Colonialism and Underdevelopment in Guyana, 1580-1803Carib Research & Publications, 1987 - 299 pages |
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Page 35
... Essequibo was worse . Only three or four Company estates had been established in 1700 and five in 1735. The private estates numbered eighteen in 1687 , but around 1700 only twelve of them seem to have been in cultivation . By 1735 the ...
... Essequibo was worse . Only three or four Company estates had been established in 1700 and five in 1735. The private estates numbered eighteen in 1687 , but around 1700 only twelve of them seem to have been in cultivation . By 1735 the ...
Page 46
... Essequibo and Suri- name the major problem was slave desertion and the establishment of maroon communities . A large number of Essequibo slaves either deserted to Spanish territory or remained in the colony and became maroons.13 The ...
... Essequibo and Suri- name the major problem was slave desertion and the establishment of maroon communities . A large number of Essequibo slaves either deserted to Spanish territory or remained in the colony and became maroons.13 The ...
Page 138
... Essequibo and Demerara . In 1773 he again lost seventeen slaves through desertion . In 1778 fourteen slaves belonging to Achtekerke , the WIC's plantation in Essequibo , deserted ; and again in 1783 another twenty made off into the bush ...
... Essequibo and Demerara . In 1773 he again lost seventeen slaves through desertion . In 1778 fourteen slaves belonging to Achtekerke , the WIC's plantation in Essequibo , deserted ; and again in 1783 another twenty made off into the bush ...
Table des matières
AmerindianEuropean Relations | 191 |
Boundary Disputes | 214 |
Conclusion | 238 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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administration African Akawois allowed America Amerindian Amsterdam annatto Atlantic Slave Trade attempt Barima Batenburg became Berbice river BGBV blacks boundary Brazil British Guiana Canje Canje river Caribbean Caribs coastal coffee colonial officials colonists Corentyne Court of Policy crops cultivation Cuyuni Cuyuni river Demerara Directors Dutch colonies Dutch period early economic Essequibo Essequibo river Essequibo-Demerara established estates Europe European expedition export fact factors fish force Fort Nassau French Goslinga Governor Gravesande groups Guyana Hartsinck hinterland Hoogenheim Ibid important Indians instance insurgents land large number later laws mainly major maroon communities master class Mazaruni ment migration military missions Moruka Netherlands nineteenth century Orinoco Pinckard plantains plantation system planters plantocracy Pomeroon Portuguese postholders production settlement ships situation slave population slave society slave trade slavery social Spanish sugar Suriname territories tion treaty Villiers Warraus West Indies whites WIC's World Zeeland