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         Dominica Regional History:     more detail
  1. Centring the Periphery: Chaos, Order, and the Ethnohistory of Dominica. (book reviews): An article from: Canadian Journal of History by Rosemarie M. McNairn, 1994-12-01

41. Caribbean Islands Introduction - Flags, Maps, Economy, Geography, Climate, Natur
Grenada, dominica, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines offered the most dramatic In the early 1980s, regional leaders hoped that President Ronald
http://workmall.com/wfb2001/caribbean_islands/caribbean_islands_history_introduc

  • HISTORY INDEX
  • Country Ranks
    Caribbean Islands
    Introduction
    http://workmall.com/wfb2001/caribbean_islands/caribbean_islands_history_introduction.html
    Source: The Library of Congress Country Studies
      < BACK TO HISTORY CONTENTS THE COMMONWEALTH CARIBBEAN is the term applied to the English- speaking islands in the Carribbean and the mainland nations of Belize (formerly British Honduras) and Guyana (formerly British Guiana) that once constituted the Caribbean portion of the British Empire. This volume examines only the islands of the Commonwealth Caribbean, which are Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, the Windward Islands (Dominica, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Grenada), Barbados, the Leeward Islands (Antigua and Barbuda, St. Christopher [hereafter, St. Kitts] and Nevis, the British Virgin Islands, Anguilla, and Montserrat), and the so-called Northern Islands (the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands, and the Turks and Caicos Islands). To the casual observer, these islands might appear to be too disparate to allow for a common discussion. Consider, for instance, the differences in population, size, income, ethnic composition, and political status among the various islands. Anguilla's 7,000 residents live on an island totaling 91 square kilometers, whereas Jamaica has a population of 2.3 million and a territory of nearly 11,000 square kilometers. The per capita gross domestic product (GDPsee Glossary) of the Cayman Islands is nearly fourteen times as large as that of St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Trinidad and Tobago's population is evenly divided between blacks and East Indians, a pattern quite different from that on the other islands, on which blacks constitute an overwhelming majority. Although most of the islands are independent nations, five (the British Virgin Islands, Anguilla, Montserrat, the Cayman Islands, and the Turks and Caicos Islands) remain British dependencies.
  • 42. Download Interdisciplinary, Cross-regional And Standard-specific Units, Outreach
    Outreach World Download interdisciplinary, crossregional and Introducesstudents to the history and culture of Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Puerto
    http://www.outreachworld.org/searchresources.asp?countryid=350

    43. History Of Dominican Republic - MavicaNET
    regional North America Insular Territories Caribbean Sea history Caribbean The Virtual Jewish history Tour Dominican Republic - English
    http://www.mavicanet.com/directory/eng/24147.html
    selCatSelAlt="Deselect category"; selCatDesAlt="Select category"; selSitSelAlt="Deselect site"; selSitDesAlt="Select site";
    MavicaNET - Multilingual Search Catalog MavicaNet Lite - Light version
    Catalog

    Belarusian Bulgarian Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hungarian Icelandic Irish Italian Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian (cyr.) Serbian (lat.) Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Ukrainian Regional North America Insular Territories: Caribbean Sea Dominican Republic ... History: Caribbean History of Dominican Republic
    Sites

    Sister categories ... Economy: Dominican Republic History of Anguilla History of Bahamas History of Barbados History of Bermuda History of British Virgin Isla... History of Cayman Islands History of Cuba History of Dominica History of Grenada History of Guadeloupe History of Haiti History of Jamaica History of Martinique History of Montserrat History of Netherlands Antille... History of Puerto Rico History of Saint Kitts and Nev... History of Saint Lucia History of Saint Vincent and t...

