From Columbus to Castro: The History of the Caribbean, 1492-1969A history of the Caribbean from 1492 to the present by the Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago. This book sets the record straight by collecting all existing knowledge of the Caribbean in relation to the rest of the world, and to provide, through greater awareness of its heritage of exploitation and neglect, a sure foundation for the economic integration of the region. Countries in the Caribbean Sea include Cuba, the Bahamas, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. |
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Results 1-3 of 81
Page 117
... cultivation of the latter , inasmuch as there is reason to expect that the islands , in propor- tion as their lands are cleared and put in cultivation , will produce too large a quantity of sugar . Variety in cultivation is more ...
... cultivation of the latter , inasmuch as there is reason to expect that the islands , in propor- tion as their lands are cleared and put in cultivation , will produce too large a quantity of sugar . Variety in cultivation is more ...
Page 379
... cultivation was impossible , represented the only instance in which the spread of sugar cultivation in other tropical areas was not attended with the degradation of labour which charac- terised the Caribbean sugar industry . In ...
... cultivation was impossible , represented the only instance in which the spread of sugar cultivation in other tropical areas was not attended with the degradation of labour which charac- terised the Caribbean sugar industry . In ...
Page 448
... cultivation . ' The Olivier Sugar Commission paid particular attention to this question of land settlement in 1928 and came up with the follow- ing conclusion : ' We must record our considered opinion that it is impossible to expect any ...
... cultivation . ' The Olivier Sugar Commission paid particular attention to this question of land settlement in 1928 and came up with the follow- ing conclusion : ' We must record our considered opinion that it is impossible to expect any ...
Contents
Introduction | 11 |
Westward Ho | 13 |
Christopher Columbus and the Discovery of the West Indies | 18 |
Copyright | |
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From Columbus to Castro: The History of the Caribbean, 1492-1969 Eric Williams No preview available - 1983 |
Common terms and phrases
abolition abolitionists acres Africa agriculture American annual Antigua Assembly average Barbados beet sugar Britain British Government British Guiana British West Indies cane Caribbean Castro cent Colbert colour Columbus commerce Commission Company Cuba Cuba's Cuban cultivation Domingo Dutch duties economic eighteenth century emancipation England English Europe European exports factories foreign France French West Indies Governor Grenada Guadeloupe Haiti half Hispaniola hogsheads hundredweight immigration imports indentured independence interests Jamaica King Kitts labour land Leeward Islands less Lucia manufacture Martinique ment metropolitan country million monopoly mulattoes Negro slave Parliament political population Portuguese pounds produced profit Puerto Rico refining revolution Rican Royal Saint-Domingue servants Seville ships slave trade slavery Spain Spaniards Spanish Spanish colonies Spanish Government sugar industry sugar plantation Surinam territories tion tobacco tons treaty Trinidad and Tobago United West Indian West Indian planters West Indian sugar workers wrote