Ethnic groups: black 53.8%, white 31%, mixed 7.5%, other 7.1%, unspecified 0.6% (2010 est.)
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Bahamas
Ethnic groups: black 90.6%, white 4.7%, black and white 2.1%, other 1.9%, unspecified 0.7% (2010 est.)
Father
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Turks and Caicos Islands
Ethnic groups: black 87.6%, white 7.9%, mixed 2.5%, East Indian 1.3%, other 0.7% (2006)
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Cuba
Ethnic groups: white 64.1%, mestizo 26.6%, black 9.3% (2012 est.)
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Cayman Islands
Ethnic groups: mixed 40%, white 20%, black 20%, expatriates of various ethnic groups 20%
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Jamaica
Ethnic groups: black 92.1%, mixed 6.1%, East Indian 0.8%, other 0.4%, unspecified 0.7% (2011 est.)
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Haiti
Ethnic groups: black 95%, mulatto and white 5%
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Dominican Republic
Ethnic groups: mixed 73%, white 16%, black 11%
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Puerto Rico
Ethnic groups: white 75.8%, black/African American 12.4%, other 8.5% (includes American Indian, Alaskan Native, Native Hawaiian, other Pacific Islander, and others), mixed 3.3%
Doug M Member # 7650
posted
Beautiful pics. Wished there were some black owned resorts down there in those islands though.
Mike111 Member # 9361
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U. S. Virgin Islands
Ethnic groups: black 76%, white 15.6%, Asian 1.4%, other 4.9%, mixed 2.1%
Mike111 Member # 9361
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British Virgin Islands
Ethnic groups: black 82%, white 6.8%, mixed 5.9%, East Indian 3%, other 1.6%, unspecified 0.7% (2001 est.)
Ethnic groups: predominantly black; some British, Portuguese, and Lebanese.
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Antigua and Barbuda
Ethnic groups: black 87.3%, mixed 4.7%, hispanic 2.7%, white 1.6%, other 2.7%, unspecified 0.9% (2011 est.)
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Montserrat
Ethnic groups: African/black 88.4%, mixed 3.7%, hispanic/Spanish 3%, caucasian/white 2.7%, East Indian/Indian 1.5%, other 0.7% (2011 est.)
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Guadeloupe
Ethnic groups Guadeloupe's population is 90% Black or mulatto. 5% of the population are White. Another 5% of the population are made up of South Asian Indians, Lebanese, other Arabs, and Chinese.
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Dominica
Ethnic groups: black 86.6%, mixed 9.1%, indigenous 2.9%, other 1.3%, unspecified 0.2% (2001 est.)
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Martinique
Ethnic groups African and African-white-Indian mixture 90%; white 5%; Indian Tamil or East Indian, Lebanese and Syrians, and Chinese less than 5%.
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Saint Lucia
Ethnic groups: black/African descent 85.3%, mixed 10.9%, East Indian 2.2%, other 1.6%, unspecified 0.1% (2010 est.)
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Ethnic groups: black 66%, mixed 19%, East Indian 6%, European 4%, Carib Amerindian 2%, other 3%
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Barbados
Ethnic groups: black 92.4%, white 2.7%, mixed 3.1%, East Indian 1.3%, other 0.2%, unspecified 0.2% (2010 est.)
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Grenada
Ethnic groups: African descent 89.4%, mixed 8.2%, East Indian 1.6%, other 0.9% (includes indigenous) (2001 est.)
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Trinidad and Tobago
Ethnic groups: East Indian 35.4%, African 34.2%, mixed - other 15.3%, mixed African/East Indian 7.7%, other 1.3%, unspecified 6.2% (2011 est.)
The population is estimated to be 80% mixed Black/White/Caribbean native Americans and 20% other ethnicities.
Mike111 Member # 9361
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Mike111 Member # 9361
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THE ARAWAK
The Arawak were (Mongol) American Indians of the Greater Antilles and South America. The Taino, an Arawak subgroup, were the first native peoples encountered by Christopher Columbus on Hispaniola. The island Arawak were virtually wiped out by Old World diseases to which they had no immunity. A small number of mainland Arawak survive in South America. Most (more than 15,000) live in Guyana, where they represent about one-third of the Indian population. Smaller groups are found in Suriname, French Guiana, and Venezuela. Their language, also called Arawak, is spoken chiefly by older adults, a characteristic that commonly foretells the death of a language.
