vaquero - meaning and definition. What is vaquero
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What (who) is vaquero - definition

A HORSE-MOUNTED LIVESTOCK HERDER OF A TRADITION THAT ORIGINATED ON THE IBERIAN PENINSULA.
Vaqueros; Vaqueiro
  • A Texas-style [[bosal]] with added fiador, designed for starting an unbroke horse
  • Circa 1850s photo of a group of cowboys in [[New Mexico]]
  • mecates]] top row, rawhide [[bosal]]s in second row with other equipment
  • Modern child in Mexican parade wearing ''charro'' attire on horse outfitted in vaquero-derived equipment including wide, flat-horned saddle, bosalita and spade-type bit, carrying [[romal]] reins and reata
  • Image of a man and horse in Mexican-style equipment, horse in a two-rein bridle
  • "Rancheros". ''Voyage pittoresque et archéologique dans la partie la plus intéressante du Mexique''. 1834
  • In [[Piauí]], Brazil.
  • Vaquero, c. 1830

Vaquero         
·noun One who has charge of cattle, horses, ·etc.; a herdsman.
vaquero         
[v?'k?:r??]
¦ noun (plural vaqueros) (in Spanish-speaking parts of the USA) a cowboy; a cattle driver.
Origin
Sp., from vaca 'cow'.
Jesús Vaquero         
SPANISH NEUROSURGEON
Jesús Vaquero Crespo (1950 – 17 April 2020) was a Spanish neurosurgeon. He was a pioneer in the treatment of medullary injuries.

Wikipedia

Vaquero

The vaquero (Spanish: [baˈkeɾo]; Portuguese: vaqueiro, European Portuguese: [vɐˈkɐjɾu], Brazilian Portuguese: [vaˈkejɾu]) is a horse-mounted livestock herder of a tradition that has its roots in the Iberian Peninsula and extensively developed in Mexico from a methodology brought to Latin America from Spain. The vaquero became the foundation for the North American cowboy, in Northern Mexico, Southwestern United States, and Western Canada.

The cowboys of the Great Basin still use the term "buckaroo", which may be a corruption of vaquero, to describe themselves and their tradition. Many in Llano Estacado and along the southern Rio Grande prefer the term vaquero. While the indigenous and Hispanic communities in the age-old Nuevo México and New Mexico Territory regions use the term caballero, this term is likewise used in the Andes regions of South America. Vaquero heritage remains in the culture of the Californio (California), Neomexicano (New Mexico), and Tejano (Texas), along with Mexico, Central and South America, as well as the Asia-Pacific where there are related traditions.

Examples of use of vaquero
1. "Really, it was too small a bull for a grown man even to mention, more of a child‘s pet, very embarrassing to a vaquero," he writes.
2. A lot of people assume if you‘re of Latino background, you speak Spanish. . . . He‘s still very proud of being Puerto Rican. . . . As we try to shape our identity, we‘re trying not to lose what‘s important to us." Zavala‘s great–great–grandfather was a vaquero, one of the early Texas cowboys.