|
Caribbean
The History of the British Virgin Islands is usually, for convenience, broken up into five separate periods: more...
Home
Antiquities
Architectural & Garden
Asian Antiques
Books, Manuscripts
Decorative Arts
Ethnographic
Furniture
Maps, Atlases, Globes
Globes
Maps on CD
Maps, Atlases
Africa
Asia
Australia, New Zealand
Caribbean
Continental Europe, Russia
India
Middle East
Mixed Lots
North America
Canada
Mexico
United States
US:AK, HI
US:AL, FL, GA, MS, NC, SC
US:AR, IA, KS, LA, MO, NE
US:AZ, CA, CO, NM, NV, UT
US:CT, MA, ME, NH, RI, VT
US:DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA
US:Entire US
US:ID, OR, WA
US:IL, IN, MI, OH, WI
US:MN, MT, ND, SD, WY
US:OK, TX
US:VA, WV, KY, TN
Other
South America
United Kingdom
World & Hemisphere Maps
Maritime
Musical Instruments
Other Antiques
Primitives
Rugs, Carpets
Science & Medicine
Silver
Textiles, Linens
Pre-Columbian Amerindian settlement, up to an uncertain date;
Nascent European settlement, from approximately 1612 until 1672;
British control, from 1672 until 1834;
Emancipation, from 1834 until 1950;
The modern state, from 1950 to present day;
These time periods are used for convenience only. There appears to be an uncertain period of time from when the last Arawaks left what would later be called the British Virgin Islands until the first Europeans started to settle there in the early 1600s, but each period commences with a dramatic change from the time period which precedes it, and so is a convenient way to compartmentalise the subject.
Pre-Columbian settlement
The first recorded settlement of the Territory was by Arawak Indians who came from South America, in around 100 BC. However, there is some dispute about the dates. Some historians place it later, at around 200 AD, but they suggest that the Arawaks may have been preceded by the Ciboney Indians, who are thought to have settled in nearby St. Thomas as early as 300 BC. There is some evidence of Amerindian presence on the islands as far back as 1500 BC, although there is little academic support for the idea of a permanent settlement on any of the current British Virgin Islands at that time.
The Arawaks inhabited the islands until the 1400s when they were displaced by the more aggressive Caribs, a tribe from the Lesser Antilles islands, after whom the Caribbean Sea is named. Some historians, however, believe that this popular account of warlike Caribs chasing peaceful Arawaks out of the Caribbean islands is rooted in simplistic European stereotypes, and that the true story is more complex.
None of the later European visitors to the Virgin Islands ever reported encountering Amerindians in what would later be the British Virgin Islands, although Columbus would have a hostile encounter with the Carib natives of St. Croix.
Comparatively little is know about the early inhabitants of the Territory specifically (as opposed to the Arawaks generally). The largest excavations of Arawak pottery have been found around Belmont and Smuggler's Cove on the northwest of Tortola, but many other sites have been found, including at Soper's Hole, Apple Bay, Coxheath, Pockwood Pond, Pleasant Valley, Sage Mountain, Russell Hill (modern day Road Town), Pasea, Purcell, Paraquita Bay, Josiah's Bay, Mount Healthy and Cane Garden Bay. Modern archaeological excavations regularly cause local historians to revise what they thought they knew about these early settlers. Discoveries reported in the local newspapers in 2006 have caused postulation that the settlement of the islands by Arawaks may have been much more significant than had earlier been thought.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
|
|