In its British Empire days, Barbados was known as Little England. It was the
first colony to declare war in 1939 and cheered Britons with a cable that
read: "Don't worry. Little England is with you."</font>
Today, the island is independent but still cherishes Anglo-Saxon civility,
cricket and high tea. After 350 years of colonization, Britain has left its
mark and added much to the beguiling charm of "Little England in the
Tropics."
The capital city, Bridgetown, sports a Trafalgar Square in its downtown
heart--complete with a bronze statue of British hero Lord Admiral Horatio
Nelson.
Green fields and hills further emphasize the Britishness of Barbados. Bajans,
as the islanders call themselves, take education seriously. The literacy
rate is close to 100 percent.
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Barbados (Portuguese word for
bearded-ones, pronounced /bɑrˈbeɪdoʊz, -dɒs/), situated
just east of the Caribbean Sea, is an independent island
nation in the western Atlantic Ocean. At roughly 13?
North of the equator and 59? West of the prime meridian,
the country lies in the southern Caribbean region, where
it is considered a part of the Lesser Antilles. Its
closest island neighbors are Saint Vincent & the
Grenadines and Saint Lucia to the west. To the south
lies Trinidad and Tobago—with which Barbados now shares
a fixed official maritime boundary—and also the South
American mainland. Barbados's total land area is about
430 square kilometers (166 square miles), and is
primarily low-lying, with some higher regions in the
country's interior. The highest point in Barbados is
Mount Hillaby in the parish of Saint Andrew. The
geological composition of Barbados is thought to be of
non-volcanic origin and is predominantly composed of
limestone-coral formed by subduction of the South
American plate colliding with the Caribbean plate. The
island's climate is tropical, with constant trade winds
off the Atlantic Ocean serving to keep temperatures
mild. Some less developed areas of the country contain
tropical woodland and mangroves. Other parts of the
interior which contribute to the agriculture industry
are dotted with large sugarcane estates and wide, gently
sloping pastures, with panoramic views down to the
coast.
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Barbados's human development index ranking is
consistently among the top 50 in the world. For example,
in 2006, it was ranked 31st in the world, and third in
the Americas, behind Canada and the United States.
According to accounts by
descendants of the aboriginal Arawak tribes on other
local islands, the original name for Barbados was
Ichirouganaim.
The origin of the name "Barbados" is controversial.
The Portuguese, en route to Brazil are credited as
the first Europeans to discover and name the island.
It is a matter of conjecture whether the word
"bearded" refers to the long, hanging roots of the
bearded fig-tree (Ficus citrifolia), indigenous to
the island, to bearded Caribs inhabiting the island,
or to the foam spraying over the outlying reefs
giving the impression of a beard. In 1519, a map
produced by the Genoese mapmaker Vesconte de
Maggiola showed and named Barbados in its correct
position southeast of the island of Dominica.
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Another name associated with Barbados or her people
is "Bim" or "Bimshire". The origin is uncertain but
several theories abound, the National Cultural
Foundation of Barbados follows the Dr. Richard
Allsopp theory, which is that "Bim" was a word
commonly used by slaves and that it derives from the
phrase "bi mu" or either ("bem", "Ndi bem", "Nwanyi
ibem" or "Nwoke ibem")[4] from an Igbo phrase,
meaning "my people." In colloquial or literary
contexts, "Bim" can also take a more deific tone,
referring to the "goddess" Barbados. The word Bim and Bimshire are recorded in
the Oxford English Dictionary and the Chamber's
Twentieth Century Dictionaries. Another possible
source for "Bim" is reported to be in the
Agricultural Reporter of 25 April 1868, The Rev. N
Greenidge suggested the listing of Bimshire as a
county of England. Expressly named were "Wiltshire,
Hampshire, Berkshire, and Bimshire". Lastly in the
Daily Argosy (of Demerara i.e. Guyana) of 1652 it
referred to Bim as a possible corruption of the word
"Byam" which was a Royalist leader against the
Parliamentarians. That source suggested the
followers of Byam became known as Bims and became a
word for all Barbadians.
Early
history
The first
indigenous people are thought to be
Amerindians who arrived from
Venezuela around approximately
350-400 B.C. The Arawak people were
the second wave of migrants,
arriving from South America around
800. In the thirteenth century, the
Caribs arrived from South America in
the third wave, displacing both the
Arawak and the Salodoid-Barrancoid
culture. For the next few centuries,
the Caribs — like the Arawak and the
Salodoid-Barrancoid — lived in
isolation on the island.
