Naming customs of Hispanic America
The naming customs of Hispanic America are similar to the Spanish naming customs practiced in Spain, with some modifications to the surname rules. Many Hispanophones in the countries of Hispanic America have two given names, plus a paternal surname and a maternal surname.
Colonial Hispanic America
In the colonial period and nineteenth century, it was common to have between one and three given names followed by a second name with a "de" in front. For example, the Saint Teresa de Los Andes whose real name is Juana Enriqueta Josefina de los Sagrados Corazones Fernández del Solar. Where "Juana", "Enriqueta" and "Josefina" are her first names, followed by the second name "de los Sagrados Corazones". Her paternal surname is "Fernández" and her maternal surname is "del Solar".Another form of second name can be preceded by a "de" particle, which can be varied to "del" or "de los". Examples are "José del Pilar", "Rosa del Carmen", "Fidelina de las Mercedes". These second names are only used in formal occasions, and in many cases only registered in the birth, marriage and death certificates.
Modern day
Children who are not recognized by their father or to be raised separately have been legally treated in two ways, changing from time to time according to the civil registration norms. One way is to be registered with only a first surname that is the mother's surname. The second way is to have the mother's surname as first surname and second surname.Another case is to only register the father's surname and not giving reference to the mother, in accordance with US naming customs. This can be done to avoid legal and clerical complications in the future.
Argentina
Generally speaking, Argentine family names usually consist of a single, paternal surname. However, due to the large number of people of Spanish descent, many Argentines still use the surnames of both parents.In modern day Argentina, it's not common for married women to adopt their spouse's surname after marriage, although in the past some did add the spousal surname after their own with a de, as in, María López de Martínez. This usage is no longer seen in recent generations.
Chile
Instead of primer apellido and segundo apellido, legally, the following expressions are used: apellido paterno and apellido materno. Both surnames are equally important and having two surnames is obligation for any person in birth registrations, the use of them are mandatory for any official document.In Chile people never replace their surnames by the spouse’s ones at marriage. Spouse’s name adoption is not socially practiced and the possibility of so doing is not even contemplated by the law. Although a woman may socially use the marital conjunction de, it is omitted in her legal name. For example, former first lady Marta Larraechea very often is called Marta Larraechea de Frei, but her full legal name remains Marta Larraechea Bolívar. As another example, Soledad Alvear is almost never called Soledad Alvear de Martínez; her full legal name is María Soledad Alvear Valenzuela. This social practice, though, has long ago begun to fall into disfavor and very few women would these days accept to be referred to in this manner.
Colombia
In Colombia, the use is two surnames: first the paternal surname and then the maternal surname. Married women used to change their second last name for their husband first last name adding the preposition "de" between the two last names. However, in recent years, married women do not change their original family names for their husband's. Children who are not recognized by their father are registered with the two maternal surnames.Cuba, Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, and Puerto Rico
In Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, and Puerto Rico, both men and women carry their two family names. Both are equally important and are mandatory for any official document. Married women never change their original family names for their husband's. Even when they migrate to other countries where this is a common practice, many prefer to adhere to their heritage and keep their maiden name. They also use "de", as explained below.Ecuador
In Ecuador, a couple can choose the order of their children's surnames. Most choose the traditional order, but some invert the order, putting the mother's paternal surname first and the father's paternal surname last. Such inversion, if chosen, must be consistent for all children of the marriage.Uruguay
Uruguayans carry two surnames, as is the practice in most Spanish-speaking countries. Such custom has been recognized under Uruguayan laws No. 15.462 and 19.075.Regarding names, it is a common practice for Uruguayans to carry two names. Under Section 5 of Law No. 15.462, it is forbidden to the Officers of Public Registrars to register "names that are extravagant, ridicule, immoral or that may provoke a misunderstanding regarding the sex of the child to whom it is being imposed.".
Regarding surnames, according to those laws, if no agreement has been reached, the first surname shall be the father's surname, and the second surname shall be the mother's surname.
