From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political Evolution of Central America and the Caribbean 1700 to
present
This is a timeline of the territorial evolution of Latin
America and the Caribbean, listing each change to the
internal and external borders of the various countries that make up
Latin America and the Caribbean.
The region covered is the Caribbean Sea, its islands (most of which enclose the sea), and the
surrounding coasts. Also included is southern part of the Gulf of Mexico,
Florida, Central
America, and the northern region of South America.
The political evolution of the land surrounding the Caribbean
reveals the significant role the region played in the colonial
struggles of the European
powers since Christopher Columbus arrived in
1492. In the twentieth century the Caribbean was again important during World War II, in the
decolonization
wave in the post-war period, and in the tension between Communist Cuba and the United States (U.S.). Genocide, slavery,
immigration and rivalry between world powers have given Caribbean
history an impact disproportionate to the size of this small
region.
At the time of the European
discovery of most of the islands of the Caribbean, three major Amerindian indigenous peoples lived on the
islands: the Taíno in the
Greater
Antilles, The Bahamas and the Leeward Islands; the
Island Caribs and Galibi in the
Windward
Islands; and the Ciboney
in western Cuba. The Taínos are
subdivided into Classic Taínos, who occupied Hispaniola and Puerto
Rico, Western Taínos, who occupied Cuba, Jamaica, and the Bahamian
archipelago, and the Eastern Taínos, who occupied the Leeward
Islands.[1]
Trinidad was inhabited by
both Carib
speaking and Arawak-speaking groups.
Notes
- In the following images not all islands are to scale with some
being changed to be easier to see.
- Cuba while shown to be an independent nation was actually
controlled through the Platt Amendment which gave the United
States the final word on Cuban affairs. [2]
- Not shown is:
- Navassa
Island is a small, uninhabited island in the Caribbean Sea, and
is an unorganized unincorporated territory of the United States,
which administers it through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
The island is thought to have been claimed by Haiti prior to being
claimed by the United States, as far back as 1801.
- The island of Tobago
changed hands at least 22 times altogether between the French,
Dutch, British and Courlanders (the
Duchy of Courland, at that
time a fief of Poland was
located in what is now modern western Latvia; Tobago was actually the only overseas
colony Poland ever had) and was controlled at times by various
pirate groups.
1700
In 1700 Spain ruled what is now North America, Central America,
South America and the major islands of the Caribbean. Other players
were the:
Kingdom of
England
who controlled:
- Mosquito
Coast - The Mosquito Coast or eastern portion of what is now Nicaragua was declared to
be under the protection of the English crown in 1687.[3]
- Anguilla - In 1650,
English settlers arrived from St Kitts and colonized Anguilla. In 1856
Indians from a neighboring island came and destroyed the
settlement. The French temporarily overtook the island in 1666 but
under the Treaty
of Breda it was returned to English control.[4]
- Antigua and Barbuda - As part of
the Treaty of Breda France formally
ends its claim of Antigua in 1667 giving control to the British. In
1685 the plantation owner Christopher Codrington, a sugar
planter from Barbados leases the island of Barbuda from the British
crown.[5]
- Bahamas - In 1670 King
Charles II granted the islands to the Earl of
Craven a Lords Proprietors of the Carolinas, who
rented the islands from the king with rights of trading, tax,
appointing governors, and
administering the country.[6]
- Barbados - British
sailors who landed on Barbados in 1625 arrived at the site of
present-day Holetown. From
the arrival of the first British settlers in 1627–1628 until
independence in 1966, Barbados was under uninterrupted British
control.[7]
- British Honduras (Belize)"
English buccaneers began
cutting logwood (Haematoxylum
campechianum), which was used in the production of a
textile dye. English buccaneers
began using the coastline as a base from which to attack Spanish
ships. Buccaneers stopped plundering Spanish logwood ships and
started cutting their own wood in the 1650s and 1660s. Logwood
extraction then became the main reason for the English settlement