    44. GlobalEDGE (TM) | Country Insights - Overview Of Dominican Rep.
    Information on the overview of the country, its history, economy, governmentstructure, DOMINICAN REP. HEADLINES. regional PAGE. Latin America
    http://globaledge.msu.edu/ibrd/CountryIntro.asp?CountryID=120&RegionID=4

    45. History Of The Caribbean Community
    British Honduras, dominica, Grenada, Saint Lucia, Montserrat, CARICOM, ina counterattack, is mobilising a region-wide response in combat against
    http://www.jis.gov.jm/special_sections/CARICOMNew/history.htm
    Search HISTORY OF THE CARIBBEAN COMMUNITY The end of the Federation meant the beginning of more serious efforts on the part of the political leaders in the Caribbean to strengthen the ties between the islands and mainland by providing for the continuance and strengthening of the areas of cooperation that existed during the Federation. To this end in mid-1962 a Common Services Conference was called to take decisions on these services, the major ones among them being the University of the West Indies (UWI), founded in 1948 and the Regional Shipping Services set up during the Federation to control the operation of the two ships donated in 1962 by the government of Canada - the Federal Palm and the Federal Maple. The Caribbean Meteorological Service was established one year after, in 1963 and along with the UWI and the Regional Shipping Service, represented the heart of Caribbean cooperation directly after the end of the Federation.

    46. RBC Royal Bank - The Caribbean And Bahamas
    RBC Royal Bank of Canada s history in the Caribbean goes back a long way. branches were established in three Eastern Caribbean islands dominica,
    http://www.rbcroyalbank.com/caribbean/rb_hist.html
    RBC.com Search Site Map Contact Us ... Legal Terms Select Region Canada US International Other RBC Sites: Banking Investments Insurance
    RBC ROYAL BANK
    CARIBBEAN and BAHAMAS Home A bit of History Antigua Bahamas ... SEARCH
    History
    Sea-going trade
    RBC Royal Bank of Canada's history in the Caribbean goes back a long way. In fact, the bank established branches in the Caribbean before some of Canada's western provinces. Strong maritime roots influenced its representation throughout the region. Its commercial relations began with a group of merchants from Halifax, Nova Scotia, who formed the Merchant's Bank in 1864, and were engaged in the thriving sea-going trade between Halifax and the West Indies. In those days Canadian southbound ships carried mainly flour, codfish and timber, returning north with their cargoes of sugar, rum, cotton and spices. Through branches established in all major trade centres in the Caribbean, RBC offered valuable facilities for promoting trade. Early days
    The bank's first venture south was Bermuda in 1882 followed by Cuba in 1899. By 1914, the bank's international network included Puerto Rico, Bahamas, Trinidad, Jamaica, Dominican Republic, Barbados, British Honduras (now Belize) and Grenada. In that same year, RBC purchased the British Guiana Bank that had opened in 1836. By 1984 the bank had opened a total of 15 branches in Guyana (formerly British Guiana) but in November 1984 RBC ceased to operate there. The
    Bio-diversity Centre in Georgetown, created to study Guyana's largely intact rain forest, was built with funds from RBC's operations in Guyana, since foreign exchange restrictions made it impossible to take them out of the country.

    47. RBC Royal Bank - The Caribbean And Bahamas
    RBC Royal Bank of Canada s history in the Caribbean goes back a long way. St. Kitts and St. Lucia. regional offices are located in Bahamas and Barbados.
    http://www.rbcroyalbank.com/caribbean/business/rb_hist.html
    RBC.com Search Site Map Contact Us ... Legal Terms Select Region Canada US International Other RBC Sites: Banking Investments Insurance Global Services ...
    RBC ROYAL BANK
    THE CARIBBEAN and BAHAMAS Home A bit of History Antigua Bahamas ... SEARCH
    History
    Sea-going trade
    RBC Royal Bank of Canada's history in the Caribbean goes back a long way. In fact, the bank established branches in the Caribbean before some of Canada's western provinces. Strong maritime roots influenced its representation throughout the West Indies and the Caribbean. Its commercial relations with the West Indies began with a group of merchants from Halifax, Nova Scotia, who formed the Merchant's Bank in 1864, and were engaged in the thriving sea-going trade between Halifax and the West Indies. In those days Canadian southbound ships carried mainly flour, codfish and timber, returning north with their cargoes of sugar, rum, cotton and spices. Through branches established in all major trade centres in the Caribbean, RBC offered valuable facilities for promoting trade. Early days
    The bank's first venture south was Bermuda in 1882 followed by Cuba in 1899. By 1914, the bank's international network included Puerto Rico, Bahamas, Trinidad, Jamaica, Dominican Republic, Barbados, British Honduras (now Belize) and Grenada. In that same year, RBC purchased the British Guiana Bank that had opened in 1836. By 1984 the bank had opened a total of 15 branches in Guyana (formerly British Guiana) and in November 1984 RBC ceased to operate in Guyana. The Bio-diversity Centre in Georgetown, created to study Guyana's largely intact rain forest, was built with funds from RBC's operations in Guyana, since it was impossible to take them out of the country due to foreign exchange restrictions.

