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- <text id=93CT1672>
- <title>
- Dominica--History
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- Caribbean
- Dominica
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Almost all 81,000 Dominicans are descendants of African
- slaves imported by planters in the 18th century. Dominica is the
- only island in the eastern Caribbean to retain a colony of its
- pre-Columbian population, the Carib Indians, about 500 of whom
- live in a reserve on the island's east coast. The population
- growth rate is low, due primarily to emigration to more
- prosperous Caribbean islands, the United Kingdom, the United
- States, and Canada.
- </p>
- <p> English is the official language; however, because of
- historic French domination, the most widely spoken dialect is
- a French patois. About 80% of the population is Catholic. In
- recent years, a significant number of Protestant churches have
- been established.
- </p>
- <p> Dominica was discovered November 3, 1493, by Columbus on
- his second voyage to the New World. He found the island
- inhabited by warlike Carib Indians, who in the 14th century had
- expelled or exterminated the indigenous Arawak Indians. Because
- of prevailing winds and currents, Spanish ships frequently
- landed on Dominica during the 16th century, but fierce
- resistance by the Caribs daunted the Spanish and discouraged
- efforts at settlement.
- </p>
- <p> In 1635, with the decline of Spanish power, France claimed
- Dominica. Shortly thereafter, French missionaries became the
- first Europian inhabitants of the island. Carib incursions
- continued, however, and in 1660 the French and British agreed
- that Dominica and St. Vincent should be left to the Indians.
- Dominica was officially neutral for the next century. But the
- attraction of Dominica's resources remained; rival groups of
- British and French foresters were harvesting timber by the
- start of the 18th century, normally in expeditions rather than
- from permanent settlements.
- </p>
- <p> Largely due to Dominica's position between Martinique and
- Guadeloupe, France eventually became predominant, and a French
- settlement was established and grew. However, as part of the
- 1763 Treaty of Paris that ended the Seven Years' War being
- fought in Europe, North America, and India, the island became
- a British possession. In 1778, during the American Revolutionary
- War, the French mounted a successful invasion with the active
- cooperation of the still largely French population. The 1783
- Treaty of Paris, ending American hostilities, returned the
- island to Britain. Further French invasions failed in 1795 and
- 1805.
- </p>
- <p> In 1763, the British established a legislative assembly,
- representing only the white population. In 1831, reflecting a
- liberalization of official British racial attitudes, the "Brown
- Privilege Bill" conferred political and social rights on
- nonwhites. Three blacks were elected to the Legislative
- Assembly the following year, and by 1838 the recently
- enfranchised blacks dominated that body. Most black legislators
- were smallholders or merchants, who held economic and social
- views diametrically opposed to the interests of the small,
- wealthy English planter class. Reacting to a perceived threat,
- the planters lobbied for more direct British rule. In 1865,
- after much agitation and tension, the colonial office replaced
- the elective assembly with one of half elected members and half
- appointed. The elected legislators were subsequently
- outmaneuvered on numerous occasions by the planters allied with
- colonial administrators. In 1871, Dominica became a federal
- colony attached to the Leeward Islands. The power of the black
- population progressively eroded until crown colony government,
- after severe colonial office pressure, was forced on the
- assembly in 1896. All political rights for the vast majority of
- the population were effectively curtailed. Development aid,
- offered as compensation for disenfranchisement, proved to have
- negligible effect.
- </p>
- <p> Following World War I an upsurge of political consciousness
- throughout the Caribbean led to the formation of the
- Representative Government Association. Marshaling popular
- discontent with the lack of a popular voice in the governing of
- Dominica, this group in 1924 won one-third and in 1936 one-half
- of the popularly elected seats of the Legislative Assembly.
- Shortly thereafter, Dominica was transferred from Leeward
- Island administration and was governed as part of the Windwards
- until 1958, when it joined the short-lived Federation of the
- West Indies. After the federation dissolved, Dominica became an
- associated state of the United Kingdom in 1967 and formally
- took responsibility for its internal affairs. On November 3,
- 1978, the Commonwealth of Dominica was granted independence by
- the United Kingdom.
- </p>
- <p> Problems stemming from centuries of economic
- underdevelopment have persisted since independence. In mid-1979,
- political discontent led to the formation of an interim
- government. This was replaced after 1980 elections by the
- Dominica Freedom Party under Prime Minister Mary Eugenia
- Charles, the Caribbean's first female prime minister. Chronic
- economic problems also were compounded by the severe impact of
- Hurricanes David in 1979 and Allen in 1980. But by the end of
- the decade, the economy had made a healthy recovery, fueled by
- highly profitable banana exports.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
- April 1990.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-