Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- A Concise History of the Caribbean
- 1 A HISTORY OF ISLANDS
- 2 ANCIENT ARCHIPELAGO, 7200 BP–AD 1492
- 3 COLUMBIAN CATACLYSM, 1492–1630
- 4 PLANTATION PEOPLES, 1630–1770
- 5 REBELS AND REVOLUTIONARIES, 1770–1870
- 6 DEMOCRATS AND DICTATORS, 1870–1945
- 7 THE CARIBBEAN SINCE 1945
- 8 CANOE, CARAVEL, CONTAINER SHIP
- Suggestions for Further Reading
- Index
- Title in the Series
4 - PLANTATION PEOPLES, 1630–1770
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- A Concise History of the Caribbean
- 1 A HISTORY OF ISLANDS
- 2 ANCIENT ARCHIPELAGO, 7200 BP–AD 1492
- 3 COLUMBIAN CATACLYSM, 1492–1630
- 4 PLANTATION PEOPLES, 1630–1770
- 5 REBELS AND REVOLUTIONARIES, 1770–1870
- 6 DEMOCRATS AND DICTATORS, 1870–1945
- 7 THE CARIBBEAN SINCE 1945
- 8 CANOE, CARAVEL, CONTAINER SHIP
- Suggestions for Further Reading
- Index
- Title in the Series
Summary
By the beginning of the seventeenth century, European colonization had reduced the Caribbean islands to a blank canvas. In truth it was not so much a blank canvas as one that had been thickly painted by a series of hands, scoured and scraped, then smeared with a rough bloody cloth, and cleaned again of yet another attempted landscape. The people and the civilizations that had flourished in the Greater Antilles before Columbus had been virtually obliterated. They had not been replaced by any new substantial population or any new form of civilization. Even regions the Spanish had attempted to populate were being evacuated. The land that had been brought to a high state of cultivation by the Taínos was being reconquered by rainforest. Exotic trees made themselves at home in the woodland. Large feral animals introduced by the Spanish crashed through the undergrowth of this landscape, otherwise silent but for the night sounds of crickets and frogs, the occasional noisy cascade or crack of thunder. Only in the smaller islands of the eastern Caribbean, which the Spanish had touched less heavily, did the indigenous people survive in significant numbers.
Although new European peoples had begun to show an interest in exploiting the opportunities offered by the disorganized state of Spain's Caribbean empire and although some of these same nations had encouraged attempts at settlement in the 1620s, there were few clues to the revolutionary transformation that was about to occur.
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- A Concise History of the Caribbean , pp. 97 - 140Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010