The Portuguese then briefly claimed
Barbados from the mid-1500s to the
1600s; and may have seized the
indigenous Caribs on Barbados and
used them as slave labour. Other
Caribs are believed to have fled the
island to neighbouring islands.
Apart from possibly displacing the
Caribs, the Portuguese left little
impact and by the 1610s, they left
for South America, leaving the
island uninhabited.
British
colonial rule
British sailors
who landed on Barbados in 1625
arrived at the site of present-day
Holetown. At the time it was
inhabited only by the feral pigs
descended from those left behind by
the Portuguese. From the arrival of
the first British settlers in
1627–1628 until independence in
1966, Barbados was under
uninterrupted British control.
Nevertheless, Barbados always
enjoyed a large measure of local
autonomy. Its House of Assembly
began meeting in 1639. Among the
initial important British figures
was Sir William Courten.
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With the increased implementation of
slave codes, which created
differential treatment between
Africans and the white settlers, the
island became increasingly
unattractive to poor whites. Black
or slave codes were implemented in
1661, 1676, 1682, and 1688. In
response to these codes, several
slave rebellions were attempted or
planned during this time, but none
succeeded. However, an increasingly
repressive legal system caused the
gap between the treatment of
typically white indentured servants
and black slaves to widen. Imported
slaves became much more attractive
for the rich planters who would
increasingly dominate the island not
only economically but also
politically. Some have speculated
that, because the Africans could
withstand tropical diseases and the
climate much better than the white
slave population, the white
population decreased. This is
inconsistent with the fact that many
poor whites simply migrated to
neighbouring islands and remained in
tropical climates. Nevertheless, as
those poor whites who had or
acquired the means to emigrate often
did so, and with the increased
importation of African slaves,
Barbados turned from mainly Celtic
in the seventeenth century to
overwhelmingly black by the
nineteenth century.
Barbados eventually had one of the
world's biggest sugar industries
after Jews from Brazil introduced
the sugarcane to the island in the
mid 1600s. This quickly replaced
tobacco plantations on the islands
which were previously the main
export. As the sugar industry
developed into its main commercial
enterprise, Barbados was divided
into large plantation estates that
replaced the smallholdings of the
early British settlers. Some of the
displaced farmers moved to other
British colonies in the Americas,
most notably North and South
Carolina, and British Guiana, as
well as Panama. To work the
plantations, West Africans were
transported and enslaved on Barbados
and other Caribbean islands. The
British abolished the slave trade in
1807. In 1816, the continuation of
slavery caused the largest major
slave rebellion in the island's
history. 20,000 slaves from over
seventy plantations rebelled. Whites
were driven off of plantations, yet
mass killings were avoided. Later
termed “Bussa's Rebellion” after the
slave ranger Bussa who with his
assistants hated slavery, found the
treatment of slaves on Barbados to
be “intolerable,” and believed the
political climate in the UK made the
time ripe to peacefully negotiate
with planters for freedom (Davis, p.
211, Northrup, p. 191). Bussa's
Rebellion failed. One hundred and
twenty died in combat or were
immediately executed; another 144
were brought to trial and executed;
remaining rebels were shipped off
the island (Davis, pp. 212-213).
Slavery was abolished in the British
Empire eighteen years later in 1834.
In Barbados and the rest of the
British West Indian colonies, full
emancipation from slavery was
preceded by an apprenticeship period
that lasted four years.
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Statue of Nelson in National Heroes
Square which predates the more
famous Nelson's Column by some 27
years.In 1884, the Barbados
Agricultural Society sent a letter
to Sir Francis Hincks requesting his
private and public views on whether
the Dominion of Canada would
favourably entertain having the then
colony of Barbados admitted as a
member of the Canadian
Confederation. Asked of Canada were
the terms of the Canadian side to
initiate discussions, and whether or
not the island of Barbados could
depend on the full influence of
Canada in getting the change agreed
to by the United Kingdom. Then in
1952 the Barbados Advocate newspaper
polled several prominent Barbadian
politicians, lawyers, businessmen,
the Speaker of the Barbados House of
Assembly and later as first
President of the Senate, Sir
Theodore Branker , Q.C. and found
them to be in favour of immediate
federation of Barbados along with
the rest of the British Caribbean
with complete Dominion Status within
five years from the date of
inauguration of the West Indies
Federation with Canada.
