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] : Introduction
St. Christopher ( commonly called St. Kitts ) and Nevis, separated
by just two miles, are two islands in the north eastern Caribbean
comprising 261 square kilometers with a population of 45,000. Despite
their small size there is much natural diversity, ranging from forested
volcanic mountains soaring to more than 1,000 meters, to coastal
plains, dry scrub, golden beaches and vibrant coral reefs in the
warm waters offshore.
This welcoming environment no doubt attracted the first settlers
from the South American mainland nearly 5000 years ago and continue
to attract settlers and visitors ever since. Christopher Columbus
sailed by on his second voyage in 1493. Although he did not land,
he bestowed his name on the islands: San Cristobal (St. Christopher)
after his own patron saint, and Nieves or 'Snows' suggested by the
cloud-capped cone of Nevis. Permanent European settlement was not
made until the early 1600s when French Hugenots lived among the
aboriginal Arawakan people and cultivated tobacco and food crops.
In the 1620s more organised settlements were made in St. Kitts first
by the English, followed shortly by the French who both shared the
island between them, after defeating the native people.
St. Kitts became a successful colony of England and France and
served as a base and a model for the establishment of other English
and French colonies in the Caribbean. African people were brought
to the islands from the 1630s to toil on the tobacco, cotton and
then sugar plantations. This infamous trade and exploitation of
humans continued well into the 19th century.
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