Saturday, October 23, 2010

The Diversified Caribbean in the 16th & 17th Centuries Dave Gosse, Ph.D.




The European basis for exploration into the Caribbean

Three main factors:
-Ideology
-Technological Development
-Re-conquest

Thesis
Despite European colonialism influencing the Caribbean’s socio-political and economic institutions resulting in a diversified region, nevertheless, the Caribbean played a major role in the industrial development of Europe.
Ideological Factors
1. a:  Bullionism:
The concept of bullionism was never far away from the minds of many adventurers & national administrators as they contemplated exploration.                 
The concept of bullionism was the belief that the wealth of a nation depended on bullion (gold & silver) that it physically held.
It was, therefore, in the best interest of each state to secure as much of the world's bullion as possible because the belief that the amount of bullion in the world was finite.
Ideological Factors - cont
As a consequence each nation was to capture as much bullion as possible.
This meant an irretrievable loss to other nations which would not benefit from the bullion that was acquired
The theory of bullionism held that exploration was deemed necessary to find new lands and untapped reserves of bullion before other competing nations
Mercantilism
Mercantilist theory was an extension of the  bullionist theory.
The mercantilists understood the wealth of the world not only in bullion but also in trading activities that resulted in wealth creation.
Mercantilists argue that control of trade &  the control of markets, had a large part to play in the creation & sustenance of a nation's wealth.

Mercantilists held the view that to create and sustain wealth, nations must always have a positive balance of trade.
This meant that the volume & value of a nation's exports must always exceed what was imported.
Mercantilist encouraged exports of locally produced goods, less imports of goods and services & developed local substitutes – import substitution.
Mercantilism - cont
Mercantilists, understood economic prosperity in terms of competition between maritime powers and states.
Thus finding of “new” lands meant new opportunities for trade & wealth creation.
Mercantilist needed to secure trade relations with newly found lands first.
Mercantilists argued that their nations were only secure as long as they excluded other nations from engaging in trade with the newly conquered lands
 Colonialism
Colonialism emerged from theories of bullionism & mercantilism.
Colonialism implies formal political control, & loss of sovereignty for the territory annexed.
Colonialism necessitated military, intellectual & psychological warfare to ensure that the wealth derived from newly seized territories came only to the colonial power.
Colonialism -
In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in the Caribbean this usually meant military control over islands in the Caribbean.
When controlled by a colonial power these islands were compelled to trade only with the dominant metropolitan power.
Colonialism also implied changing the social views of the conquered territories.
Colonialism -
The Caribbean region was especially important from a colonialist perspective
 It was thought to be the westerly gateway to the riches of the East
Thus, the Caribbean was of high strategic and mercantilist value in terms of the control of the lucrative trades there.


Colonialism -
Behind the voyages of Columbus lay the urge to the East with its fabled stories of gold and spices popularised by the famous travelogues of Marco Polo and the persistent legend of Prester John.
This stimulated the desire to find a westerly route to the East. – Eric Williams
Religion
Many of the voyages of exploration aimed at the conversion to Christianity of peoples found in any newly found lands.
Catholic nations, such as Spain & Portugal, were keen to explore on behalf of their imperial powers, especially after 1492, when Spain completed a war against the Muslim Moors (Infidels) and succeeded in taking back Granada.
Developments in Technology
a: Nautical Developments
During the 15th C 'patrons' of innovation and exploration merged.
These patrons provided encouragement and much needed funding that facilitated the development of tools and ships for exploration.
Prince Henry the Navigator, a son of the King of Portugal, was one such patron who used his wealth and influence to facilitate the expansionist thrust of the period
Nautical Developments
With his wealth and influence Prince Henry established a school through which seamen were trained and advances in nautical technology were made.
With his encouragement and support, developments emerged in ship design that facilitated better seafaring navigation and that gave ships the ability to travel further, faster and safer on the high seas.
Nautical Developments
Larger, more powerful ships were built, such as the Venetian Galleass, which could accommodate up to 1,200 sailors & was generally used as a warship.
During this period, better riggings for sails were developed.
This resulted in the creation of the new Caravel, with better positioned sails that maximized the trade winds & led to farther voyages into the unknown.
Nautical Developments

