enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of Guyana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Guyana

    After World War I, new economic interest groups began to clash with the Combined Court. The country's economy had come to depend less on sugar and more on rice and bauxite, and producers of these new commodities resented the sugar planters' continued domination of the Combined Court. Meanwhile, the planters were feeling the effects of lower ...

  3. Guyana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guyana

    Guyana, [b] officially the Co-operative Republic of Guyana, [12] is a country on the northern coast of South America, part of the historic mainland British West Indies. Georgetown is the capital of Guyana and is also the country's largest city.

  4. Guyanese people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guyanese_people

    Even though referred to collectively as Amerindians, the indigenous peoples in Guyana are made up of several distinct tribes or nations. Warao, Arawak, Caribs, and Wapishana are all represented in Guyana. [8] Europeans arrived in the Guianas in the search for gold in the New World, eventually settling in and colonizing Guyana and the Americas ...

  5. Indo-Guyanese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-Guyanese

    In Guyana, among the Indo-Guyanese people, it is popular to eat curried or fried vegetables such as okra, eddoe, breadnut, lablab beans, pumpkin, bitter melon, drumstick, long beans, calabash, potato, ridged gourd, sponged gourd, cassava, cabbage, cauliflower, green banana, green papaya, chickpeas, and eggplant. Roti or dhal bhat (dhal and rice ...

  6. The Guianas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Guianas

    Before the arrival of European colonials, the Guianas were populated by scattered bands of native Arawak people. The native tribes of the Northern amazon forests are most closely related to the natives of the Caribbean; most evidence suggests that the Arawaks immigrated from the Orinoco and Essequibo River Basins in Venezuela and Guiana into the northern islands, and were then supplanted by ...

  7. Afro-Guyanese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Guyanese

    Led by Cuffy (now the national hero of Guyana), the African freedom fighters came to number about 3,000 and threatened European control over the Guianas. [2] The freedom fighters were defeated with the assistance of troops from neighbouring French and British colonies and from Europe. [2] Colonial life was changed radically by the demise of ...

  8. Descendants of a British owner of slaves in Guyana apologize ...

    www.aol.com/news/descendants-british-owner...

    GEORGETOWN, Guyana (AP) — The descendants of a 19th-century Scottish sugar and coffee planter who owned thousands of slaves in Guyana apologized Friday for the sins of their ancestor, calling ...

  9. British Guiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Guiana

    A political and social history of Guyana, 1945-1983 (Westview Press, 1984). Will, Henry Austin. Constitutional change in the British West Indies, 1880-1903: with special reference to Jamaica, British Guiana, and Trinidad (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1970).