for more than a century. A 1667 treaty, in which the European
powers agreed to suppress piracy, encouraged the shift from
buccaneering to cutting logwood and led to more permanent
settlement.[8]
- British Virgin Islands - During
the 1698 negotiations between the Netherlands and the British over the
ownership of the islands an order from the King become known. The
King in 1694 issued an order to prevent foreign settlement in the
Virgin Islands. In February 1698 Governor Christopher Codrington was told
to regard the earlier 1694 orders as final, and the British
entertained no further claims to the islands.[9]
- Cayman
Islands - The islands were captured, then ceded to England in
1670 under the Treaty of Madrid.[10]
- Jamaica - Jamaica was
captured, then ceded to England in 1670 under the Treaty of Madrid[10]
- Montserrat - Fell
under English control in 1632.[11]
- Saint Kitts and Nevis - After the
Kalinago Genocide of 1626,
the island was partitioned between the British and French, with the
French gaining the ends, Capisterre in the North and Basseterre in
the south, and the British gaining the centre. In 1689, during the
War of the Grand Alliance, France re-occupied the entire island,
and decimated the British farms. English retaliation by General
Codrington defeated the French forces and deported them to
Martinique. The Treaty of Rijswijk in 1697 restored pre-war
coniditons.
- Saint Lucia - In
1664, Thomas Warner (son of the governor of St Kitts) claimed Saint
Lucia for England. He brought 1,000 men there to defend it from the
French, but after two years there were only 89 left, mostly due to
disease.
- Turks and Caicos Islands -
Bermudians claimed the islands for Britian and came to Turks &
Caicos to rake the salt and take it back to Bermuda. Salt was a
precious commodity back then as it was used not only for flavoring
food but for preserving it as well. The held the islands until
1706[12]
Dutch
Republic
The Dutch
Republic controlled:
- Aruba - Acquired in 1636 by
the Dutch and remained under their control for nearly two
centuries.[13]
- Netherlands Antilles - In the 17th
century, the islands were conquered by the Dutch West India Company
and were used as military outposts and trade bases, most prominent
the slave trade.[14]
- Guyana - The Dutch West
India Company, which administered most of the colony from 1621 to
1792, granted early Dutch and then British settlers ownership over
100-hectare tracts of land. [15
]
Kingdom of
France
At the year 1700 Louis XIV ruled as King of France
and of Navarre. In the new world he controlled:
- Dominica - The first
colonists of Dominica were French in 1632. The island would stay
French until the Treaty of
Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748 when it was decided between, Great
Britain and France to treat the island as neutral ground and leave
it to the Caribs. [16]
- Haiti - The first official
settlement on Tortuga was established in 1659 under the commission
of King
Louis XIV.[17]
France established the first permanent French settlement on the
mainland of Hispaniola, Cap François (later Cap Français, now Cap-Haïtien) in
1670.[17]
Under the 1697 Treaty of Ryswick, Spain officially
ceded the western third of Hispaniola to France.[17]
- Grenada - In 1650, a
French company founded by Cardinal Richelieu purchased Grenada
from the English and established a small settlement.[18]
- Guadeloupe - The
island was annexed to the Kingdom of France in 1674.[19]
- Martinique - From
1670 to the early 1700s Martinique under French control evolved
into a plantation society.[20]
- Saint
Barthélemy- From 1651–1673 Saint Barthélemy was under the
control of the Knights of Malta[21]
After 1673 it was returned to France.[21]
- St. Vincent - While the English
were the first to lay claim to St. Vincent in 1627, the French
would be the first European settlers on the island when they
established their first colony at Barrouallie on the Leeward side
of St. Vincent shortly before 1700.[22]
- Saint Kitts and Nevis - After the
Kalinago Genocide of 1626,
the island was partitioned between the British and French, with the
French gaining the ends, Capisterre in the North and Basseterre in
the south, and the British gaining the centre. In 1689, during the
War of the Grand Alliance, France re-occupied the entire island,
and decimated the British farms. English retaliation by General
Codrington defeated the French forces and deported them to
Martinique. The Treaty of
Rijswijk in 1697 restored pre-war coniditons.