    48. Postgraduate Prospectus : History - University Of Newcastle Upon Tyne
    regional history, MRes. 12 months full time. Aims. To study the history of regionsand regionalism across time and space at an advanced level,
    http://www.ncl.ac.uk/postgraduate/taught/subjects/history/courses/403
    Skip to Content Skip to Navigation
    University of
    Newcastle upon Tyne
    ... Accessibility S earch Skip to Navigation
    History.
    Regional History, MRes
    12 months full time
    Aims
    To study the history of regions and regionalism across time and space at an advanced level, through an extended programme of research training and teaching in the approaches used by regional historians.
    School Web pages:
    Programme Description
    This unique new research training programme is designed to provide a springboard to PhD-level work. It is offered in collaboration with the AHRB Centre for North-East England History, which means students benefit from the combined expertise of regional historians based in the universities of Durham, Newcastle, Northumbria, Sunderland and Teesside. Compulsory modules (120 credits) are offered through a programme of workshops and seminars, covering a wide range of topics including: introduction to information skills; dissertation preparation; research methods in history; IT and history; issues in regional history; approaches to regional history. All modules are assessed by submitted course work. In the final semester students complete a dissertation on their chosen aspect of regional history (60 credits).
    Entrance Requirements
    A good 2:1 Honours degree in history or a related field. Applicants whose first language is not English require IELTS 6.5, TOEFL 575 (paper-based) or 233 (computer-based), or equivalent.

    49. 12.1 History Of Slavery And Independence
    Amongst the smaller islands of the Eastern Caribbean only dominica and St. The United States have various interests in the Caribbean the region is the
    http://ethesis.helsinki.fi/julkaisut/mat/maant/pg/lipsanen/121.html
    12 Dwelling
    12.1 History of slavery and independence
    'Yeah, mon, the Caribbean try to make countries. It's a kind of magic. Making something from nothing.' This was said by Bunny Wailer, a Jamaican singer, interviewed by Mark Kurlansky ( : vii). Three European colonial powersSpain, France, and the Great Britainand several minor ones ruled the Caribbean from the 16th to the early 20th century. Genocide was committed on the Native American cultures. Estimates of the Indian population of the Caribbean islands in 1492 when Columbus arrived range from 225,000 to six million. Presently only few thousand of them live on the mainland South America and in Dominica ( Rogozinski 1992 The Caribbean has a common history of slavery. Between 1600 and 1870 some four million West Africans were imported to the Caribbean as slaves. By comparison, the North American mainlaind received some 460,000 Africans in the same period while Jamaica alone, for instance, received almost 750,000! This was due to high death rates and small birth rates among the Caribbean slave population at the time. New slaves from Africa had to be imported continuously. In Barbados, for instance, 387,000 slaves were imported but at the time of emancipation in 1834 there were only 81,000 to be freed. Caribbean slavery was different from any other form of slavery that has ever existed. It was the only time in history when there were societies with almost nine out of ten inhabitants being slaves, which was the situation on the sugar producing islands (

    50. The History Of CARICOM
    THE history OF CARICOM. The establishment of the Caribbean Community and Common Some of the principal issues currently on the regional agenda include
    http://www.axses.com/encyc/caricom/history.htm