The Antillean Arawak, or Taino, were agriculturists who lived in villages, some with as many as 3,000 inhabitants, and practiced slash-and-burn cultivation of cassava and corn (maize). They recognized social rank and gave great deference to theocratic chiefs. Religious belief centred on a hierarchy of nature spirits and ancestors, paralleling somewhat the hierarchies of chiefs. Despite their complex social organization, the Antillean Arawak were not given to warfare. They were driven out of the Lesser Antilles by the Caribs shortly before the appearance of the Spanish.
The South American Arawak inhabited northern and western areas of the Amazon basin, where they shared the means of livelihood and social organization of other tribes of the tropical forest. They were sedentary farmers who hunted and fished, lived in small autonomous settlements, and had little hierarchical organization. The Arawak were found as far west as the foothills of the Andes. These Campa Arawak, however, remained isolated from influences of the Andean civilizations.
Mike111 Member # 9361
posted THE CARIB
The Caribs were a Black American Indian people who inhabited the Lesser Antilles and parts of the neighboring South American coast at the time of the Spanish conquest. Their name was given to the Caribbean Sea, and its Arawakan equivalent is the origin of the English word cannibal. Today the term Cariban is used to designate a linguistic group that includes not only the language of the Antillean Carib but also many related Indian languages spoken in South America.
The Island Carib, who were warlike (and allegedly cannibalistic), were immigrants from the mainland who, after driving the Arawak from the Lesser Antilles, were expanding when the Spanish arrived. Peculiarly, the Carib language was spoken only by the men; women spoke Arawak. Raids upon other peoples provided women who were kept as slave-wives; the male captives were tortured and killed.
The Island Carib were a maritime people, expert navigators who made distant raids in large dugout canoes. Warfare was their major interest. Internal conflicts were common; there was no important chief, military organization, or hierarchical structure. The men strove to be individualistic warriors and boasted of their heroic exploits.
Carib groups of the South American mainland lived in the Guianas, and south to the Amazon River. Some were warlike and were alleged to have practiced cannibalism, but most were less aggressive than their Antillean relatives. They lived in small autonomous settlements, growing cassava and other crops and hunting with blowgun or bow and arrow. Their culture was typical of the peoples of the tropical forest. Other Carib-speaking tribes, apparently much like the Guianan Carib, were found to the west on the wooded slopes of the Andes along the Venezuelan-Colombian border. To the southeast the Guicuru, Bakairi, and other Carib speakers lived at the headwaters of the Xingu River in central Brazil. .
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Agostino Brunias (1730 – 1796) was a London-based Italian painter from Rome. Strongly associated with West Indian art, he left England at the height of his career to chronicle Dominica and the neighboring islands of the West Indies.
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Some have described these Black Carib Indians as the offspring of Runaway African Slaves and Non-Black native Indians - even some Black institutions have stupidly accepted that nonsense, which is no surprise. As always when dealing with what the lying Albinos say, one must always think "Critically". i.e. The British outlawed the Slave trade in 1807, but did not outlaw Slavery until 1833. The painter of these paintings "Augustin Brunias" died in 1796: at the time he painted those people, if what the Albinos say was true: they and their still living parents, would have been subject to re-capture and a return to Slavery. They would certainly not have been allowed such easy movement and social intercourse, for fear their example would have fomented rebellion among Slaves.
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IronLion Member # 16412
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quote:Originally posted by Mike111: THE CARIB
The Caribs were a Black American Indian people who inhabited the Lesser Antilles and parts of the neighboring South American coast at the time of the Spanish conquest. ...
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Agostino Brunias (1730 – 1796) was a London-based Italian painter from Rome. Strongly associated with West Indian art, he left England at the height of his career to chronicle Dominica and the neighboring islands of the West Indies.
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Deliberately created discrepancy by revisionist albions:
Real History
Augustin Brunias (c.1730-1796) A family of Charaibes in the Island of St. Vincent oil on canvas
Fake History
Augustin Brunias (c.1730-1796) A family of Charaibes in the Island of St. Vincent oil on canvas 22 x 24in. (56 x 61cm.)
Agostino Brunias, Yale Centre for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Agostino Brunias:A Leeward Islands Carib Family outside a Hut
Mike111 Member # 9361
posted
^Thanks lion, I didn't know that engraving existed: calling what I believe to be Arawaks Cribs. Naturally the original painting did not have that printed annotation. Typical Albinos, they lie about everything.
Troll Patrol # Ish Gebor Member # 18264
posted
quote:Originally posted by IronLion: Real History:
Agostino Brunias (1728 - 1796): A Leeward Islands Carib family outside a Hut