Denmark
Denmark controlled what is now the:
1702
English forces annex the whole of the island of St.
Kitts.[23
]
1706
On St. Kitts the French made one
more major attack on British troops in 1706 during the War of the Spanish
Succession taking the whole of the island.[23
]
1706
Spanish and French forces seized the Turks in 1706.[12]
1710
Spanish and French forces seized the Turks in 1706, but English
Bermudian forces expelled them four years later in what was
probably Bermuda's only
independent military operation.[12]
1713
The French held St. Kitts for 8 years (1713)
until the Treaty of Utrecht was signed. The
treaty ceded the entire island of St. Kitts to the British.[24]
1723
Saint Lucia
becomes Neutral territory (agreed by Britain and France in the
Treaty of Choc Island)[25]
1733
Denmark purchases the island of Saint Croix from France
in 1733 it is in what now is the United States Virgin
Islands[26
]
1744
Saint Lucia
becomes French colony (Sainte Lucie).[25]
1748
Saint Lucia
becomes Neutral territory (de jure agreed by Britain and
France)[25]
1756
Saint Lucia
becomes French colony (Sainte Lucie)[25]
1759
In Guadeloupe from 1759 through 1763, as a part of the Seven Years'
War, the British took control of the
island and the main city Pointe-à-Pitre was established during
these years.[27
]
1761
In June 7, 1761 a British expedition against Dominica led by Lord Rollo was successful
and the island was conquered.[28
]
1762
Britain captured Martinique and Grenada during the Seven Years'
War, holding it from 1762 to 1763.[28
] Saint
Lucia becomes British.[25]
1763
The Treaty of Paris, often called
the Peace of Paris, or the Treaty of
1763, was signed on February 10, 1763, by the kingdoms of
Great Britain, France and Spain, with Portugal in agreement. It ended the Seven Years'
War.[29]
In the treaty:
1779
Saint Vincent restored to French rule in 1779.[35
]
1782
1783
The Treaty of Paris (1783), signed
on September 3, 1783, ratified by the Congress of the
Confederation on January 14, 1784 and by the King of Great
Britain on April 9, 1784 (the ratification documents were exchanged
in Paris on May 12, 1784), formally ended the American Revolutionary War
between the Kingdom of Great Britain and
the United States of
America, which had rebelled against British rule starting in
1775. The other combatant nations, France, Spain and the
Dutch Republic
had separate agreements; for details of these see Peace
of Paris (1783).
In the agreements:
1784
Saint
Barthélemy was sold to Sweden on July 1, 1784.[21][43]
1794
After the emancipation decrees of Léger-Félicité Sonthonax and
Étienne
Polverel during the Haitian Revolution, the French National
Convention declared the end of slavery in all French
territories in February 1794, and named Victor Hugues civil commissioner to
Guadeloupe. French plantation owners and other Royalists had
called in the United Kingdom as a way of rejecting the
freedom of slaves on the French colonies:
- In Martinique the French planter Jean Baptiste Dubuc, signed
the Whitehall accord of submission to England thus
enabling the British military conquest of
Martinique starting from February 6, 1794 and completed by
March 1794.[44][45]
- British forces took control of the island on April 21 1794. Victor Hugues by
rallying slaves and gens de couleur, Hugues was able
to retake the island by December 1794, when he obliged the English
general to surrender.[46]
1795
France came to own the whole island of Hispaniola in 1795, when in the Treaty of Basel
Spain ceded Santo Domingo as a consequence of the Spain fighting
against France in the French Revolutionary
Wars.[47]
1796
Effective British control of Guyana began in 1796 during the French Revolutionary Wars, at
which time the Netherlands were under French occupation
and Great
Britain and France were at
war.[48]
A British expeditionary force was dispatched from its colony of Barbados to seize the
colonies from the French-dominated Batavian Republic. The colonies
surrendered without a struggle, and initially very little changed,
as the British agreed to allow the long-established laws of the
colonies to remain in force.
