The term Caucasian race, Caucasian or Caucasoid is used to refer to people whose ancestry can be traced back to Europe, North Africa, West Asia, the greater Indian subcontinent and parts of Central Asia. It was once considered a useful taxonomical categorization of human racial groups based on a presumed common geographic and/or linguistic origin.
In anthropology, the later and more technical term Caucasoid was defined by anthropometric criteria.
The term itself derives from measurements in craniology from the 19th century, and its name stems from the region of the Caucasus mountains, itself imagined to be the location from which Noah's son Japheth, traditional Biblical ancestor of the Europeans, established his tribe prior to its migration into Europe.
Caucasoid is a term used in physical anthropology to refer to people falling within a certain range of anthropometric measurements.
In New Zealand the term Caucasian is used most frequently in police offender descriptions. Pākehā, European New Zealander, or simply New Zealander (although in theory this should include all New Zealanders) are more common in general language.
In the United States the term "caucasian" has taken on a political rather than a scientific meaning. For example a large segment of the Hispanic community in the United States can be scientifically categorized as caucasian. Caucasian Hispanics, therefore, take offense to the political use of the word caucasian to describe the non-Hispanic caucasian population in the United States.
The reason the Caucasus had such an attraction to Blumenbach and other contemporaries was because of its proximity to Mount Ararat, where according to the Biblical account, Noah's Ark, eventually landed after the flood. Blumenbach believed that the original humans were light-skinned, that the Caucasians had retained this whiteness as a constant, and that darkness of skin was a sign of change from the original. The tribe of Japheth was supposed to have originated in the Caucasus, then spread north and westwards.
Later anthropologists, including William Z. Ripley in 1899 and Carleton Coon in 1957, further expanded upon the classification of the Caucasian race proposed by Blumenbach, and subdivided the group into Nordic, Alpine, Mediterranean, and at times Dinaric and Baltic subdivisions. The term Caucasoid (Caucasian-like) also came into use to encompass a larger grouping of populations with similar skull-shapes, including many North African, South Asian and Middle Eastern peoples. Nordicism, the belief that the blond Nordic sub-division constitutes a "master race", was influential in Northern Europe and the United States during the early twentieth century, eventually becoming the official ideology of the Nazi state. It was used to justify eugenics programs and the persecution and extermination of so-called "inferior" races then living in Europe, such as Jews and Roma.
In Europe, usage of the term declined in the 19th century as it did not allow for enough distinctions as required by the new forms of nationalism which were emerging, but in the United States it enjoyed a use which continues to the present. It is currently often used in the US as a general term for "white", and used by many physical anthropologists to refer to people of European origin. However, Caucasoids can range from light-"white"-skin (with blond hair and blue eyes) to dark-brown-skin (with black hair and black eyes).
Caucasians typically have the lowest degree of projection of the alveolar bones which contain the teeth, a notable size prominence of the cranium and forehead region, and a projection of the midfacial region. In anthropology skin color is not counted when describing Caucasians because Caucasians can be from pale (e.g. Scandinavia) to very dark brown (e.g. India).
However a year later, the same court was faced with the trial of United States v. Bhagat Singh Thind (1923), where they ruled that someone from the Indian subcontinent could not become a naturalized United States citizen, because they were not "white". The Supreme Court conceded that anthropologists had classified Indians as "Caucasians", and thus the same race as "whites" as defined in Ozawa, but concluded that "the average man knows perfectly well that there are unmistakable and profound differences", and denied citizenship.
The relevance of the term "Caucasian" to cultural identity and socio-economic patterns is still being debated in the scientific and cultural groups of America. There are those who would argue that the term is synonymous with "Caucasoid" and thus identifies a very large group of people who present certain general physical characteristics, with generally sharp features and straight/wavy hair. Using this diluted definition, "Caucasians" would range from the very dark South Indians; light-Brown to olive skinned North Indians, people of the Middle East and Mediterranean region; to the fair-skinned, light-haired natives of Northern Europe; or immigrant populations from any of these groups in the Americas or Australia.
Under this broadened definition, "Caucasians" would be the largest racial population group collectively in the world. The population would about equally split between the darker-skinned people originating in the Indian subcontinent and North Africa and the lighter-skinned people originating in Europe, and Western Asia. In reality, however, although Indians may be members of the broad "Caucasoid" racial classification by this definition, very few if any Indians would identify themselves as caucasians.
In common usage in North America and some other areas, the term "Caucasians" differs from the term "Caucasoid", and "Caucasians" are taken to include only fair-skinned "whites", whose populations are historically concentrated in the Northern parts of the world, including Northern Europe, Northern Asia and North America. Through immigration, however, Caucasians have also settled in large numbers in South America, Australia, New Zealand and parts of Southern Africa. Under this more common definition of the term, Caucasians make up a relatively small minority of the world's population.
In anthropology on the other hand, the definition has remained unchanged.
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"Caucasian race".
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