thumb|Illustration of a maragato from the mid-19th century Maragato refers both to the modern inhabitants of the region of Maragatería in the Province of León, Spain, as well as historically and specifically to the isolated merchants and muleteers from that area. Historically the maragatos faced social discrimination.
thumb|Illustration of a maragato from the mid-19th century Maragato refers both to the modern inhabitants of the region of Maragatería in the Province of León, Spain, as well as historically and specifically to the isolated merchants and muleteers from that area. Historically the maragatos faced social discrimination.
== Etymology == Several theories exist for the origins of the term maragato. Francisco Javier Rodríguez Pérez suggests that it comes from the Latin (merchant). Laureano Rubio suggests it is a contraction of the phrase "", referring to them transporting salted fish from Galicia (the sea, "") to Madrid (the cats, "", a nickname that stems from a medieval myth). The 17th century friar Pedro de Alba y Astorga suggested it originated from meaning "brave warrior".
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).