    51. ZUJI
    Destination Guides Caribbean dominica. dominica. history. The Caribs, whosettled here in the 14th century, called the island Waitikubuli,
    http://www.zuji.com/dest/guide/0,1277,LNPLAU|15207|871|1,00.html
    Feedback My ZUJI About ZUJI Help ... Log-in
    Regional Guide Introduction Fast Facts Best Time to Visit Money ... Caribbean : Dominica Dominica
    History The Caribs, who settled here in the 14th century, called the island Waitikubuli, which means 'tall is her body.' With less poetic flair, Christopher Columbus named the island after the day of the week he spotted it - Sunday, 3 November 1493. In 1607, Captain John Smith and his followers stopped at the Dominican coastal settlement of Portsmouth for a couple of days before heading north to establish Jamestown, North America's first permanent English settlement. The harbor became so important to the British that they intended to make Portsmouth the island's capital until outbreaks of malaria and yellow fever thwarted the plan. France laid claim to the island in 1635 and a few years later sent a contingent of missionaries, who were driven off by unwelcoming Caribs. The French and English signed a neutrality treaty in 1660 agreeing to Carib possession of the island. Nevertheless, French settlers from the neighboring French West Indies began establishing coffee plantations on Dominica toward the end of the century. France then sent a governor in the 1720s and took formal possession of the island. For the remainder of the 18th century, Dominica was caught up in the French and British skirmishes that marked the era, changing hands between the two powers several times. Under the Treaty of Paris, the French reluctantly ceded the island to the British in 1763. The French tried to recapture Dominica in 1795 and again in 1805, when they managed to burn much of Roseau to the ground.

    52. LyricsVault: History Of Music; Cultural And Regional Genres Of Music
    Music of the Dominican Republic (merengue, gagá, bachata, salve) Music of EastTimor (likurai) By province, region or other subnational entity
    http://www.lyricsvault.net/history/CulturalRegionalGenres.html
    Cultural and regional genres of music
    Cultural genres By race or ethnicity
    Australian Aboriginal music (didgeridoo, Aboriginal rock)
    African American music (blues, gospel, soul, funk, jazz, rock 'n' roll, hip hop)
    Andean music (nueva cancion)
    Arab music (classical Arab music, rai, sout, gnawa, al-jil, chaabi)
    Ashkenazi music (klezmer)
    Basque music (trikitrixa, bersolari, shawm and drum, fasil, raks, calgia)
    Bedouin music (zajal)
    Berber music
    Blackfoot music Celtic music (jig, reel, strathspey, hornpipe) Garifuna music (punta, paranda, brukdown) Gypsy music (flamenco) Inuit music (katajjaq) Jewish music (piyyutim, klezmer) Kurdish music Lusophone music (fado, samba, Angolan merengue, semba, bossa nova, choro, lambada, MPB, baila, timbila, gumbe, marrabenta, morna) Maori music (kapa haka, waiata) Native American and First Nations music (chicken scratch, pow-wow, peyote song) Nordic music (pols, polska, runo, Scandinavian death metal, Finnish opera) Palestinian music (dabka, dalauna, meyjana)

    53. Martinique: Map, History And Much More From Answers.com
    It became a department of France in 1946 and an administrative region in 1974 . international microwave radio relay to Guadeloupe, dominica, and Saint
    http://www.answers.com/topic/martinique
    showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Dictionary Encyclopedia Map Local Time Geography Dialing Code Stats WordNet Wikipedia Translations Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Martinique Dictionary Mar·ti·nique m¤r tÄ­-nēk , -tn-ēk
    An island and overseas department of France in the Windward Islands of the West Indies. Inhabited first by Arawaks and later by Caribs, the island was visited by Columbus in 1502. It was colonized by French settlers after 1635. Fort-de-France is the capital. Population: 429,000 . Mar ti·ni can Encyclopedia Martinique m¤rtÄ­nēk ) , overseas department and administrative region of France (1995 est. pop. 395,000), 425 sq mi (1,101 sq km), in the Windward Islands, West Indies. Fort-de-France is the capital. The department and the island of Martinique are coextensive. Land, People, and Economy Of volcanic origin, the island is rugged and mountainous and reaches its greatest height in Mt. Pel©e . The mainly Roman Catholic population is largely of African descent; minorities include those of European, Asian Indian, Lebanese, and Chinese origin. French and a creole patois are spoken. Most agriculture exists in the hot valleys and along the coastal strips; a large part of this area is devoted to sugarcane, which was introduced from Brazil in 1654 and which provides one of Martinique's chief exports, rum. Bananas and pineapples are also important agricultural products. The island's industries consist mainly of petroleum refining, sugar and rum production, and pineapple canning. Tourism, which has eclipsed agriculture as a source of foreign exchange, constitutes a major sector of the economy, and the majority of the people work in the service sector or administration.