 The invention of more sophisticated & accurate nautical devices, such as, the quadrant (from about 1456), allowed navigators to more accurately draw maps & locate their positions by use of the compass instead of just the stars.
As the explorers ventured further afield new maps of the world emerged & new ideas about the  known world began to dispel ancient beliefs; fallacies & superstitions that had kept Europe relatively confined. 
The Reconquest
The rulers of Portugal devoted their energies to expansion and exploration having expelled the Moslems from as early as 1150.
At that time much of Spain was still under Moslem rule.
Spain was not able to enter the fray until after 1492. In that year the crowns of Castile and Aragon were united through the marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella
The Reconquest -
As a united force, Spain pushed for the final expulsion of the Moors which took place in 1492.
Spain could now look outwards at expansion.
It is therefore significant that it was in the year of the completion of the reconquista that Christopher Columbus went on his first voyage under the sponsorship of Spain.
The Reconquest -
By then, Portugal had established trade with coastal West Africa which brought much wealth for Portuguese traders.
The Portuguese gained gold, slaves, spices, ivory & pepper.
By 1506, the Portuguese had led the exploration so far on the east coast of Africa that Mozambigue was under their control by 1507 Portugal and later Brazil.  
The Reconquest -
Treaty of Tordesillas - 1494
To avoid conflict between Spain & Portugal over the ‘discovered’ lands, Pope Alexander Borgia issued a “papal bull” which divided such lands between Spain & Portugal.
Lands east of an imaginary line located 370 leagues west of the Cape Verde Islands (off the coast of Senegal) were to be given solely to Portugal & west to Spain
Treaty of Tordesillas - Significance
Doctrine of “Effective Occupation” laid the groundwork for continued conflict in the region & the creation of the term “interlopers”.
These conflicts led to various European cultures occupying & thereby influencing Caribbean countries at different times & to differing extents, which has contributed in many ways to our present day diversity.
Spanish Expansionism
Christopher Columbus was the first Spanish explorer to expand the Spanish areas of settlement beyond the Atlantic islands. 
Columbus was an experienced seaman & as an Italian had spent time in Portugal & Madeira.
His attempts to get sponsorship for an expedition across the Atlantic from Portugal failed.
Spanish Expansionism
Columbus initiated the tribute system in 1495 to gain: gold, cotton, spices, & cassava.
Spain claimed the right to North & South America.
Spain did not settle the Lesser Antilles because of the Kalinagos & mineral wealth discovered in Mexico & Peru.
The Greater Antilles were settled in the early years of the 16th century however.
Agricultural Change and the Emergence of King Sugar
Sugar planting and the export of sugar (and to a lesser extent its by-product, rum) were the chief mainstays of the Caribbean economy right through to the eighteenth century.
Other agricultural activities also existed prior to, in tandem with, and even apart from sugar production and cultivation in the period
Agricultural Change and the Emergence of King Sugar
The historian Carlyle Batie has shown the importance of other crops, such as tobacco, cotton, indigo, ginger to the early Caribbean economy.
Verene Shepherd, has highlighted the importance of animal pens to the agricultural well-being of the early Caribbean islands since the animals were  sources of meat and hides, and also provided mill power for the early colonists.
Agricultural Change and the Emergence of King Sugar
The fertile Caribbean lands provided a source for experiments with many agricultural crops, especially from Europe.
These experiments were intended largely for the domestic market & consisted of subsistence agriculture for the resident Spanish population.
The Spainards introduced a forced system of labour on the native peoples.
The Arrival of the English
The early English “interlopers” established replicas of traditional English society, in which small farmers tilled the land producing cotton and tobacco.
These plantations were relatively small and their  staples were never enough for export.
However, experiments with tobacco plantations in Barbados and St. Kitts marked the first real attempts to generate wealth from plantation agriculture.
The Arrival of the English
These experiments mirrored the attempts of the early American settlers in places such as Virginia and Maryland where the practice involved clearing large tracts of land and employing indentured labour (usually white) to cultivate the crop.
The tobacco experiments in the Caribbean were quite successful initially and reached their peak in the period 1627 to 1640.
The Arrival of the English
The successes of the tobacco were due to the high prices on the world market & large number of immigrants coming to the Caribbean. 
By the 17th century, Caribbean tobacco could not compete qualitatively or quantitatively with tobacco in North America.
Thus, tobacco was eventually replaced by sugar as the primary export crop.
The Spanish and Cocoa in Trinidad
While cocoa farming was never widely practiced throughout the Caribbean, a significant cocoa industry thrived in Trinidad & Tobago from around the middle of the 17th century.
The cocoa produced in T& T was of a high price and ths encouraged the Spanish settlers to depend heavily on this crop as the mainstay of the agriculture industry at that time.
The Spanish and Cocoa in Trinidad
This cocoa industry was only to have its glory days for about a hundred years.
 However, the industry had been severely affected by disastrous agricultural diseases.
Thus, T&T’s demise in the  eighteenth century also paved the way for the establishment here, as elsewhere, of sugar.
The Emergence of 'King' Sugar
It was first in Barbados the English colonists turned their attention from cotton & tobacco to the propagation of sugar cane between 1640 to 1660.
The interest in sugar cane cannot be considered an original or novel idea since sugar cultivation had been around off the Atlantic islands & Brazil for a long time and earlier attempts had been made in the region to introduce the crop
The Emergence of 'King' Sugar
Sugar cane was first brought into the wider Atlantic world (Madeira, the Canaries, Sao Tome) by the early Portuguese & Spanish explorers who had hopes of setting up sugar works to appease the growing demand for sugar in Europe
The Spanish had also set up small sugar works in Hispaniola, Cuba and Jamaica as well.
The Emergence of 'King' Sugar
However this spread of the crop attributed to the Portuguese and Spanish, was overshadowed by its quick rise in Brazil from around the mid-seventeenth century.
In fact, the sugar industry that was eventually established by the English in the Caribbean, owes more to the Brazilian industry than it does to the early Spanish and Portuguese industry.
The Emergence of 'King' Sugar
In Brazil it was demonstrated that sugar had the potential to generate large amounts of revenue.
Sugar cane necessitated plantation agriculture; harvest cycle of many years; permanent capital equipment, & settler colonies.  
Sugar cane could finance colonial endeavors as well as a justification for the occupation of more territory"
The Emergence of 'King' Sugar
By the mid-17th century, with the Dutch expulsion from the Brazilian sugar enclave of Pernambuco to Barbados in 1654, the Caribbean was now selected to become the new focal point for this most profitable industry.
Barbados's meteoric rise to prominence as a sugar island was later challenged by Jamaica.
The Emergence of 'King' Sugar
Jamaica, having more fertile sugar acreage than any other British Caribbean territory, became the most promising sugar colony.
Its buccaneering status was altered by 1700 by sugar cultivation.
This was aided by generous land grants of thirty acres of land plus thirty more for each family member, servant & enslaved African brought with them.
Labour Diversity and Demographic Change in Caribbean Society
The Encomienda System:
The encomienda system in the Caribbean was patterned after a similar labor system in Spain. 
Under the system in the Caribban, Spanairds who were loyal subjects to the Spanish crown, were granted a parcel of land with the right to exact tribute (usually in the form of labour or crops, or both) from the Indians living on the land
The Encomienda System
The encomienda system in the Caribbean was patterned after a similar labor system in Spain. 
Under the system in the Caribban, Spanairds who were loyal subjects to the Spanish crown, were granted a parcel of land with the right to exact tribute (usually in the form of labour or crops, or both) from the Indians living on the land
The Encomienda System
The system offered rights to the Indians in the form of payment & provisions.
The Spaniards ignored the requirements & the system became a one-way flow of naked exploitation 
The native people were compelled to pay heavy tributes that often took the form of goods & services such as foodstuffs, cloth & labour in plantations & mines.
Resulting in the decimation of the Indians.
The White English Indentured Labourers
English settlements in the Caribbean beganin the 1620s with the breaking of the Spanish monopoly in the Lesser Antilles.
This was followed by similar incursions into the Leewards between 1680 to 1700 and the capture of the prize island of Jamaica in 1655.
With a growing territorial stake in the Caribbean, English colonization was a natural development
The White English Indentured Labourers
The threat of attack & conflict with the native Indians, the English needed residents to recreate a new civilization.
This stage of development has been termed the “frontier Stage” by historians.
The idea of “frontier” thus conveys the concept of a wild & uncharted territory from a European perspective), but also the idea of the meeting of cultures in which only one group would flourish.
The White English Indentured Labourers
The labour requirements were met by young white male bonded servants seeking a better life in the Caribbean.
These indentured servants came under contract & were expected to work for a stipulated number of years, after which time they would be freed of  their contracts.
 Not surprisingly, few females came out to the Caribbean.  For eg, in Barbados in 1635, less than one percent were female