1799
Britain occupied Aruba from
1799 to 1802.[49]
1802
The Treaty
of Amiens is signed which ends the hostilities between France
and the United
Kingdom during the French Revolutionary Wars. It
was signed on 25 March 1802 (Germinal 4, year X in the French
Revolutionary Calendar) by Joseph Bonaparte and the Marquess
Cornwallis as a "Definitive Treaty of Peace". As part of the
treaty:
- In 1797, General Sir Ralph Abercromby and his
squadron sailed through the Bocas and anchored off the coast of
Chaguaramas. The Spanish Governor Chacon decided to capitulate
without fighting. Trinidad became a British crown colony, with a
French-speaking population and Spanish laws. The 1797 conquest and
formal ceding of Trinidad[52
] in 1802 led to an influx of settlers from
England or the British colonies of the Eastern Caribbean.
1803
Guyana is retaken by the
British.[50]
1804
In Haiti The native leader Jean-Jacques Dessalines, long
an ally of Toussaint Louverture, defeated the French troops led by
Donatien-Marie-Joseph
de Vimeur, vicomte de Rochambeau at the Battle
of Vertières. At the end of the double battle for emancipation
and independence, former slaves proclaimed the independence of
Saint-Domingue on 1 January 1804, declaring the new nation as
Haiti, honoring one of the indigenous Taíno names for the island.
Haiti was consequently the first country in the Western Hemisphere
to abolish
slavery.[53]
Dessalines was proclaimed Emperor for life by his troops.[54]
1805
Britain occupied Aruba from
1805.[49]
1808
In 1808, following Napoleon's invasion of Spain, the criollos
of Santo Domingo revolted against French rule and, with the aid of
Great Britain
(Spain's ally) and Haiti,[55]
returned Santo Domingo to Spanish control.[56]
1809
In Martinique the
surrender of Fort Desaix to British forces solidified their
occupation of the island of Martinique. The remaining shipping and
military supplies were seized and the regular soldiers of the
garrison taken as prisoners of war.
The militia were disbanded and Martinique became a British colony,
remaining under British command until the restoration of the French
monarchy in 1814, when it was returned to French control.[57]
1810
On February 4, 1810 the British once again seized Guadeloupe.[58]
On July 5, 1811 Venezuela declared
independence from Spain.
On November 11, 1811 the province of Cartagena declared independence
from Spain. The United Provinces of New
Granada was established a few days later on November 27, with
Cartagena joining it.
1814
The Treaty of Paris of May 30, 1814,
ceded Tobago[52
] and, Martinique once more to France.[57]
1816
1819
The Colombian rebellion
finally succeeded in 1819 when the territory of the Viceroyalty of New Granada
and the Captaincy General of
Venezuela became the Republic of Gran Colombia organized as a
federation of Ecuador,
today's Colombia and Venezuela (Panama was part of Colombia). The
official name of the country at the time was the Republic of
Colombia.[59]
Historians adopted the term "Gran Colombia" to distinguish this
republic from the present-day Republic of Colombia, which began
using the same name in 1863.[60]
Map showing results of the Adams-Onís Treaty.
