Dictionary Definition
gaucho n : a cowboy of the South American
pampas
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From lang=qu.
Pronunciation
- ˈgaʊtʃoʊ qualifier US
Noun
- A cowboy of the South American pampas.
Translations
South American cowboy
- Bosnian: gaučo
- Catalan: gautxo
- Croatian: gaučo
- Esperanto: gaŭĉo
- French: gaúcho
- German: Gaucho
- Hebrew: גאוצ'ו
- Japanese: ガウチョ
- Korean: 가우초 (gaucho)
- Macedonian: гаучо
- Portuguese: gaúcho
- Russian: гаучо
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic: гаучо
- Roman: gaučo
- Cyrillic: гаучо
- Ukrainian: гаучо
Extensive Definition
Gaucho (gaúcho in Portuguese)
is a term commonly used to describe residents of the South
American pampas,
chacos or Patagonian
grasslands, found
principally in parts of Argentina,
Uruguay,
Southern
Chile and Rio
Grande do Sul state in southern
Brazil. In Brazil it is used to designate people born in state
of Rio
Grande do Sul.
The word gaucho could be described as a loose
equivalent to the North
American "Cowboy". Like the
North American word cowboy, Venezuelan or
Colombian
llanero, or Chilean
huaso, or the Mexican
vaquero, the term often
connotes the 19th century
more than the present day; then gauchos made up the majority of the
rural population, herding cows and practicing hunting as their main
economic activities.
There are several conflicting hypotheses
concerning the origin of the term. It may derive from the Quechua
huachu (Indian, from the Indies) . The first recorded uses of the
term date from around the time of
Argentine independence in 1816.
History
Gauchos were generally nomadic and lived on the
pampas, the plain that
extends north from Patagonia,
bounded on the west by the Andes and extending
as far north as the Brazilian state of Rio
Grande do Sul. Residing outside of the growing urban centres
and farming settlements, these skilled riders lived off the land
often willingly sharing their food with other travelers. Most
gauchos were either criollo (South Americans of Spanish ancestry) or
mestizo (of mixed Spanish and
Native American blood), but the term applies equally to people
of other European, African, or mixed
ancestry.
Some gauchos were recorded as being in the
Falkland
Islands http://www.falklands.info/history/history3.html,
and have left a few Spanish words in the local dialect e.g.
camp from campo.
The gaucho plays an important symbolic role in
the nationalist feelings of this region, especially that of
Argentina and Uruguay. The epic poem Martín
Fierro by José
Hernández used the gaucho as a symbol against corruption and of
Argentine national tradition, pit against Europeanising tendencies.
Martín Fierro, the hero of the poem, is drafted into the Argentine
military for a border war, deserts, and becomes an outlaw and
fugitive. The image of the free gaucho is often contrasted to the
slaves who worked the northern Brazilian lands. Further literary
descriptions are found in Ricardo
Güiraldes' Don
Segundo Sombra. Like the North American cowboys, gauchos are
generally reputed to be strong, honest, silent types, but proud and
capable of violence when provoked. There is, perhaps, more of an
air of melancholy about the classic gaucho than the classic
cowboy.
Also like the cowboy, the gauchos were great
horseriders. Typically, a gaucho's Horse constituted
most of what he owned in the world. During the wars of the 19th
century in the Southern
Cone, the cavalries
on all sides were composed almost entirely of gauchos. In
Argentina, gaucho armies such as that of
Martín Miguel de Güemes, slowed Spanish advances. Furthermore,
many caudillos relied
on gaucho armies to control the Argentine provinces.
The gaucho diet was composed almost entirely of
beef while on the range, supplemented by yerba mate, an
herbal tea-like drink rich in caffeine and nutrients. Argentine
cooking draws influence from the simple but delicious recipes used
in gaucho meals.