The White English Indentured Labourers
This gender imbalance was reflective of the general  perception of frontier society as rough &that women would not be able to survive the harsh conditions.
In the latter part of the 17th century, when the frontier had developed somewhat, more females began coming to the region
By 1680 about twenty percent of the indentured servants were females.
The White English Indentured Labourers
They  weeded tobacco & provision fields, & were also responsible for the harvesting & packing of crops. 
The females also were often relegated to housework,.
Realizing that they had the indentured servants for a limited  time, the owners  extracted as much work as possible & also providing the minimum amount of food & support for the indentured servants.
The White English Indentured Labourers
As a result the servants were usually underfed and overworked.
The mortality rate amongst the indentured workers was very high due to disease, deficient diet & overwork
White indentured servants had very little rights & were subject to a number of restrictions.
However, if a free man married a female servant he had to pay her owner twice the market value for her freedom.
The White English Indentured Labourers
If a free man got an indentured servant pregnant he had to provide her owner with another servant for lost labor & must provide for the upkeep of the child.
 If the father of the indentured woman’s child was also a servant he had to serve her owner for three years more than his own indenture
No servant (male or female) could marry without the owner's permission.
The White English Indentured Labourers
The landowners were allowed to whip their indentured servants & in some cases commit them to death
This exploitation was largely because  they belonged to the poor peasant  population of England, Scotland & Ireland,& many had been accustomed to living in city slums.
Some were prostitutes or convicts & had been sent to the Caribbean straight out of jail and had no means of redress.
Enslaved Africans
In 1518 the first enslaved Africans, called ladino because they had lived in Spain & spoke the Castillian language, were introduced to the Caribbean to help mitigate the labour shortage.
This relatively small African presence continued throughout the phase of English colonization and it was not strange to see people of both European and African descent working in the tobacco fields.
Enslaved Africans
This duality of labour came to an end however with the establishment of sugar as the primary plantation crop in the Caribbean.
Successful sugar cultivation required large amounts of labour.
African labour was deemed best suited due to its low cost and because it allowed for an easily distinguishable servile class.
Enslaved Africans
African labor was not a new idea &  from 1540s, Las Casas suggested this form of labor. 
Central to this idea was the belief that the Africans were ideally suited for the inhumane work of the estates. 
 The subsequent legalization of the trade in 1549 resulted in enslaved labour – 1834. 
Enslaved Africans
Thus, sugar cane with its West African workforce by 1670, came to link the new world & the old in a triangle of wealth, sweat & blood that comprised England, Africa, the North American colonies & the sugar colonies of the Caribbean. 
 Although persons felt that this industry was morally wrong, nothing was done to remove it until its profitability was brought into question in the late eighteenth century

