
The
first inhabitants several hundred years
before Christ were the Arawaks, an indian
tribe, peaceful, but highly developed
fishermen.
They became extinct around the 9th century
by the men eating warriors of the Caraïbes,
who still inhabited the island Caloucaéra
(Karukera in creole language) when the
fleet of Christopher Columbus landed on
November 3rd, 1493. He named the island
Guadeloupe. |
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The
Spanish showed little interest for the inhospital
island and the first "volunteers"
of the French - mostly farmers from the Normandie,
the Bretagne or the Charente - have been settled
in by the Compagnie des Isles d'Amérique
not until 1635. Then the Karibs themselves got
killed by epidemics, alcohol and guns. But the
difficult living conditions affected the first
settlers very much and so soon the trade with
slaves from Africa as a workforce began.
At the beginning farming was not very profitable,
so the Compagnie sold Guadeloupe to Charles
Houël, who started the economic growth
of the island with plantations of sugar, coffee
and cocoa. Later on, the island was owned by
the Compagnie des Indes, then by King Louis
XIV.; the island survived attacks by the Dutch
and occupation by the British. New plants like
cotton and spices were introduced.
During
the 18th century was the peak of the buccaneering
and the Caribbean
islands mostly lived of attacks and looting
of foreign cargo vessels.
Influenced
by the French Revolution, on February 4th, 1794,
the Convention in Paris voted for the prohibition
of slavery and sent Victor Hugues to Guadeloupe
to control the implementation. A big number
of estate owners who were loyal to the king
and slavemasters got executed by the Guillotine.
1802
Napoléon Bonaparte reinstated slavery,
but at the same time an opposition movement
stood up. First under the commando of Louis
Delgrès in 1802, later under the British,
who forbid slavery in 1807, then at the Congress
of Vienna in 1815. But only on April 27th, 1848,
the French parliament voted for the Abolition
Decreet, brought in by Viktor Schoelcher, the
founder of the Société Abolitionniste.
Victor Schoelcher
Since
the relations between the former slaves and
their former masters were extremely bad, they
searched for other workers and found the coolies.
These free and payed workers came from China
and first of all from India. The fact that they
had to pay the workers and the growing competition
from the European sugar growers led to the economic
downfall of many planters. In the second half
of the 19th century, they lost their estates
to big foreign companies.
But
the economic crisis could not be stopped and
there were severe social uproars and strikes.
It was at this time, that Guadeloupe voted for
her first socialist parlementarians: Légitimus
and Achille-René Boisneuf. To get away
from the economic dependance of sugar growing,
a diversification of the production with plantations
of bananas, pineapples and rice began after
World War II - sugar and rum are still the main
exports.
On
March 19th, 1946, Guadeloupe becomes a French
Overseas Department. Like all the other French
Departments she is governed by a prefect. He
is assisted by two secretary generals and two
under-prefects, one for the district of Pointe-à-Pitre,
the other one for the Northern Islands. The
law is the same as in metropolitan France with
some specific exemptions in regard to the wages
for the civil servants, the school system and
the social and health system. An independance
movement, which was very active in the eighties
seems to have been replaced by the will to work
together for a secure social and economic future.
Thus, the presidents of the regions Guadeloupe,
Martinique
and French Guyana defined together in the "Déclaration
de Basse-Terre", on December 1st, 1999,
a new development program for the Antilles-Guyana
region, and in June 2000, the law of orientation
for the French Oversea's departments has been
voted.
Saint
Martin and Saint
Barth voted for their independence from
Guadeloupe's administration and got French oversea
communities of their own since the referendum
held on December 07, 2003.
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