    54. Caribbean Connections: I - Overview Of Regional History, Classroom Resources For
    Dominican Republic Ecuador El Salvador Caribbean Connections I Overviewof regional history, Classroom Resources for Secondary Schools
    http://www.americas.org/bookstore/category_2020_product_1273
    americas.org Bookstore Countries/Regions A - F ... Checkout Categories Countries/Regions A - F Aguilla Amazon ... Catalogs Quick Find
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    Caribbean Connections: I - Overview of Regional History, Classroom Resources for Secondary Schools
    Editor: Catherine A. Sunshine
    Medium: paper
    Level: Middle school (7-9)
    Language: English
    Department: Curricula
    Published: 1991
    Regions: Caribbean
    Pages: 180 ISBN: 1878554069 A study guide which includes fiction, nonfiction, interviews, and other materials. Home About Us Donate Contact Us

    55. About Kacike Journal Of Caribbean Amerindian History And Anthropology
    Amerindian communities located on reservations in Guyana and dominica, The publication of KACIKE Journal of Caribbean Amerindian history and
    http://www.kacike.org/aboutkacike.html
    Editorial Statement The modern world-system emerged with the expansion of Europe into the Caribbean. Similarly, Europe, as an idea and as a project, was constructed and reworked in light of the momentous encounters and relationships that occurred between European metropoles and their social institutions, economies, and agents and their counterparts among Caribbean Amerindian societies. It can be argued that Caribbean Amerindians also played central roles in either making or breaking European efforts at colonization in the Caribbean territories, especially those deemed to be of commercial value for their fertile soils and/or strategically placed in the quest for "El Dorado." Caribbean Amerindians, and especially the Caribs, whose name was once interchangeable with Cannibal and synonymous with anthropophagy, occupied the centre of European imaginations of the radically different Other.
    Caribbean Amerindians were present in the range of European attempts at grappling with or constructing difference, whether the conceptions were of irreducible and cruel savages, or heroic warriors and noble inheritors of the soil. Europeans conquered Amerindian societies, worked with Amerindian polities, adopted Amerindian practices, commoditized and globalized the trade in Amerindian products such as cocoa and tobacco, forged new cultural formations with Caribbean Amerindians, married Caribbean Amerindians, settled in their villages, brought them back to Europe, painted Caribbean Amerindians, idealized them, wrote stories about them, and eventually even established institutions and territories designed to protect and preserve the last remaining "pure" Amerindians at the turn of the twentieth century.

    56. Tourism
    The Abbreviated history of Barbados brief notes on the archaeological history Education through Travel Elder Hostel in dominica a site featuring tours
    http://www.kacike.org/cac-ike/Tourist.html
    Caribbean Amerindian Centrelink
    (CAC) Tales for the Tourist: Caribbean Amerindians in Online Travel Brochures

    57. Country Home Page
    Click on a country to view a listing of USAID Reports and Project history documents . Africa Region. African regional Sahel regional
    http://www.dec.org/country/index.cfm
    Home This Is USAID Privacy What's New ... Contact The United States Agency for International Development
    Country List Click on a country to view a listing of USAID Reports and Project History documents. Listings are updated every two weeks Initial download may take a few seconds. Central Asia Region Afghanistan
    Kazakhstan