Defining the Caribbean -- Dave Gosse, Ph. D.

Definition of the Caribbean

‘Caribbean’: a physical reality and a constructed one…Benedict Anderson.
He believes nations are “Imagined Communities” since not even in the smallest nation - can one know all its members.
A nation is a “Utopian community”
Modern media: books, telephone, radio & TV, as a condition for the existence of a modern community.
The Physical Landscape
The geographical formation of the Caribbean took place some 70 million years ago.
Pressures in the earth’s crust forced up vast areas of rock from the seabed. 
 Gradually the faulting & fracturing of the rock formation thrust up mountains from under the water of the great South American waters of Orinoco & Essequibo.
The Physical Landscape
This process created the fertile islands of the Greater Antilles, namely Hispaniola, Jamaica, Puerto Rico and Cuba. 

Cuba is the most westward of the islands, while Hispaniola, which is currently comprised of Haiti and the Dominican Republic, lies at the center of the Greater Antilles.
The Physical Landscape
Puerto Rico is the most eastern of the islands while Jamaica lies south of Cuba. 
To the north of Cuba lies a group of small islands which comprise the Bahamas and to the north of Hispaniola, lies another group of islands, called the Turks and Caicos Islands.
The islands in the Greater Antilles have fertile soils and are capable of supporting dense populations.              
The Physical Landscape
While volcanic activity has ceased millions of years ago in the Greater Antilles it has remained partially active in some of the islands of the Lesser Antilles.  
These islands are located south east of the Caribbean archipelago, stretching from the Virgin Islands to Grenada
All of the Caribbean islands, with a few exceptions, are defined as oceanic rather than continental.
The Physical Landscape
This is so as they have never been attached to either North or South America. 
The British Caribbean island of Guyana is the exception as it is still located geographically on the South American mainland.
Trinidad is also unique as it is only seven miles off the coast of Venezuela & was historically joined to the South American continent until recently.
The Physical Landscape

