Migratory Movements and The Patterns of Caribbean

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The passage discusses the history of migration and settlement patterns in the Caribbean from pre-Columbian times to 1838.

The indigenous peoples like the Tainos and Kalinagos migrated to the Caribbean around 5000 BC, entering from South America and migrating northward over time.

The Tainos migrated north up the Caribbean islands between 1000-700 BC, while the Kalinagos settled in the Lesser Antilles around 600-700 AD, using piraguas to travel between islands.

Migratory movements and the patterns of settlement by

different groups within the Caribbean from pre-Columbian


times to 1838
The impact of history on the Caribbean is great and a definition focuses on the shared history of
colonization and plantation production with forced labour.

The first peoples came to the Caribbean and occupied it long before Columbus came. They were
thought to have entered the western hemisphere via an ice bridge of the frozen Bering Strait in
waves of migration continuing down from Alaska, Canada, United States, into Central America
and South America, entering the Caribbean around 5000 BC (approx. 7000 years ago):

The Tainos (Arawaks) who went to the Greater Antilles Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica and
the Bahamas living on the coasts
The Kalinagos (Caribs) of the Lesser Antilles sharing Puerto Rico and Trinidad with the
Tainos. The movement of both groups up the Antilles was part of the process of migration
diffusion and not necessarily that the Tainos were on the run from the Kalinagos
The Mayans who occupied central America Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras
and part of Mexico. They lived in the highlands and were a more advanced civilization, all
were hunter/gatherers/farmers

They came in the Caribbean from the area around the Orinoco basin of Venezuela around 1000
years ago. Between the 1st and 7th centuries the Tainos began moving northward from South
America up into the Caribbean. The Kalinagos moved into the Caribbean 600 AD to 700 AD to
settle in the in the Lesser Antilles using their piragas.
The
The ancestors of these first peoples most likely came from the Steppes of Eurasia,
following migrant herds of the animals they subsisted on. They would have left in waves
as competition for food resulted from their increased numbers. They would have crossed
the frozen Bering Strait which 10 000 years ago would have joined Russia to North
America. When they crossed some settled as the Eskimo and Inuit, others moved on to
Canada example the Iroquois, some pressed on to become the tribes of Native Americans
in the USA example the Apache, Dakota, Cheyenne and such. Others kept on the move
pushing down into Central America to become the Aztecs of Mexico, the Mayans of Belize
and other territories and the Incas of Peru.
These are among the best known in history because of their interactions with the
Spaniards, but there were numerous others who are alive today in South America
example the Wai Wai and Wapishani. They settled across Venezuela and Guiana. Aruacan
speaking tribes were also settled.
Entry into the Caribbean archipelago was from three directions
Down from the Florida panhandle into the Bahamas the Lucayans
Across from the Gulf of Mexico moving Eastward to the Lesser Antilles
Up from South America to Trinidad, island hopping using the important piraga.
Tribes living in Florida at present call their dugout canoes Piragas as well. Puerto
Rico and Trinidad are the two places where both Tainos and Kalinagos lived
together. Kalinagos lived in Dominica, St. Vincent and Grenada. There is still a
substantial Kalinago population living on tribal lands in Dominica whilst Trinidad
has a small population in Arima.
Pai Tavytera Indians in Paraguay Aztecs

Mayans

Mayans Incas

Kalinagos Tainos
Then there were those who came after:
The Europeans 1492-1640 - Spaniards came during the 15th century as part
of Columbus efforts to gain a trade route to the East, he therefore came here in theory
by error, though correct in his belief that the earth was round. Europe was in the
Renaissance a period of renewed interest in science, technology and the arts after the
sacking of Europe by the Huns. Improvements in navigational devices pushed by the
Portuguese king Henry the Navigator, improvements in shipbuilding and the printing
press made maps more widely available.
Columbus
The Gutenburg Press
Hidalgos
Columbus was patronized in his exploration efforts by Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand, who
expected new lands, wealth and souls in return for their investments. Resulting from the 1494
Treaty of Tordesillas, this was an effort to facilitate conversion of natives to Roman Catholicism
as a promise to Isabella. The Treaty of Tordesillas saw Pope Alexander declaring that all lands
west of the Azores belonged to Spain whilst East of the Azores and Brazil belonged to the
Portuguese. Never mind these places were already settled by the various indigenous tribes.
Reasons for other European nations being interlopers
This 1494 Treaty giving Spain and Portugal all lands denied other European countries a share of
empire and wealth but Spain could not supply her dispersed colonies with goods. Besides the
Popes word held no power for the British and Netherlands who had embraced Protestantism,
rejecting Roman Catholicism. Although Catholic, France was embittered with the Vatican as they
felt that the Pope should be French rather than a Roman. But it was the fabulous wealth of the
New World that beckoned.

