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In 1946, the colony of Guadeloupe became an overseas department of France. [ 4 ] Tensions arose in the post-war era over the social structure of Guadeloupe and its relationship with mainland France.
- Overview
- History of Guadeloupe
- French rule
- Political and economic changes since 1950
Visited in November 1493 by Christopher Columbus, the two main islands—then together known as Karukera (“Island of Beautiful Waters”)—were peopled by Caribs, who had displaced the original Arawak inhabitants. Columbus consecrated the territory to Our Lady of Guadalupe of Extremadura in Spain, from whom it takes its name.
Visited in November 1493 by Christopher Columbus, the two main islands—then together known as Karukera (“Island of Beautiful Waters”)—were peopled by Caribs, who had displaced the original Arawak inhabitants. Columbus consecrated the territory to Our Lady of Guadalupe of Extremadura in Spain, from whom it takes its name.
The Caribs repulsed Spanish troops and settlers in 1515, 1520, and 1523. In 1626 the Spanish, who had established themselves on the coast, were driven away by Pierre Bélain, sieur d’Esnambuc, a Frenchman who established a trading company. In 1635 two other Frenchmen, Léonard de L’Olive and Jean Duplessis d’Ossonville, landed and established a colony. Until 1640 the colonists fought against the Carib Indians, but thereafter the colony grew. In 1644 the slave trade first brought workers for the sugar, coffee, and other plantations that the colonists established, and slavery became institutionalized. In 1674 Guadeloupe passed from the hands of chartered companies, which had been ruined in successive attempts to colonize the islands, to the authority of the French crown. It became a dependency of Martinique, which it remained until 1775. Guadeloupe benefited from the influence of Jean-Baptiste Labat, a strong leader who was the effective founder of the Basse-Terre colony and who in 1703 armed the island’s African slaves to fight against the English; he also established the first sugar refineries, thereby laying the foundation for the economic prosperity that followed.
In 1759 Guadeloupe was occupied by the British for four years but was restored to France in 1763. In 1794 it was again occupied by British troops, allied with French royalists, but the French revolutionary official Victor Hugues recaptured it, abolished slavery, and had several hundred white planters massacred. When Napoleon I’s government reestablished slavery in the French colonies in 1802, a slave revolt occurred. It culminated as antislavery forces blew themselves up rather than surrender when threatened at Matouba by French forces under the command of Gen. Antoine Richepanse. The British occupied Guadeloupe in 1810; however, after some changes in status, it was restored to France in 1816.
The final abolition of slavery in 1848 was the most significant 19th-century development in the territory. Universal suffrage was abolished during the reign of Napoleon III of France, but in 1870 colonial representation in the French Parliament was restored. In 1940 Guadeloupe gave its allegiance to the Vichy government of Nazi-occupied France during World War II (1939–45), but in 1943 it adhered to Gen. Charles de Gaulle’s Free French forces. In 1946 it was given the status of a French département, and in 1974 it became a région of France.
Britannica Quiz
Several independence movements emerged on Guadeloupe after the war, but the charismatic appeals of de Gaulle, who visited the island in 1956, 1960, and 1964, managed to sidestep the separatists and convince the majority to stay within the French union. More local control was granted the island, but as progress on autonomy talks slowed to a standsti...
6 days ago · On February 22, 2007, Saint-Martin (the northern half of the island of St. Martin) and Saint-Barthélemy formally separated from Guadeloupe to become overseas collectivities of France. Guadeloupe is simultaneously administered as an overseas region (région d’outre-mer). Show More.
Mar 28, 2023 · Visited by the explorer Christopher Columbus in 1493, who named it after a Spanish monastery, the territory was home to Carib indians who resisted Spanish attempts to settle the islands. French...
In 1946 the French government gave the status of French département to its Caribbean possessions, referred to as departmentalisation. The people who migrated to the New World came from the Atlantic coast north of Bordeaux and the northwest region of France.
Jul 18, 2023 · 1635 - French colonialists establish a settlement, wiping out the Carib population and bringing in African slaves to work on sugar plantations. 1700-1800s - Several British occupations and a...
The Carib Indians held off the Spanish and French for a number of years before the islands became part of France in 1674. The British occupied Guadeloupe for short periods in the 18th–19th century; the islands became officially French in 1816. In 1946 they were made a department of France.