Trinidad & Tobago is unique as a result of the ice age.
 When the Ice age ended and sea levels rose Trinidad and Tobago became separated from Venezuela
 However, its rich animal life is still that of the South American mainland.
Map of the Caribbean

The Indigenous Settlers of the Caribbean:
Paleo-Indians
The peopling of the region has been diverse and historians today recognize two main settlement patterns that originated at different times, from both ends of the island chain.
The first settlement pattern consists of an early civilization of people arriving into the region about 5000 BCE
Paleo-Indians
They came across the sea from South & Central America.  
They established small seaside communities that had no real knowledge of pottery & subsisted on a diet of wild berries, fishing & hunting. 
These Paleo-Indians had a civilization that relied heavily on basic implements/tools made from stones and shells.

Meso-Indians
This first group of people was followed, around 500 B.C., by another group collectively' referred to as Meso-Indians
Their civilization was more “advanced” in terms of pottery and tools, and whose settlement patterns were not confined to the seashore.
This group came from South America and is today known as Ciboneys or Siboneys.

Meso-Indians
They probably came from Florida or Mexico establishing small settlements along the shores where they lived from fishing and hunting.
The Meso-Indians' settlement patterns followed a trend which saw them first settling the island of Trinidad and Tobago.
They then heading northwards and up in-the islands of the Greater Antilles

Meso-Indians
In time, their main settlements became established Trinidad, Cuba and Hispaniola (also known as Espanola).
In general, however, their numbers were never large.
They only occupied a peripheral demographic niche up until the time of the arrival of the Spanish by which they completely disappeared.

Neo-Indians
The third group of Amerindian people recognized in the region was the Neo-Indians.
Unlike the earlier groups, they had a more varied diet.
This diet resulted from their hunting & fishing and their advanced agricultural methods through which they could cultivate their own crops
Neo-Indians
From archaeological and linguistic evidence historians/anthropologists have concluded that this group of neo-Indians was further divided into two, closely related, main groups/ cultures known collectively as the Salodoid people. 
This title was derived from two styles of pottery that were characteristic of these cultures who migrated from north East South America.

SALODOID POTTERY
Salodoid Cultures
The Salodoid people arrived into the region around 300 B.C. and spoke a language called Arawakan.
They spread throughout the Greater and Lesser Antilles and also in the Bahamas.
Ultimately, they settled principally on the islands of the Greater Antilles
In the literature they are also referred to as the Lucayos but this designation refers only to those groups that settled in the Bahamas
Salodoid Cultures - cont
This entire group of Arawakan speakers with their Salodoid culture are today most commonly referenced in the literature as Taino
Literally translated 'Taino' means 'men of the good' and this was the name the native people gave to themselves.
Salodoid Cultures - cont
 The Tainos who had been established on the banks of the Orinoco river for at least several centuries had more developed social structures than the Ciboneys and other such pre-ceramic peoples
They gradually travelled up the islands  stopping first in nearby Trinidad and then moving up to Grenada and northwards.  
Salodoid Cultures - cont
These people have been called Arawaks by some historians since the communities which settled along the entire archipelago were descended from the Arawaks of north-eastern South America.  
The language they spoke was known as Arawak like its speakers who originated from the South American mainland.
Salodoid Cultures - cont
The Tainos can be divided into three main sub-groupings.
 The Tainos who inhabited Jamaica, Hispaniola and Cuba
The Lucayans who settled in the Bahamas;
The Borequinos who lived in Puerto Rico & are tall and light brown in colour with straight black hair similar in appearance to the Polynesians of the Pacific Ocean.
Salodoid Cultures - cont
The second major sub-division of Salodoid people spoke a language called Cariban
At the time of the Spanish incursion into the region, this group was actively involved in an expansionist phase.
 As a result of this they were mistakenly identified as “Caribs” by the Spanish.