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    Europe and Eurasia Regions East European Regional Albania Armenia Azerbaijan ... Yugoslavia Africa Region African Regional Sahel Regional Southern Africa Regional Algeria ... Zimbabwe Latin America and Caribbean Regions Caribbean Regional Central America Regional Latin American Regional Antigua/Barbuda ... Contact DEC To view PDF files, download Accessibility: Many of the documents on this site are provided in Adobe Acrobat format. To download the Adobe Access plugin, or to submit an Acrobat file to Adobe's on-the-fly PDF to HTML conversion engine, visit access.adobe.com If you have difficultly accessing this page, please contact the webmaster The Development Experience Clearinghouse is operated for USAID/PPC/DEI by the

    58. Guatemala City Regional Delegation (Belize, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic
    Guatemala City regional delegation (Belize, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, it to the history and experiences of the Maya population of Guatemala.
    http://www.icrc.org/web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList165/18B3D4D874266C01C1256B890033
    About the ICRC ICRC activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... Print this page Annual Report Guatemala City Regional delegation (Belize, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Panama, Suriname and other countries in the Caribbean)
    Hurricane Mitch
    When hurricane Mitch, the worst storm to hit Central America for decades, wrought havoc in the region in November, the ICRC, under the coordination of the Federation (the lead agency for the Movement's international activities in the event of natural disaster), worked closely with the National Societies concerned. The regional delegation sent a tracing delegate to help in the search for family members who had gone missing. Above and beyond the thousands of lives it claimed, the storm caused severe damage to infrastructure in Honduras and Nicaragua and greatly set back mine-clearance efforts in the latter, as many landmines were unearthed and washed away to new, unmarked locations.
    The security situation stabilized somewhat in Nicaragua and El Salvador, which had been affected by internal conflicts until the early 1990s. In Guatemala, too, the peace process continued, but the political and security situation remained more uncertain, as many of the social problems at the root of the conflict remained to be addressed. In Panama, the spillover effect of the internal conflict in Colombia caused hardship for inhabitants of the eastern region of Dari©n.
    In Haiti a poor security situation became worse at year's end, as the government was all but paralysed by a political stand-off.

    59. Guatemala City Regional Delegation (Belize, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic
    *history *Structure *Finances and budget *Human resources Guatemala CityRegional delegation (Belize, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, El Salvador,
    http://www.icrc.org/web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList140/97DD681C9720CDFBC1256B660058
    About the ICRC ICRC activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... Print this page Annual Report Guatemala City Regional delegation (Belize, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama and other countries in the Caribbean)
    Introduction
    For an account of the ICRC's activities in Haiti and Mexico in 1994, which were initially coordinated from the Guatemala City regional delegation, please see the relevant chapters. As of February 1994 and September 1994 respectively these operations were coordinated by an ad hoc mission in San Cristo¿bal de las Casas, Mexico, and a delegation in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
    COSTA RICA CUBA DOMINICA DOMINICAN REPUBLIC ... PANAMA

    COSTA RICA
    Two delegates from Geneva took part in the twelfth interdisciplinary course on human rights organized by the Inter-American Institute of Human Rights in San Jos©. The course took place from 18 to 29 July and brought together 120 participants, including judges, jurists, members of non-governmental organizations, and church representatives from practically all the countries of the Americas.
    CUBA
    During missions throughout the year ICRC delegates discussed with the Cuban authorities the possible resumption of ICRC visits to detainees (the last visits took place in 1989), Cuba's accession to Protocol II additional to the Geneva Conventions and the logistics involved in the opening of a centre for the dissemination of international humanitarian law in Havana. In October the future director of the centre came to ICRC headquarters in Geneva for talks with specialists in dissemination and other ICRC staff. On 23 November the centre, the first of its kind in Latin America, was inaugurated by representatives of the armed forces, the Minister of Health (also President of the Cuban Red Cross), the Secretary-General and other officials of the Cuban Red Cross and three ICRC delegates sent from headquarters in Geneva and from the delegations in Guatemala City and Bogot¡. The centre is to be run by the armed forces, together with the National Society and the ICRC.

    60. Maps Of Latin America - LANIC
    Aztec, Olmec and Mesoamerican Maps history Link 101; Caribbean Area Subject dominica, Guadeloupe, and Martinique PerryCastañeda Library Map Collection,
    http://lanic.utexas.edu/la/region/map/
    Maps
    Regional Resources
    The Americas

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