However, plantation owners and
merchants of British descent still
dominated local politics, owing to
the high income qualification
required for voting. More than 70%
of the population, many of them
disenfranchised women, were excluded
from the democratic process. It was
not until the 1930s that the
descendants of emancipated slaves
began a movement for political
rights. One of the leaders of this
movement, Sir Grantley Adams,
founded the Barbados Labour Party,
then known as the Barbados
Progressive League , in 1938. A
staunch supporter of the monarchy,
Adams and his party demanded more
rights for the poor and for the
people. Progress toward a more
democratic government in Barbados
was made in 1942, when the exclusive
income qualification was lowered and
women were given the right to vote.
By 1949 governmental control was
wrested from the planters and, in
1958, Adams became Premier of
Barbados.
From 1958 to 1962, Barbados was one
of the ten members of the West
Indies Federation, an organisation
doomed by nationalistic attitudes
and by the fact that its members, as
British colonies, held limited
legislative power. Adams served as
its first and only "Premier", but
his leadership failed in attempts to
form similar unions, and his
continued defence of the monarchy
was used by his opponents as
evidence that he was no longer in
touch with the needs of his country.
Errol Walton Barrow, a fervent
reformer, became the new people's
advocate. Barrow had left the BLP
and formed the Democratic Labour
Party as a liberal alternative to
Adams' conservative government.
Barrow instituted many progressive
social programmes, such as free
education for all Barbadians, and
the School Meals system. By 1961,
Barrow had replaced Adams as Premier
and the DLP controlled the
government.
With the Federation dissolved,
Barbados had reverted to its former
status, that of a self-governing
colony. The island negotiated its
own independence at a constitutional
conference with the United Kingdom
in June 1966. After years of
peaceful and democratic progress,
Barbados finally became an
independent state on 30 November
1966, with Errol Barrow its first
Prime Minister. Upon independence
Barbados maintained historical
linkages with Britain by
establishing membership to the
Commonwealth of Nations grouping, a
year later Barbados' International
linkages were expanded by obtaining
membership to the United Nations and
the Organization of American States.
Government
and politics
Main articles:
Politics of Barbados and Monarchy of
Barbados
Barbados has been an independent
country since 30 November 1966. It
functions as a constitutional
monarchy and parliamentary
democracy, modeled on the British
Westminster system, with Elizabeth
II, Queen of Barbados, as head of
state represented locally by the
Governors-General, Clifford Husbands
and the Prime Minister as the head
of the government. Its Parliament
comprises thirty seats. It has been
proposed that Barbados become a
republic with a president replacing
the Barbadian sovereign; this issue
is still being debated, as the
island has been stable and
governmentally autonomous for
decades.
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Barbados is a full and participating
member of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM),
the Caribbean (CARICOM) Single
Market and Economy (CSME), the
Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ),
which pertains only to Barbados and
Guyana but is expected to replace
the UK Privy Council for the entire
English-speaking Caribbean
eventually, and the Association of
Caribbean States (ACS).
Barbados has a two party system, the
two dominant parties being the
ruling Democratic Labour Party and
the Barbados Labour Party. The
Barbados Labour Party (BLP) had been
in government for fifteen years,
since 1993 until the 2008 general
election. Under this administration,
the Former Prime Minister, The Right
Honourable Owen S. Arthur also acted
as the Regional Leader of the CSM
(Caribbean Single Market). The Right
Honorable David Thompson is the
Prime Minister of Barbados.
On 11 April 2006, the 5-Member
UNCLOS Annex VII Arbitral Tribunal,
presided over by H.E. Judge Stephen
M. Schwebel, rendered after two
years of international judicial
proceedings, the landmark
Barbados/Trinidad and Tobago Award,
which resolved the maritime boundary
delimitation (in the East, Central
and West sectors) to satisfaction of
both Parties and committed Barbados
and Trinidad and Tobago to resolve
their fisheries dispute by means of
concluding a new Fisheries
Agreement.
Parishes
Main article:
Parishes of Barbados
Map of the parishes
of Barbados Barbados
is divided into
eleven
administrative
parishes:
Christ Church
Saint Andrew
Saint George
Saint James
Saint John
Saint Joseph
Saint Lucy
Saint Michael
Saint Peter
Saint Philip
Saint Thomas
Economy
Main
article:
Economy
of
Barbados
Historically,
the
economy
of
Barbados
had
been
dependent
on
sugarcane
cultivation
and
related
activities,
but
in
recent
years
it
has
diversified
into
the
manufacturing
and
tourism
sectors.
Offshore
finance
and
information
services
have
become
important
foreign
exchange
earners,
and
there
is a
healthy
light
manufacturing
sector.
