The Caribbean Basin
The Caribbean Basin
This essay provides details about the largest island in the Caribbean Basin, Jamaica, from its discovery until the present day.
3,670 words (
approx. 14.7 pages) |
9 sources |
MLA | 2001
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Paper Summary:
This essay is a study of the island of Jamaica. It gives an historical overview of its discovery. It details Jamaica's social, political, and economic situation and describes the main factors that effect its situation. This paper also examines the adjacent Caribbean islands and their present day situations. It gives an historical overview of the discovery of the Caribbean and the part the British and Japanese have played in the Caribbean's history.
From the Paper:
"Early in the sixteenth century, Spaniards landed on, and claimed, the island of Jamaica. Previously inhabited only by Arawak Indians, the island, located along the ocean route connecting the Old World to the New World, soon became a way station for Spanish galleons and a marketplace for slaves and goods from many countries. Along with the Spaniards, it was home to British citizens as well as multinational buccaneers and entrepreneurs.
"According to Daniel J. Seyler, in his contribution to Countries of the World, "Jamaica's story is one of independence that began in the seventeenth century with the Maroons, runaway slaves who resisted the British colonizers by carrying out hit-and run attacks from the interior. Their 7,000 descendants in the Cockpit Country have symbolized the fervent, sometimes belligerent, love of freedom that is ingrained in the Jamaican people as a result of both their British tutelage and their history of slavery. Independence came quietly, however, without a revolutionary struggle, apparently reflecting the lasting imprint of the British parliamentary legacy on Jamaican society" (Seyler 1991)."
The Caribbean Basin (2012, February 10). Retrieved February 10, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Research-Paper-The-Caribbean-Basin/5390
"The Caribbean Basin" 10 February 2012. Web. 10 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Research-Paper-The-Caribbean-Basin/5390>