Spanish Racism
From the moment of contact the Spaniards took their world view as superior to those of the neo-Indians.
For eg, the 'skimpy' (from a Spanish perspective) mode of dress that the Neo­Indians were accustomed to wearing was misinterpreted by the Spaniards
Seeing the indigenous native women largely unclad, they automatically categorized them 'loose' and 'promiscuous' & lacking in sexual inhibitions.
Spanish Racism
They then proceeded to act upon this assumption, raping many of these women and using them indiscriminately as their concubines, heedless to the previous relations these women had with indigenous men.
This, of course, led to revolts in places like Hispaniola where the indigenous men and women retaliated in the face of such indignities.
Spanish Racism
From the outset of contact with the Spaniards, is the fact that the Spaniards ignored the reality that these people had their own established civilizations and cultural norms and practice.
As students of Caribbean civilization we would do well to avoid this interpretational oversight and instead properly focus on and appreciate their native civilization.
Neo –Indians & Village Life
Neo-Indian villages were established with easy access to reliable fresh water, & with the availability of flat fertile ground for cassava (manioc) cultivation.
Military defense was part of the consideration in setting up these villages.
Villages consisted of a central village square with individual houses & thatched roofs & timber walls. These villages housed between 300-500 persons.
Neo – Indian & Social Organization
In Taino villages, there was no segregation of the sexes in terms of living-arrangements.
In Kalinago villages segregation existed,& a communal house was established where boys went to at puberty & in which adult  and adolescent males lived, slept and ate.
Kalinago men spoke a different pidgin which was probably used for trading or for initiation ceremonies.
Neo-Indian Division of Labour
Daily chores would be undertaken with divisions of jobs being made on the basis of age and sex. 
Men & boys did fishing & hunting; cleared the fields & defended the villages.
Additionally the men & boys played integral roles in house construction & canoe making while women were in charge of crop cultivation, spinning and weaving of cotton, making handicrafts (baskets, hammocks, aprons and utensils) and child rearing
Neo-Indian Division of Labour
On a daily basis the women also saw to the preparation of food and drinks.
Many historians, interested in the study of gender, have pointed out that, from the surviving evidence these societies were highly patriarchal.
This means that females seem to be in a subordinate position to men in terms of social organization.
Neo-Indian Division of Labour
Indeed, even when one considers the assumed difference in village layout between the Taino and Kalinagos
One notes that in the Kalinago villages the women still came to the male communal houses where they brought food and drink for the men as well as groomed them.
Neo-Indian & Marriage
The economic roles of women were mainly as cultivators and farmers.
They had no choice in marriage as they were arranged by parents when the girls were close to puberty.
Women were often used as commodities to be traded and raided. 
In these societies polygamy was practiced amongst the noble classes.
Neo-Indian & Marriage - cont
These nobles were often in a position to support many wives and the number of wives a man had came to represent his standing in society. 
It was therefore the norm for the chief or cacique, for example to have many wives.
The 'ordinary' male commoner usually had only one wife for economic reasons.
Neo-Indian & Marriage - cont
Indeed the procurement of a wife meant the payment of a bride price and many commoners often had to pay for their wives through service to her parents.
Elite men and chiefs, however, could have afforded to pay for their bride price in trading goods.
Neo-Indians & Concepts of Beauty
These neo-Indians spent a lot of time on their daily appearance.
To this end they had their own ideals of beauty which, differed from the European concept.
They saw flattened foreheads as being attractive and they often flattened the foreheads of newborn infants to enhance their beauty.
Neo-Indians & Concepts of Beauty
Ornaments were also worn by the women such as bracelets made of beads, shells and gold pieces, which were worn on their arms and legs.
Gold rings were also worn in their ears and noses just as is worn today by many people throughout the world.
Similarly, hair especially for women, was seen as a mark of beauty and even in men a loss of hair considered ill-luck.
Neo-Indians & Sports
The Neo-Indian peoples also had leisure time in which some games were played by both men & women.
Other games were played separately.
The Tainos played a sophisticated team game on special ball courts using a rubber ball which they propelled the opposing team with their bodies without using hands or feet.
The Tainos
The migratory movement of the Tainos was gradual yet persistent. 
Each island was sighted and settled in turn as groups navigated their canoes through the often treacherous seas. 
 Sometimes a neighboring island could be seen in the distance encouraging an exploratory expedition; otherwise a group set out into the unknown hoping to find land beyond the horizon.
The Tainos - cont