Gauchos dressed quite distinctly from North
American cowboys, and used boleadoras (three leather
bound rocks tied together with approximately three feet long
leather straps) in addition to the familiar "North American"
lariat or riata. The
typical gaucho outfit would include a poncho (which doubled as
saddle blanket and also as sleeping gear), a facón (large
knife), a rebenque (leather whip), and loose-fitting trousers
called bombachas, belted with a tirador, or a chiripá, a piece of
cloth used in the fashion--but not the function--of a diaper.
Several of these items were British imports into the area; for
example, bombachas were originally made in Turkey. In the
wintertime, gauchos wore heavy wool ponchos to protect against
cold.
Modern influences
Gaucho is also the common denomination of the
current inhabitants of the Brazilian State of Rio
Grande do Sul. An example is the Brazilian football
player Ronaldinho,
known by Brazilian people as Ronaldinho Gaúcho, as he was born in
that State. The term is also used to identify some groups of people
who live in other states of the southern half of Brazil, Argentina, and
Uruguay.
For those people evoking this denomination usually has the purpose
of expressing the pride one has for its origins as immigrants to untouched lands
and for the hard-working nature it represents. Gauchito (a boy in
the Argentine colors and a gaucho hat) was the mascot
for the 1978
FIFA World Cup.
In Popular Culture
- "The Gaucho" was a 1927 film starring Douglas Fairbanks. In it he plays the Gaucho, a heroic leader of a gang of outlaws that try to save a city overtaken by an evil general.
- DC Comics owns two characters named El Gaucho. One was a Wonder Woman villain equipped with a flying robot horse and an electric lasso (from Wonder Woman #263) and the other one is an Argentinian masked hero (see Batmen of All Nations).
- The mascot of the University of California, Santa Barbara is the Gaucho.
See also
- Hacienda system
- Literatura Gauchesca
- Rebenque, the gaucho riding whip
- The Taba Game
- Estancias
- Pato
- Florencio Molina Campos
- Gauchito Gil
- Vaquero
- Cowboy (U.S.A)
- Morochuco (Peruvian Andean cowboy)
- Piajeno (north coast mule rider of Peru: Piura and Lambayeque)
- Charro (Mexican cowboy, nomad and bandolero)
- Guajiro (Cuban cowboy)
- Huaso (Chilean cowboy)
References
Gaucho in Catalan: Gautxo
Gaucho in German: Gaucho
Gaucho in Spanish: Gaucho
Gaucho in Esperanto: Gaŭĉo
Gaucho in French: Gaúcho
Gaucho in Italian: Gaucho
Gaucho in Hebrew: גאוצ'ו
Gaucho in Malay (macrolanguage): Gaucho
Gaucho in Dutch: Gaucho
Gaucho in Japanese: ガウチョ
Gaucho in Norwegian: Gaucho
Gaucho in Occitan (post 1500): Gaucho
Gaucho in Polish: Gaucho
Gaucho in Portuguese: Gaúcho
Gaucho in Russian: Гаучо
Gaucho in Simple English: Gaucho
Gaucho in Slovak: Gaučo
Gaucho in Serbian: Gaučo
Gaucho in Serbo-Croatian: Gaučo
Gaucho in Finnish: Gaucho
Gaucho in Swedish: Gaucho
Gaucho in Ukrainian: Гаучо
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
broncobuster, buckaroo, caballero, cattleman, cavalier, cavalryman, chevalier, circus rider,
cowboy, cowgirl, cowhand, cowherd, cowman, cowpuncher, drover, equestrian, equestrienne, goatherd, gooseboy, gooseherd, herder, herdsman, hogherd, horse soldier, horse
wrangler, horseback rider, horsebacker, horseherd, horseman, horsewoman, jockey, knight, mounted policeman,
pigman, postboy, postilion, puncher, rider, roughrider, sheepherder, sheepman, shepherd, shepherdess, steeplechaser, swanherd, swineherd, trick rider,
vaquero, waddy, wrangler