In historic Chilean agriculture an inquilino is a labourer indebted to a landlord who allows him to form a farm in parts of his property (usually in the marginal lands to keep away intruders) and who in exchange works without pay for the landlord. The inquilinos provided key manpower to carry out tasks like the gathering of livestock (rodeo) and slaughter. For inquilinos living in wheat-producing regions duties increased as the Chilean wheat cycle went on in from the 18th century onwards. The inquilinaje institution that characterized large parts of Chilean agriculture were eliminated by the Chilean land reform in the 1960s and early 1970s. Historian Mario Góngora has researched on the history of the inquilinos.
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| - Inquilinaje (es)
- Inquilino (en)
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| - Inquilinaje es la denominación que en Chile recibió el orden social y económico rural de la hacienda colonial, derivado de la hacienda andaluza, propia del régimen feudal Europeo, y que en el caso chileno fue el resultado de la crisis de la institución colonial de la encomienda. La denominación como tal se origina en una fórmula notarial empleada en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII, que solía hablar del «inquilino tenedor y precario poseedor», al referirse a lo que en otros lugares se denominó «arrendatario» o «colono». (es)
- In historic Chilean agriculture an inquilino is a labourer indebted to a landlord who allows him to form a farm in parts of his property (usually in the marginal lands to keep away intruders) and who in exchange works without pay for the landlord. The inquilinos provided key manpower to carry out tasks like the gathering of livestock (rodeo) and slaughter. For inquilinos living in wheat-producing regions duties increased as the Chilean wheat cycle went on in from the 18th century onwards. The inquilinaje institution that characterized large parts of Chilean agriculture were eliminated by the Chilean land reform in the 1960s and early 1970s. Historian Mario Góngora has researched on the history of the inquilinos. (en)
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| - Inquilinaje es la denominación que en Chile recibió el orden social y económico rural de la hacienda colonial, derivado de la hacienda andaluza, propia del régimen feudal Europeo, y que en el caso chileno fue el resultado de la crisis de la institución colonial de la encomienda. La denominación como tal se origina en una fórmula notarial empleada en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII, que solía hablar del «inquilino tenedor y precario poseedor», al referirse a lo que en otros lugares se denominó «arrendatario» o «colono». (es)
- In historic Chilean agriculture an inquilino is a labourer indebted to a landlord who allows him to form a farm in parts of his property (usually in the marginal lands to keep away intruders) and who in exchange works without pay for the landlord. The inquilinos provided key manpower to carry out tasks like the gathering of livestock (rodeo) and slaughter. For inquilinos living in wheat-producing regions duties increased as the Chilean wheat cycle went on in from the 18th century onwards. The inquilinaje institution that characterized large parts of Chilean agriculture were eliminated by the Chilean land reform in the 1960s and early 1970s. Historian Mario Góngora has researched on the history of the inquilinos. In modern Spanish the word has the same meaning as the English "tenant". (en)
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