They were seen as interlopers when they came to the New World as they were in defiance of the
Treaty of Tordesillas and the Asiento or Spanish licence to trade. The British, French and Dutch
came to steal and smuggle. Capturing the Spanish Armada or flotilla of boats laden with New
World riches signaled Spains incapability to defend so vast an empire, and that there was simply
a lack of man power for effective occupation.

But once they saw that they could settle, a mass migration of poor whites began from Western
Europe vagabonds, criminals, farmers and persons affected by war, famine, poverty and
hardships. Contracted as indentured labourers or servants they were to farm in tobacco and
other cash crops.

Europe therefore embarked on exploration and expansion. Columbus voyages triggered the
arrival of the Spanish, then later the French, English and Dutch as rivals into the region bringing
with them their language, culture music, dance, art forms, religion, laws and government,
cuisine, new crops, animal species, technology and many other aspects that have changed and
shaped modern Caribbean society. Intent on becoming wealthy, they exploited the Tainos and
tried to remove the Kalinagos, reverting to other large scale labour as needed in the different
systems of production.

The Europeans settled in what became towns and claimed vast tracts of land further inland as
their property and built estate houses, claiming for themselves the majority of agricultural land.
Amerindians who fled or survived were pushed into the interior. They convinced their
government that the Indigenous people were all dead and that they needed new labourers.

The Africans from 1515 Spain gave Portugal the asiento or licence to trade in
Africans to work on the cattle ranches and mines alongside Amerindians. In 1640 the
sugar revolution saw millions of enslaved Africans being brought in.
Africans were raided as they slept in their village clearings in the dark of night, often by
Portuguese aided by other African natives, usually from other tribes/clans. The raid may
have begun with fire being set to the huts and shots being fired by muskets. Africans were
grabbed and chained in the confusion.
Slave Raid
Coffle
Barracoons

They were coffled one to another and made to march on a long, wearisome journey
through forests, to the coasts. They were to never see their homeland or loved ones left
behind dead or alive again. On the march, the sick and infirmed, old or young who slowed
down the march were cut off from the coffle and left to die as the line moved on.
On the coast it was a terrifying sight for many natives who had never seen the ocean and
waves, they also thought that the ship was a great beast that would swallow them. They
were kept to recover in barracoons or fortressed prisons on the coasts. Those that did not
eat had their front teeth chiseled out to be forced fed. Wounds were packed with
gunpowder and lime juice concoction. An even crueler fate awaited them. Hundreds were
packed and shackled into ships that the Europeans had redesigned for human trafficking.
Slave ship

Millions were caught and sold over the centuries and many died on the Atlantic crossing
the Middle Passage, from unsanitary conditions and deprivation to be unceremoniously
dumped overboard. It was said that a slaving ship could be smelt from 10 miles away on
the seas.
They were auctioned on the ports and taken to estates in the colonies. They were housed
on the lowlands on the fringes of the fields on the plantations but after eman-
cipation moved to hillsides in Jamaica, St. Lucia and Antigua and open places in rural areas
away from estates, to become the peasantry e.g. Liberta in Antigua. They also farmed the
slopes on the volcanic Lesser Antilles.
The Chinese were brought in to Trinidad as early as 1806 in anticipation of the end of the
slave trade in 1807
In 1834 the British West Indies began importing white immigrant labour from Ireland,
Scotland and Germany with the majority coming from Ireland. Jamaica in particular
imported 5000 to boost their white populace
1838 Emancipation was declared and Africans were no longer legally enslaved. The white
planters with their sugar production only estates worked on convincing their
governments that they would be ruined financially if they were not able to find cheap
labour immediately and in large numbers. This ushered in new systems of production.
Migratory movements within and outside the region from 1838
to present day
1838 1917
Indentured labourers came from China at first but did not stay on the estates long but went to
shopkeeping, laundries etc. They went to Trinidad, Jamaica and Guyana. Cuba also imported 125
000 Chinese from 1847 to 1874. In the period 1852 1893 some 20 000 Chinese were brought in
to the British Caribbean with 12 000 to Guyana, 5 000 to Jamaica and the remaining 3 000 to
Trinidad,