- The Adams-Onís
Treaty of 1819[61], also
known as the Transcontinental Treaty of 1819,
settled a border dispute in North America between the United States and
Spain. The treaty was the result
of increasing tensions between the U.S. and Spain regarding
territorial rights at a time of weakened Spanish power in the New World. In addition to
ceding Florida to the United
States, the treaty settled a boundary dispute along the Sabine
River in Texas and firmly
established the boundary of U.S. territory and claims through the
Rocky
Mountains and west to the Pacific Ocean in exchange for the U.S.
paying residents' claims against the Spanish government up to a
total of $5,000,000 and relinquishing its own claims on parts of
Texas west of the Sabine River and other Spanish areas under the
terms of the Louisiana Purchase.[62]
1821
- On November 9, 1821 the Spanish colony of Santo Domingo was toppled by a group led by
Spanish General José Núñez de Cáceres.[63][64]
Forces which opposed unification with Haiti formally declared
independence from Spain on
November 30, 1821.[65]
The new nation was known as República del Haití
Español (Republic of Spanish Haiti).
1822
Spanish
Haiti's independence was short-lived, as Haitian forces, led by
Jean-Pierre Boyer, invaded and took control
of the country just nine weeks later in February 1822.[67]
1823
After a brief time as part of the Mexican
Empire of Agustín de Iturbide
became a state in the Federal Republic of
Central America on July 1, 1823.[68]
1830
- In 1830, José Antonio Páez declared Venezuela
independent from Gran Colombia and became president. Although he
was not the first president of Venezuela (which declared its
independence from Spain in 1811 and had at the moment Cristobal Mendoza as head of its executive triumvirate) Páez was the first head of
government after the dissolution of Gran Colombia.[69]
- Through out the 1820s Ecuador was the center of much fighting.
First, the country found itself on the front lines of Gran
Colombia's efforts to liberate Peru from Spanish rule between 1822
and 1825; afterward, in 1828 and 1829, Ecuador was in the middle of
an armed struggle between
Peru and Gran Colombia over the location of their common
border. The Treaty of 1829 fixed the border on the line that had
divided the Quito audiencia and the Viceroyalty of Peru before
independence. In May 1830 a group of Quito notables met to dissolve
the union with Gran Colombia, and in August, a constituent assembly
drew up a constitution for the State of Ecuador, so named for its
geographic proximity to the equator, and placed General Juan
José Flores in charge of political and military affairs. He
remained the dominant political figure during Ecuador's first
fifteen years of independence.[70]
1838
Nicaragua separated
from the Federal Republic of
Central America on November 5, 1838.[68]
1839
On May 30, 1838, the Central American Congress struck down Francisco
Morazán's control over the Federal Republic of
Central America. The Congress then declared that the individual
states could establish their own governments, and on July 7, 1838
recognized these as "sovereign, free, and independent political
bodies."
1840
- A map of the borders of the British colony Guyana was published
in 1840. Venezuela protested, claiming the entire area west of the
Essequibo River.[72]
1841
The union was only officially ended upon El Salvador's self-proclamation of the
establishment of an independent republic in February 1841.
1842
On September 11, 1842, Mexican President Antonio López de Santa Anna
proclaimed the "irrevocable union" of Soconusco with Chiapas. [73]
The issue between Mexico and Guatemala was not resolved until a
boundary treaty was signed on September 27, 1882, when Guatemala
gave up its claims to Soconusco and Chiapas.
