enow.com Web Search

Search results

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

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Bahamas

    In World War I organisations such as the Imperial Order of the Daughters of Empire and the Bahamas Red Cross Guild began collecting money, food and clothing for soldiers and civilians in Europe. "The Gallant Thirty" Bahamians set out to join the British West Indies Regiment as early as 1915 and as many as 1,800 served in the armed forces of ...

  3. Lucayan people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucayan_people

    The Taínos probably did not settle in central Cuba until after 1000, and there is no particular evidence that this was the route of the initial settlement of the Bahamas. [ 4 ] From an initial settlement of Great Inagua Island, the Lucayans expanded throughout the Bahamas Islands in some 800 years (c. 700 – c. 1500), growing to a population ...

  4. The Bahamas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bahamas

    The Bahamas has won more Olympic medals than any other country with a population under one million. [179] The Bahamas were hosts of the first men's senior FIFA tournament to be staged in the Caribbean, the 2017 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup. [180] The Bahamas also hosted the first three editions of the IAAF World Relays. [181]

  5. Indigenous peoples of the Caribbean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_peoples_of_the...

    [33] [34] Carl O. Sauer called the Florida Straits "one of the most strongly marked cultural boundaries in the New World", noting that the Straits were also a boundary between agricultural systems, with Florida Indians growing seed crops that originated in Mexico, while the Lucayans of the Bahamas grew root crops that originated in South ...

  6. History of the Caribbean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Caribbean

    The most popular early destinations were Jamaica and the Bahamas; the Bahamas remains today the most popular tourist destination in the Caribbean. Post-independence economic needs, particularly in the aftermath of the end of preferential agricultural trade ties with Europe, led to a boom in the development of the tourism industry in the 1980s ...

  7. Afro-Bahamians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Bahamians

    There was also an additional 9,560 people brought directly from Africa to the Bahamas from 1788 - 1807. 1807 was when the British abolished the slave trade. [6] Throughout the 19th century, close to 7000 Africans were resettled in the Bahamas after being freed from slave ships by the Royal Navy, which intercepted the trade, in the Bahamian islands.

  8. Territorial evolution of the Caribbean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_evolution_of...

    In the 20th century the Caribbean was again important during World War II, in the decolonization wave in the post-war period, and in the tension between Communist Cuba and the United States (U.S.). Genocide, slavery, immigration and rivalry between world powers have given Caribbean history an impact disproportionate to the size of this small ...

  9. Lucayan Archipelago - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucayan_Archipelago

    The Lucayan Archipelago, also known as the Bahamian Archipelago, is an island group comprising the Commonwealth of The Bahamas and the British Overseas Territory of the Turks and Caicos Islands. The archipelago is in the western North Atlantic Ocean, north of Cuba and the other Antillean Islands, and east and south-east of Florida.