Women do not change their surnames upon marriage in Uruguay. In some instances, such as high society meetings, the partner's surname can be added after the person's surnames using the preposition de, but it is not a practice officially or legally provided, recognized or accepted.
Since 2013, parents may invert this order by mutual agreement, at the naming of the first child of the couple. Subsequent children must be named following the same order, since once the order of the surnames has been established it cannot be changed. If there is no agreement on the order, the rule shall apply depending on the type of couple: in case of heterosexual couples, the order shall be as in general practice. Same-sex parents may choose the order of both surnames of the children by mutual agreement. In case of disagreement the order of the surnames is determined by draw.
For example, Natalia Marisa Oreiro Iglesias is the daughter of Carlos Florencio Oreiro Poggio and Mabel Cristina Iglesias Bourié. Note that the marriage between her parents did not mean that the mother lost her maiden surnames.
In Uruguay, foreigners may retain use of their cultural naming customs, yet upon being granted the Uruguayan national identification document called Cédula de Identidad, they are legally obliged to assume Spanish-style names. If the naturalised person is from a one-surname culture, the maiden's name of the mother needs to be obtained, and if such cannot be evidenced, the surname is then duplicated.
Venezuela
In August 2007, a draft law by the Venezuelan National Electoral Council thus sought to change the national Venezuelan naming customs:'Civil Registry Organic Law Project: Limitation upon the inscription of names Article 106 "... will not permit... to place names that expose them to ridicule; that are extravagant or difficult to pronounce in the official language; that contain familiar and colloquial variants that denote a confused identification, or that generate doubts about the determination of the sex. In these cases, the registrar will offer, as reference, a listing of the most common names and surnames... The names of boys, girls, or adolescents of the country's indigenous ethnic groups and the names of foreigners' children are excepted from this disposition...."
Popular complaint against the naming-custom-limiting Article 106 compelled the Venezuelan National Electoral Council to delete it from the Civil Registry Organic Law Project.
It could be said that common names like Elvio Lado or Mónica Galindo would count as an example of violation to this law.
''de''
In some instances, such as high society meetings, and with no legal value, the husband’s surname can be added after the woman’s surnames using the conjunction de. Thus Leocadia Blanco Álvarez, married to a Pedro Pérez Montilla, may be addressed as Leocadia Blanco de Pérez or as Leocadia Blanco Álvarez de Pérez. This format is not used in everyday settings and has no legal value.In other nations doing so is frowned upon. The contemporary naming custom now practises the wife retaining her surname. The use of the husband’s surname by a wife is typically encountered in social situations where the connection to the husband is being stressed. Her full formal married-name is the documentary convention in only some Latin American countries. Where it exists, the custom provides her with ceremonial life and death wife-names, Ángela López, Sra. de Portillo wherein Sra. connotes "wife"; and Ángela López Sáenz, vda. de Portillo, wherein vda. denotes widowhood.
Some names have the de conjunction without association to marriage at all. Instead they may reflect the geographical origin of the individual or that of the individual ancestors. Thus there are men named Juan Ponce de León, José de Guzmán Benítez, Cristián de la Fuente and Oscar de la Renta.
Legal implications
The Hispanic preference for using the first surname from the father over the second surname from the mother occasionally results in serious legal problems in the United States, where, by social convention, most people have a first name, an optional middle name, and a single last name inherited solely from the father.For example, the 2006 decision on Corona Fruits & Veggies v. Frozsun Foods, from one of the California Courts of Appeal, held that a creditor had failed to perfect its security interest in the strawberry crop of a debtor whose full true name was "Armando Muñoz Juárez." In accordance with Mexican naming convention, he frequently went by Armando Muñoz, and signed documents by that name, and the creditor's financing statement therefore referred to him as "Armando Muñoz." The court ruled: "Debtor's last name did not change when he crossed the border into the United States. The 'naming convention' is legally irrelevant" In other words, under the California implementation of the Uniform Commercial Code, the debtor's "true last name" was Juárez.