In
recent
years
the
Government
has
been
seen
as
business-friendly
and
economically
sound.
Since
the
late
1990s
the
island
has
seen
a
construction
boom,
with
the
development
and
redevelopment
of
hotels,
office
complexes,
and
homes.
The
government
continues
its
efforts
to
reduce
unemployment,
encourage
direct
foreign
investment,
and
privatize
remaining
state-owned
enterprises.
Unemployment
has
been
reduced
from
around
14
percent
in
the
past
to
under
10
percent.
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Circulating
coins
2006The
economy
contracted
in
2001
and
2002
due
to
slowdowns
in
tourism,
consumer
spending
and
the
impact
of
the
September
11,
2001
attacks,
but
rebounded
in
2003
and
has
shown
growth
since
2004.
Traditional
trading
partners
include
Canada,
the
Caribbean
Community
(especially
Trinidad
and
Tobago),
the
United
Kingdom
and
the
United
States.
Business
links
and
investment
flows
have
become
substantial:
as
of
2003
the
island
saw
from
Canada
C$25
billion
in
investment
holdings,
placing
it
as
one
of
Canada's
top
five
destinations
for
Canadian
Foreign
Direct
Investment
(FDI).
Businessman
Eugene
Melnyk
of
Toronto,
Canada,
is
said
to
be
Barbados'
richest
permanent
resident.
It
was
thought
by
key
Barbadian
industry
sources
that
the
year
2006
would
have
been
one
of
the
busiest
years
for
building
construction
ever
in
Barbados,
as
the
building-boom
on
the
island
entered
the
final
stages
for
several
multi-million
dollar
projects.
Transport
Main article: Transport in Barbados
Transport on the island is good, with 'route taxis', called "ZR's"
(pronounced "Zed-Rs" not "Zee-Rs"), travelling to most points on the
island. These small buses can at times be crowded, but will usually
take the more scenic routes to destinations. They generally depart
from the capital Bridgetown or from Speightstown in the northern
part of the island.
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A Mini Moke at Speightstown beachThe island of Barbados's lone
airport is the Sir Grantley Adams International Airport (GAIA) (IATA
identifier BGI). It receives daily flights by several major airlines
from points around the globe, as well as several smaller regional
commercial airlines and charters. The airport serves as the main
air-transportation hub for the Eastern Caribbean. It is undergoing a
US$100 million upgrade and expansion.
There are three bus systems running seven days a week (though less
frequently on Sundays), and a ride on any of them costs $1.50 BBD.
The smaller buses from the two privately-owned systems ("ZRs" and
"minibuses") can give change; the larger blue and yellow buses from
the government-operated Barbados Transport Board system cannot. Most
routes require a connection in Bridgetown. Some drivers within the
competitive privately owned systems are reluctant to advise persons
to use competing services, even if those would be more suitable.
Some hotels also provide visitors with shuttles to points of
interest on the island from outside the hotel lobby. The island also
has plentin their native country). There are several locally-owned
and -operated vehicle rental agencies in Barbados but there are no
multi-national car-rental agencies such as Avis, Europcar or Hertz.
There is also a helicopter shuttle service, which offers air taxi
services to a number of sites around the island, mainly on the West
Coast tourist belt. Air and water traffic is regulated by the
Barbados Port Authority.
Tourist
information
The island is well developed, and there are
internationally-known hotels offering world-class accommodation.
Time-shares are available, and many of the smaller local hotels and
private villas which dot the island have space available if booked
in advance. The southern and western coasts of Barbados are popular,
with the calm light blue Atlantic Ocean and their fine white and
pinkish sandy beaches. Along the island's east coast the Atlantic
Ocean side are tumbling waves which are perfect for light surfing,
but a little bit risky due to under-tow currents.
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Shopping districts are popular in Barbados, with ample duty-free
shopping. There is also a festive night-life in mainly tourist areas
such as the Saint Lawrence Gap. Other attractions include wildlife
reserves, jewellery stores, scuba diving, helicopter rides, golf,
festivals (the largest being the annual crop over festival
July/Aug), sightseeing, cave exploration, exotic drinks and fine
clothes shopping.
Attractions,
landmarks and points of interest.