The Tainos had formidable canoes made from a single huge tree trunk measuring as much as 25 meters & capable of carrying fifty people. 
 Using these vessels they moved in successive waves from the South American mainland as far as Cuba and the Bahamas.  
They travelled in groups including women, children & even domestic animals.   
This process took hundreds of years as discovery followed discovery. 
The Tainos’ Political Structure
Taino society was communal & revolved around extended families who formed settlements of up to 500 people usually by the seashore or on the banks of a river.
Each village had a chief or cacique who doubled as a priest and local legislator.
This was a hereditary position and normally occupied by a man but women could also be caciques.
The Tainos’ Political Structure
The chief was assisted by a tier of elders drawn from the various families who organized such communal activities as farming fishing expeditions & defense.
Work was allotted according to sex & age: men cleared the fields & fished while women were in charge of crop cultivation handicrafts & looking after children.
Unlike the Ciboneys the Tainos were skilled farmers
The Tainos & Agriculture & Diet
From South America they brought certain plants such as guava & they introduced animals like the agouti & opposum.
Their staple was cassava (manioc) which provided the flour for their baking after the poisonous juice had been extracted.
Other basic crops were sweet potato beans & peanuts although corn was less prevalent than on the Central American mainland.
The Tainos & Agriculture & Diet
Using shifting agricultural methods they avoided exhausting the soil & ensured a continual supply of food.
They grew tobacco & made cigars.
The seas provided endless amounts of fish & turtles.
Birds & small animals were hunted & grilled on barbecues —one of the Arawak words to have survived into the present day.
The Tainos’ Culture & Religion
Central to their world-view was a trinity of gods: a male figure associated with cassava & volcanoes
a female fertility god related to the sea & moon
A dog-like deity who looked after the recently dead.
There was also a collective belief in the spiritual power of nature & dead ancestors.
The Tainos’ Culture & Religion
These forces were worshipped in the form of, Zemis & fetishes made of the remains of the dead or front cotton wood and stone.  
The cacique also acted as shaman or priest & in religious ceremonies would use tobacco as a sort of hallucinogenic snuff as a prelude to entering into communion with the zemis.
The Tainos’ Material Life
The Tainos were accomplished in woodwork and pottery and extremely elaborate ceramics have been discovered throughout the Caribbean.
Houses were constructed from the trunks and leaves of the royal palm a single tree being big enough to build a whole dwelling or bohio.
The Kalinagos
By AD 1000, they too came from the Orinoco delta & began up the island chain.
Their attacks on Taino communities had begun on the mainland & this was possibly one of the reasons for the Tainos' departure.
They began to make the same journey reaching Trinidad & Tobago then moving northwards.
The Kalinagos raided & pillaged Taino settlements that they came across.
The Kalinagos - cont
The Tainos although well organized were no match for the Kalinagos raiding parties
Arriving by canoe with spears & bows and arrows, the Kalinagos killed Tainos men & rounded up & took away all their women. 
In most cases they destroyed the Taino villages & formed their own communities in the same place building their distinctive carbets or communal houses where more than 100 hammocks could be hung.
The Kalinagos - cont
They made relentless progress through the islands of the Lesser Antilles defeating & replacing the Tainos.
The only island in the Greater Antilles in which they conquered was Puerto Rico.  
By the time Europeans arrived in the Caribbean the Kalinagos were undisputed masters of all of the Lesser Antilles & were on the verge of conquering the larger islands.
The Kalinagos’ Culture of Conquest
Kalinago society revolved around war & prized feats of heroism.
Village chiefs were selected by birthright or repute as warriors & led the raiding parties.
The men lived almost separate lives from their women normally eating & sometimes sleeping communally
They also spoke a separate language Carib.
The Kalinagos’ Culture of Conquest
Boys & girls thus spoke different languages and were expected to fulfill very different roles.
While young males were initiated into the culture of warfare, girls were obliged to grow crops, cook & weave.  Kalinago artifacts  reveal a much less developed style of pottery than that of the Tainos.
Yet the Kalinagos were assimilated through some of the Tainos’ practices and traditions.
The Kalinagos’ Culture of Conquest
Those Taino women captured during attacks were incorporated into the victors’ communities keeping alive their language and culture.
Certain similarities persisted such as the importance practically & spiritually of manioc
Advanced fishing techniques and the curious practice of flattening children’s foreheads through gradual pressure.

Practice Questions

How accurate is it to describe the people Columbus met in the Caribbean as an “imagined community”?
“Sexism has always been part of the Caribbean experience”. Discuss the accuracy of this statement in light of the evidence of neo Indian community living