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History of Dominica
Mar 06, 2007 05:03:58
History of Dominica part I
The Caribs, who settled here in the 14th century,
called the island Waitikubuli, which means 'tall is
her body'. With less poetic flair, Christopher
Columbus named the island after the day of the
week he spotted it - Sunday, 3 November 1493.
In 1607, Captain John Smith and his followers
stopped at the Dominican coastal settlement of
Portsmouth for a couple of days before heading
north to establish Jamestown, North America's first
permanent English settlement. The harbour
became so important to the British that they
intended to make Portsmouth the island's capital
until outbreaks of malaria and yellow fever
thwarted the plan.
France laid claim to the island in 1635 and a few
years later sent a contingent of missionaries, who
were driven off by unwelcoming Caribs. The
French and English signed a neutrality treaty in
1660 agreeing to Carib possession of the island.
Nevertheless, French settlers from the
neighbouring French West Indies began
establishing coffee plantations on Dominica toward
the end of the century. France then sent a
governor in the 1720s and took formal possession
of the island.
For the remainder of the 18th century, Dominica
was caught up in the French and British skirmishes
that marked the era, changing hands between the
two powers several times. Under the Treaty of
Paris, the French reluctantly ceded the island to the
British in 1763. The French tried to recapture
Dominica in 1795 and again in 1805, when they
managed to burn much of Roseau to the ground.
After 1805 the island remained firmly in the
possession of the British, who established sugar
plantations on Dominica's more accessible slopes.
The British administered the island as part of the
Leeward Islands Federation until 1939, when it was
transferred to the Windward Islands Federation.
Related News
History of Dominica Part I The Caribs, who settled here in the 14th century, called the island Waitikubuli, which means 'tall is her body'. With less poetic flair, Christopher Columbus named the island after the day of the week he spotted it - Sunday, 3 November 1493. In 1607, Captain John Smith and his followers stopped at the... Read More
History of Dominica Part I The Caribs, who settled here in the 14th century, called the island Waitikubuli, which means 'tall is her body'. With less poetic flair, Christopher Columbus named the island after the day of the week he spotted it - Sunday, 3 November 1493. In 1607, Captain John Smith and his followers stopped at the... Read More
History of Dominica
The Caribs, who settled here in the 14th century,
called the island Waitikubuli, which means 'tall is
her body'. With less poetic flair, Christopher
Columbus named the island after the day of the
week he spotted it - Sunday, 3 November 1493.
In 1607, Captain John Smith and his followers
stopped a... Read More
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