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The Indigenous peoples of Trinidad and Tobago : from the first settlers until today / Arie Boomert.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Boomert, Arie, author.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Indigenous peoples--Trinidad and Tobago.
- Indigenous peoples.
- Trinidad and Tobago--History.
- Trinidad and Tobago.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (218 p.)
- Edition:
- 1st ed.
- Place of Publication:
- Leiden : Sidestone Press, [2016]
- Summary:
- This study relates the vicissitudes of the Amerindian peoples who lived or still inhabit the islands of Trinidad and Tobago, from the earliest occupants, ca. 8000 BC, until present. Using archaeological, ethnohistorical and linguistic data, it discusses the social, political, economic, and religious development of indigenous society through the ages. The Amerindian struggle with European colonization is chronicled in detail, following centuries of independent existence during pre-Columbian times, as well as the survival of the current people of indigenous ancestry in the twin-island republic."This book fills a long-standing gap in the history of Trinidad & Tobago, and the southern Caribbean more generally. It provides a clearly written, authoritative account and analysis of the Amerindians (First Peoples) who lived (and still live) in the two islands, from the very earliest human settlement there up to the present. Based on up-to-the-minute scholarship in several disciplines - archaeology, ethnography, history, linguistics - Boomert dispels many myths and misconceptions about these peoples and carefully traces the complex history of their settlement, in successive waves of migration, in both islands; their interactions with Europeans arriving from 1498; and their "decline" in the post-contact period."Dr. Bridget Brereton, Emerita Professor in History, The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago."This book is a welcome addition to the literature we are now seeking to inform our work here at the Santa Rosa First Peoples Community, as it brings to light important aspects of our buried history. Of particular interest is the information on the involvement of the Dutch in the struggles of the First Peoples, and the connection with Hierreyma, our great Nepuyo Chieftain. It is an inspiration to those of us who are currently engaged in efforts to secure the rightful place of the First Peoples of this land - Kairi."Ricardo Bharath Hernandez, Chief Santa Rosa First Peoples Community, Arima, Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago.
- Contents:
- List of illustrations; Preface; Abbreviations; 1. Introduction; Geographical situation and natural environment; The indigenous peoples of Trinidad and Tobago; Discovery of archaeological sites; 2. The first settlers (ca. 8000-300 BC); The earliest Trinidadians; The first Tobagonians and late Archaic times in Trinidad; 3. New immigrants: the first ceramists (ca. 300; BC-AD 650/800); Saladoid settlement sites in Trinidad and Tobago; Saladoid ceramics and Barrancoid intrusion; Saladoid/Barrancoid subsistence and food processing; Saladoid/Barrancoid population, society and religion
- 4. Late-prehistoric cultural change (ca.AD 650/800;1498)Arauquinoid settlement in Trinidad; Troumassoid occupation of Tobago; On the brink of the Historic Age: Mayoid in Trinidad and Cayo (?) in Tobago; 5. Amerindian culture and society in Trinidad and Tobago at the time of the encounter and thereafter; Population and settlement patterns; Subsistence and food processing; Social organization and life cycle; Interaction: war and exchange; Religion: cosmology and shamanism; 6. The Amerindian-European struggle for Trinidad and Tobago (1498-1592)
- The first European; Amerindian encounters in Trinidad and Tobago Attempts at Spanish settlement in Trinidad and slave raids in Tobago; 7. The Spanish-Amerindian frontier in Trinidad (1592-1686); Spanish settlement and Amerindian reaction; Hierreyma and the great Amerindian rebellion; 8. European settlement and Amerindian response in Tobago (1592; ca. 1810); Slave raids and the first European attempts at settlement; Further Dutch and Courlander ventures; A peaceful interlude: Tobago as a 'neutral' island; From marginalization to extinction; 9. Mission villages in Spanish Trinidad (1686-1797)
- Establishment of Capuchin missions in Spanish Trinidad Abolition and reinstatement of the missions; Foreign immigration and the development of a plantation economy; 10. British colonization and Amerindian persistence in Trinidad (1797-present); The end of mission times in British Trinidad; Becoming a small segment of a plural society; The present Amerindian community of Trinidad; Epilogue. The Amerindian heritage of Trinidad and Tobago; Glossary; Bibliography; Pre-Columbian and historic Amerindian archaeology; Primary historic sources and maps; Various historical and anthropological accounts
- Amerindian cultural heritage Appendix. Institutions and museums with significant archaeological holdings from Trinidad and Tobago; Index;
- Notes:
- Description based upon print version of record.
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ebrary, viewed March 23, 2016).
- ISBN:
- 90-8890-354-9
- OCLC:
- 944910446
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