1844
In 1838 Juan Pablo Duarte founded a secret
society called La Trinitaria, which sought the complete
independence of Santo Domingo without any foreign intervention.[74]
Ramón Matías Mella and Francisco del Rosario
Sánchez (the latter of partly African ancestry),[75]
despite not being among the founding members of La Trinitaria, were
decisive in the fight for independence. Duarte and they are the
three Founding Fathers of the Dominican Republic. On February 27,
1844, the Trinitarios (Trinitarians), declared the
independence from Haiti. They were backed by Pedro Santana, a
wealthy cattle rancher from El Seibo, who became general of the army of
the nascent Republic. The Dominican Republic's first Constitution
was adopted on November 6, 1844, and was modeled after the United States
Constitution.[76]
1846
Yucatán renounced
the Mexican government,
declaring independence effective 1 January 1846. When the Mexican-American War broke out, Yucatán
declared its neutrality.[77]
1848
After the end of the Mexican-American
War, Governor Barbachano appealed to Mexican President José Joaquín de Herrera for
help in suppressing a Mayan uprising, the Caste War of Yucatán, and in
exchange Yucatán again
recognized the central Mexican government's authority. Yucatán was again reunited
with Mexico on 17 August
1848.[77]
1860
On 28 January 1860 Britain and Nicaragua concluded the Treaty of
Managua, which transferred to Nicaragua the suzerainty over the entire Caribbean coast
from Cabo Gracias a Dios to Greytown (now San Juan del Norte) but granted autonomy to
the Miskito Indians in the
more limited Mosquito Reserve (the area described above). [78]
1861
- In 1861 Pedro
Santana, after imprisoning, silencing, exiling, and executing
many of his opponents and due to political and economic reasons,
Santana signed a pact with the Spanish Crown and reverted the
Dominican nation to colonial status, the only Latin American
country to do so. His ostensible aim was to protect the nation from
another Haitian annexation.[79]
- Florida as part of the Confederate States of
America declared its secession from the United States on
January 10, 1861[80]
1863
After two years of fighting, the Spanish troops abandoned the Dominican
nation. The Restoration was proclaimed on August 16, 1863.[79]
1865
Florida is brought under US control as the CSA falls. Historians
generally regard the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia by
General Lee at
the village of
Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865 as the end of the
Confederate States.[5]
Unionists captured President Davis at Irwinville,
Georgia, on May 10[81],
and the remaining Confederate armies had surrendered by June 1865.
The crew of the CSS Shenandoah hauled down the
last Confederate flag at Liverpool in the UK on November 6,
1865.[82]
1878
Saint
Barthélemy was sold back to France by Sweden on Mar 16,
1878.[21][43]
1898
Treaty of Paris (1898) was the
result of the Spanish-American
War which gave control of Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines to the Americans.[83]
The controversial treaty
was the subject of debate in the United States Senate during the
winter of 1898–1899, and it was approved on February 6, 1899 by a
vote 57 to 27, only one vote more than the two-thirds majority
required.[84] Only
2 Republicans voted
against ratification, George Frisbie Hoar of Massachusetts and
Eugene Pryor Hale of Maine.
1899
An international tribunal arbitrate the boundary in 1897. For
two years, the tribunal consisting of two Britons, two Americans,
and a Russian studied the case. Their three-to-two decision, handed
down in 1899, awarded 94 percent of the disputed territory to
British Guiana. [85
]
1902
Theodore Roosevelt, who had fought
in the Spanish-American War and had some
sympathies with the independence movement granted the Republic of Cuba formal independence
on May 20, 1902, with the independence leader Tomás
Estrada Palma becoming the country’s first president. Under the
new Cuban constitution, however, the U.S. retained the right to
intervene in Cuban affairs and to supervise its finances and
foreign relations. Under the Platt Amendment, Cuba also agreed to
lease to the U.S. the naval base at Guantánamo Bay.[86]
1903
The Hay-Banau
Varilla Treaty was signed on November 18, 1903 (two weeks after
Panama's independence
from Colombia on November 3, 1903). Phillipe Bunau-Varilla went to Washington,
D.C. and New
York City to negotiate the terms with several U.S. officials,
most prominently, Secretary of State John Hay. The two men negotiated the terms of
sale for the building of a Panama Canal. No Panamanians signed the
treaty although Bunau-Varilla was present as the diplomatic
representative of Panama (a role he had purchased through financial
assistance to the rebels), despite the fact he had not lived in
Panama for seventeen years before the incident, and he never
returned.[87]
1906
Cuba was placed under U.S.