The larger number of Asian immigrants came from India to Trinidad and Guyana and Surinam.
The French imported 68 000 into Martinique, Guadeloupe and French Guiana and the Dutch
several thousand Indians and Javanese into Surinam. The largest percentage went to Trinidad
and British Guiana where labour shortages were seen as more acute. (As the larger territories
there was more land available for the ex-enslaved to leave the plantations and squat in free
villages.) They worked on 3 -5 year contracts/9 hours a day/6 days a week on sugar, coffee, cocoa
and banana estates. From 1838 to 1917, 416 000 Indians were brought in with 239 000 going to
Guyana and the rest 134 000 to Trinidad.

The British Caribbean had poor sanitary conditions in barracks, with cooking done outdoors and
quarters being cramped, poorly ventilated with a lack of privacy. They were given a 3 month
ration but had to start planting immediately for subsistence and/or buy overpriced food from the
estate house indebting themselves. Forfeit of debt was an extended contract. They were paid
low wages, both men and women but differentially, and were often paid in rum given the absence
of coinage in the Caribbean. They were jailed for any infringement, flogged and beaten, sent to
fields despite actual illness. Some hid out in fields to die. Some served out their contracts and
returned to India and others remained to renew contracts. Those who stayed were given land in
the rural areas close to the estates so that they could continue to work in sugar.
Peru Estate St. James
In the late 19th and 20th centuries migration was the common feature as there was
expansion in agriculture in non-British territories and labour was in demand. Caribbean
people therefore migrated. The need also arose for skilled and casual workers in the oil
industries. People went to:

Aruba and Curacao oil industries


Build railways in Panama and Colon from 1880 to 1910
Build the Panama Canal from 1904 to 1914, particularly Barbadians and Jamaicans, where
at first they sent remittances then never returned
Work on banana plantations in Costa Rica and Honduras
Work on coffee and sugar estates in Cuba particularly Jamaicans
Panama Canal
Several waves of migration seemed to be the answer to overpopulation in the Caribbean where
too many people relied on scarce resources in the face of depressed economic conditions.

Canada, Britain and the USA

In the 50s and 60s there was migration to Canada, Britain and the USA. In the USA they went to
New York, New Jersey, Baltimore, Boston and Philadelphia. In the later 1900s these territories
allowed Caribbean migrants into their territories.

Many Haitians have migrated to Miami and many others illegally board boats to travel to the US.
These often end in impounding and even fatalities. Some go to Jamaica and others cross to the
Dominican Republic, as the sugar industry there has been attracting Haitian workers since prior
to 1900.

In 1920 -28 000 Haitians migrated


In 1935 52 000 Haitians migrated

There is a strong Haitian community but a 2014 ruling by the Dominican Republic government
has seen an expulsion of Haitians and Dominican Republic citizens of Haitian heritage. The
population of Dom. Rep.is Spanish/Arab whilst the Haitians are predominantly Black. Conflict
often results.
Caribbean diaspora
Post World War 11 saw the largest wave of migration to Britain and France who welcomed
Caribbean migrants to help rebuild their countries after the devastation of war. Hundreds of
thousands left which concerned citizens into pressuring their governments to establish 1960s
1970s Immigration Laws. So when these stringent policies were put in place Caribbean people
looked to Canada and the USA and again only the most qualified were allowed in. Whilst this
migration opens the way for improved education and standard of living for both the migrants
and the families they leave behind through the remittances they send, (many Jamaican and
Trinidadian households are supported by remittances which contribute to GNP), it could be
contributing to brain drain and dependency theory as well as neo-colonialism.

The people who first came - the indigenes, and those who were brought - the Africans, Chinese
and Indians, also had a rich history and culture prior to encountering the Europeans. They built
empires, used technology, had governance and civilizations.

Assignment

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