We visited the site of Indian drawings, surviving evidence of a vanished indigenous culture that quickly succumbed to European disease and exploitation. The first colonizers of the island were the Spanish. After a century, it was seized by the Dutch who, in turn, lost it to the British before regaining control in 1816. Today the Dutch influence shows strongly in the architecture (see the photo), whereas the local patois draws on the vocabulary of some half a dozen European languages, a fascinating living source of colonial history. The present population looks to the future by trying to forge a distinctive contemporary Caribbean identity from these diverse roots.
Call +1300.361.012(AU) | 0800.444.462(NZ)