Tourism accounts for almost one half of the
economy. Name / Parish Location:
- Christ Church
Graeme Hall Nature Sanctuary
St. Lawrence Gap
- St. Andrew
Chalky Mount potteries
Cherry Tree Hill
Morgan Lewis Windmill
- St. George
Francia Great House
Gun Hill Signal Station
Orchid World
- St. James
Folkestone Marine Park
Lancaster Great House Gallery and Gardens
http://www.lancastergreathousegallery.com
- St. John
Codrington College
St. John Parish Church
- St. Joseph
Andromeda Gardens
Flower Forest
Hackleton's Cliff
- St. Lucy
Animal Flower Cave
Little Bay
- St. Michael
Barbados Historical Museum
Bridgetown Synagogue and Cemetery
Bussa Emancipation Statue
Garrison Savannah
Kensington Oval
Mount Gay Rum Distilleries
- St. Peter
Barbados Wildlife Reserve
Farley Hill National Park
- St. Philip
Sunbury Plantation
- St. Thomas
Clifton Hill Moravian Church
Harrison's Cave
Sharon Moravian Church
Welchman Hall Gully
List of: Cities, towns and villages in Barbados.
Bridgetown
Holetown
Oistins
Speightstown
Demographics
Barbados has a population of about
279,000 and a population growth rate of 0.33% (Mid-2005
estimates). Close to 90 percent of all Barbadians (also
known colloquially as Bajan) are of African descent
("Afro-Bajans"), mostly descendants of the slave
labourers on the sugar plantations. The remainder of the
population includes groups of Europeans ("Anglo-Bajans"
/ "Euro-Bajans") mainly from the United Kingdom, the
Republic of Ireland, Chinese locally known as
Bajan-Chiney, Bajan Hindus from India and Muslims from
Bangladesh and Pakistan, and an influential "Arab-Bajans"
group mainly of Christian Syrians and Lebanese descent.
On the island are many people of Creole descent, a
mixture of Afro-Caribbean and European descent
(Primarily British, Irish and Portuguese).
Other groups in Barbados include people from the United
Kingdom, United States and Canada. Barbadians who return
after years of residence in the U.S. are called "Bajan
Yankees"; this term is considered derogatory by some.
The country's official language is English, the local
dialect of which is referred to as Bajan, spoken by
most. In religion, most Barbadians are Protestant
Christians (67%), chiefly of the Anglican Church, but
there are other Protestant, Roman Catholic, Jehovah's
Witness, Hindu, Muslim and Jewish minorities. Barbados
is a chief destination for emigrants from the South
American nation of Guyana. The biggest communities
outside the Afro-Caribbean community are:
The Indo-Guyanese, an important part of the economy due
to the increase of immigrants from partner country
Guyana. There are reports of a growing Indo-Bajan
diaspora originating from Guyana and India. They
introduced soca-chutney , roti and many Indian dishes to
Barbados' culture. Mostly from southern India and Hindu
states, these 'Desi' peoples are growing in size but
smaller than the equivalent communities in Trinidad &
Guyana; Hinduism is one of Barbados' growing religions.
Euro-Bajans have settled in Barbados since the 1500s,
originating from England, Portugal, Ireland and
Scotland. More commonly they are known as "White Bajans",
although some carry Afro-Caribbean traces and
vice-versa. Euro-Bajans introduced folk music, such as
Irish music and Highland music, and certain place names,
such as "Scotland", a mountainous region, and "Trafalgar
Square" in Bridgetown, now renamed "Heroes Square".
Chinese-Barbadians (or, as they are known on the island,
"Bajan-Chineys") are a small portion of Barbados' Asian
demographics, smaller than the equivalent communities of
Jamaica and Trinidad. Most if not all first arrived in
the 1940s during the Second World War, originating
mainly from the then British territory of Hong Kong.
Many Chinese-Bajans have the surnames Chin, Chynn or
Lee, although other surnames prevail in certain areas of
the island. Chinese food and culture is becoming part of
everyday Bajan culture.
Lebanese and Syrians form the Middle Eastern community
on the island and make up 89% of the Muslim population.
Middle-Eastern Barbadians are often perceived to be the
most successful group in business, along with the
Chinese Bajans. During the Arab Israeli Wars, many
Syrians and Lebanese headed for the West Indies to
escape conflict and poverty in the Middle East. Also Jewish people arrived in Barbados around
the same time, creating the biggest synagogue in the
West Indies.
Latin Americans have been migrating to the island since
the 18th century, due to the close proximity of South
America, many Venezuelans had migrated to Barbados as
labourers via Trinidad. Brazilian Jews, Colombians and
Panamanians also live on the island. The Spanish
language is now being encouraged to be taught as a
second language in Barbadian schools over French.