[/folder]]
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Stuck right between regions - sometimes it's the smallest of the Greater Antilles, sometimes the largest of the Lesser - Puerto Rico, a mere 110 miles by 40 miles if measuring loosely, is one of two current UsefulNotes/UnitedStates commonwealths/semi-autonomous territories[[note]]the other is the UsefulNotes/NorthernMarianaIslands, population around 50,000[[/note]]. This has some indefinite difference with simple territories (such as UsefulNotes/{{Guam}}), but legally works out to the same as the United States Constitution does not recognize a "commonwealth" as a true status. This means that the island's population is disenfranchised in presidential elections unless they relocate to one of the states proper, despite the fact that they number ''3.4 million'' as of 2015 and thus larger than several of the smaller states' populations combined. Puerto Ricans always have the chance to relocate, though, resulting in a large-scale emigration year by year; from 2010 to 2015, the territory's population saw a decrease of almost 300,000 people.

The island's first inhabitants were the Tainos, tribesmen similar to those of South America, but less aggressive. When the Spanish found the island (in UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus' second trip to the New World) the Tainos believed them to be gods (similar to what happened with UsefulNotes/HernanCortez in UsefulNotes/{{Mexico}}) and submitted to them, until they got suspicious and decided to try drowning one of them to see if he was immortal. Of course, he proved not to be, leading to an uprising against the invaders, but they were no match for them and ended up enslaved and eventually absorbed into the local gene pool (a similar fate was suffered by the African slaves). Puerto Ricans today are proud of their multicultural origins, as can be seen in everything from its towns (some still bearing Taino names) to the African rhythms of the local music.

to:

Stuck right between regions - sometimes it's the smallest of the Greater Antilles, sometimes the largest of the Lesser - Puerto Rico, a mere 110 miles by 40 miles if measuring loosely, is one of two current UsefulNotes/UnitedStates commonwealths/semi-autonomous territories[[note]]the other is the UsefulNotes/NorthernMarianaIslands, population around 50,000[[/note]]. This has some indefinite difference with simple territories (such as UsefulNotes/{{Guam}}), but legally works out to the same as the United States Constitution does not recognize a "commonwealth" as a true status. This means that the island's population is disenfranchised in presidential elections unless they relocate to one of the states proper, despite the fact that they number almost ''3.4 2 million'' as of 2015 and thus larger 2020, more than all other territories combined and even several of the smaller states' populations combined. states. However, Puerto Ricans always have are full US citizens free to live, study, work, and vote in the chance to relocate, though, mainland without dealing with immigration hurdles, resulting in a large-scale emigration exodus year by year; from year. From 2010 to 2015, 2020, the territory's population saw a decrease of almost 300,000 half a million people.

The island's first inhabitants were the Tainos, tribesmen an indigenous tribe similar to those of South America, but less aggressive. When the Spanish found the island (in UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus' second trip to the New World) the Tainos believed them to be gods (similar to what happened with UsefulNotes/HernanCortez in UsefulNotes/{{Mexico}}) and submitted to them, until they got suspicious and decided to try drowning one of them to see if he was immortal. Of course, he proved not to be, leading to an uprising against the invaders, but they were no match for them and ended up enslaved and eventually absorbed into the local gene pool (a similar fate was suffered by the African slaves). Puerto Ricans today are proud of their multicultural origins, as can be seen in everything from its towns (some still bearing Taino names) to the African rhythms of the local music.

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