occupation and a U.S. governor, Charles Edward Magoon, after a
rebellion led by Jose Miguel
Gomez.[86]
1909
Elections were held in 1908 when José
Miguel Gómez was elected President. Self-government for Cuba was restored in 1909.[86]
1915
The first United States occupation
of Haiti began on July 28, 1915 and ended in mid-August,
1934.[88]
1917
On March 31, 1917, the United States purchased Saint Croix, Saint John and Saint Thomas from Denmark for US$25 million,
renaming them the United States Virgin
Islands.[89]
1934
On August 15, 1934 the last American Marines leave Haiti which again becomes an
independent nation.[90]
1940
Aruba became a British
protectorate from 1940 to 1942.[91]
1942
Aruba became a USA protectorate from 1942 to
1945.[91]
1945
Aruba reverts back to Dutch
control.[92]
1958
The West Indies Federation, also
known as the Federation of the West Indies, was a short-lived
Caribbean federation that existed from January 3, 1958 to May 31,
1962. It consisted of several Caribbean colonies including Turks and Caicos Islands, Jamaica, Cayman Islands,
Antigua
and Barbuda, Saint
Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla, Montserrat, Dominica, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines, Grenada, Barbados and Trinidad
and Tobago.[93]
1962
With the dissolution of the West Indies Federation a number
of countries decided to go alone and declare independence:
1964
- On January 1, 1964 British Honduras became a
self-governing colony in January 1964 and was renamed "Belize" on
June 1 1973; it was the United Kingdom's last colony on the
American mainland.[96]
The constitution of 1964 established internal self-rule but
Guatemalan claim to sovereignty over the territory of Belize
delayed full independence until 1981.[96]
1966
- Guyana achieved
independence on May 26, 1966 from the UK, and became the Co-operative Republic of
Guyana on February 23, 1970 - the anniversary of the Cuffy slave
rebellion - with a new constitution.[98]
1969
British rule was fully restored to Anguilla in 1969.[99]
1973
In July 10, 1973, the Bahamas became fully independent from the
UK, but retained
membership in the Commonwealth of Nations.[100]
1974
On February 7, 1974 Grenada gains independence from the UK.[101]
1978
On November 3, 1978 Dominica became an independent nation from the
UK.[102]
1979
- The existence of the Panama Canal Zone, a political
exclave of the U.S. that cut Panama geographically in half and had its own
courts, police and civil government, was a cause of conflict
between the USA
and Panama. Demonstrations
occurred at the opening of the Bridge of the Americas in 1962
and serious rioting occurred in 1964.[105]
This led to the United States easing its controls in the Zone. For
example, Panamanian flags were allowed to be flown with American
ones. After extensive negotiations the Canal Zone ceased to exist
on October 1, 1979 in compliance with provisions of the Torrijos-Carter Treaties.[106]
1981
- Antigua and Barbuda became an
independent state from the United Kingdom on November 1, 1981.[107]
- The constitution of 1964 established internal self-rule but
Guatemalan claim to sovereignty over the territory of Belize
delayed full independence until September 21, 1981.[96]
Throughout Belize's history, Guatemala has claimed ownership of all or
part of the territory. This claim is occasionally reflected in maps showing Belize as Guatemala's
twenty-third department. As of March 2007,
the border dispute with Guatemala remains unresolved and quite
contentious;[108]
at various times the issue has required mediation by the United
Kingdom, Caribbean Community heads of
Government, the Organisation of American States, Mexico,
and the United States. Since independence, a British garrison has
been retained in Belize at the request of the Belizean
government.
1983
On September 19, 1983 Saint Kitts and Nevis became an
independent nation from the United Kingdom.[109]
See also
References
- ^ Irving Rouse (in ENGLISH). The Tainos:
Rise and Decline of the People Who Greeted Columbus (July 28,
1993 ed.). Yale University Press. pp. 224. ISBN
0300056966.
- ^ "The United States, Cuba, and
the Platt Amendment, 1901". USA.gov. 2009. http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/time/ip/86557.htm. Retrieved
2009-05-03.
- ^ USA.gov
(Data as of December 1993). "Colonial Rule". Library
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