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

    Columbus visited several other islands in the Bahamas before sailing to present-day Cuba and afterwards to Hispaniola. [3] The Bahamas held little interest to the Spanish except as a source of slave labor. Nearly the entire population of Lucayan (almost 40,000 people total) were transported to other islands as laborers over the next 30 years.

  3. Lucayan people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucayan_people

    Within two years the southern Bahamas were largely depopulated. The Spanish may have carried away as many as 40,000 Lucayans by 1513. [12] Carl O. Sauer described Ponce de León's 1513 expedition in which he encountered Florida as simply "an extension of slave hunting beyond the empty islands."

  4. The Bahamas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bahamas

    The Bahamas (/ b ə ˈ h ɑː m ə z / ⓘ bə-HAH-məz), officially the Commonwealth of The Bahamas, [13] is an island country within the Lucayan Archipelago of the Atlantic Ocean.It contains 97% of the Lucayan Archipelago's land area and 88% of its population.

  5. Andros, The Bahamas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andros,_The_Bahamas

    A 1520 expedition by the Spanish discovered only 11 people in The Bahamas; the Lucayans were effectively eradicated from these islands. The islands of the Bahamas, including Andros Island, remained uninhabited thereafter for approximately 130 years. [7] The Bahamas subsequently passed back and forth between Spanish and British rule for 150 years.

  6. 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 ...

  7. 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 ...

  8. Little Bahamas of Coconut Grove extends north to Bird Avenue and U.S. 1 and south to Franklin Avenue, according to the resolution sponsored by Commissioner Ken Russell.

  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.