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GUADELOUPE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 645 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GUADELOUPE  , a

French colony in the West Indies, lying between the
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British islands of Montserrat on the N., and
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Dominica on the S., between 15° 59' and 16° 20' N. and 61° 31' and 61° 50' W . It consists of two entirely distinct islands, separated by a narrow arm of the sea, Riviere Salee (Salt
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river), varying from too ft. to 400 ft. in width and navigable for small vessels . The western island, a rugged mass of ridges, peaks and lofty uplands, is called Basse-Terre, while the eastern and smaller island, the real low-
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land, is known as Grande-Terre . A sinuous ridge runs through Basse-Terre from N. to S . In the north-west rises the
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peak of Grosse Montagne (2370 ft.), from which sharp spurs radiate in all directions; near the
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middle of the west coast are the twin heights of
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Les Mamelles (2536 ft. and 2368 ft.) . Farther south the highest
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elevation is attained in La Soufriere (4900 ft.) . In 1797 this
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volcano was active, and in 1843 its
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convulsions laid several towns in ruins; but a few thermal springs and solfataras emitting vapour are now its only signs of activity . The range terminates in the extreme south in the jagged peak of Caraibe (2300 ft.) . Basse-Terre is supremely beautiful, its cloud-capped mountains being clothed with a
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mantle of luxuriant vegetation . On Grande-Terre the highest elevation is only 450 ft., and this island is the seat of extensive
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sugar plantations . It consists of a plain composed mainly of
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limestone and a conglomerate of sand and broken shells known as maconne de bon dieu, much used for
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building . The
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bay between the two sections of Guadeloupe on the north is called
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Grand Cul-de-
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Sac Marin, that on the south being Petit Cul-de-Sac Marin .

Basse-Terre (364 sq. m.) is 28 m.

long by 12 M. to 15 m." wide; Grande-Terre (255 sq. m.) is 22 M. long from N. to S., of irregular shape, with a long peninsula, Chateaux Point, stretching from the south-eastern extremity . Basse-Terre is watered by a considerable number of streams, most of which in the rainy season are liable to sudden floods (locally called gallons), but Grande-Terre is practically destitute of springs, and the
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water-supply is derived almost entirely from ponds and cisterns . The west
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half of the island consists of a foundation of old eruptive rocks upon which rest the
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recent accumulations of the
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great volcanic cones, together with
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mechanical deposits derived from the denudation of the older rocks . Grande-Terre on the other hand, consists chiefly of nearly
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horizontal limestones lying conformably upon a series of
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fine tuffs and ashes, the whole belonging to the early
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part of the
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Tertiary
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system (probably Eocene and Oligocene) . Occasional deposits of marl and limestone of
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late Pliocene age rest unconformably upon these older beds; and near the coast there are raised
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coral reefs of
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modern date . The mean
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annual temperature is 78° F., and the minimum 61° F., and the maximum toe F . From
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July to November heavy rains fall, the annual
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average on the coast being 86 in., while in the interior it is much greater . Guadeloupe is subject to terrible storms . In 1825 a
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hurricane destroyed the
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town of Basse-Terre, and Grand Bourg in
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Marie Galante suffered a like
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fate in 1865 . The
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soil is rich and fruitful, sugar having long been its
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staple product . The other crops include cereals,
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cocoa, cotton, manioc, yams and rubber;
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tobacco,
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vanilla, coffee and bananas are grown, but in smaller quantities . Over 30% of the
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total
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area is under cultivation, and of this more than 5o% is under sugar .

The centres of this

industry are St Anne, Pointe-a-Pitre and Le Moule, where there are well-equipped usines, and there is also a large usine at Basse-Terre . The' forests, confined to the island of Basse-Terre, are extensive and rich in valuable woods, but, being difficult of access, are not worked . Salt and
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sulphur are the only
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mineral's extracted, and in addition to the sugar usines, there are factories for the making of rum,
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liqueurs,
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chocolate, besides fruit-canning
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works and tanneries . France takes most of the exports; and next to France, the
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United States, Great Britain and India are the countries most interested in the import trade . The inhabitants of Guadeloupe consist of a few white officials and planters, a few East
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Indian immigrants from the French possessions in India, and the rest negroes and mulattoes . These mulattoes are famous for their grace and beauty of both form and feature . The
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women greatly outnumber the men, and there is a very large percentage of illegitimate births . Pop . (1900) 182,112 . The governor is assisted by a privy council, a director of the interior, a procurator-general and a paymaster, and there is also an elected legislative council of 30 members . The colony forms a department of France and is represented in the French parliament by a senator and two deputies .
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Political elections are very eagerly contested, the mulatto element always striving to gain the preponderance of power .

The seat of

government, of the Apostolic administration and of the court of
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appeal is at Basse-Terre (7762), which is situated on the south-west coast of the island of that name . It is a picturesque, healthy town
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standing on an open roadstead . Pointe-a-Pitre (17,242), the largest town, lies in Grande-Terre near the mouth of the Riviere Salee . Its excellent harbour has made it the chief
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port and commercial capital of the colony . Le Moule (10,378) on the east coast of Grande-Terre does a considerable export trade in sugar, despite its poor harbour . Of the other towns, St Anne (9497), Morne a l'Eau (8442), Petit Canal (6748), St Francois (5265), Petit Bourg (5110) and Trois Rivieres (5(316), are the most important . Round Guadeloupe are grouped its dependencies, namely, La Desirade, 6 m . E., a narrow rugged island 10 sq. m. in area; Marie Galante 16 m . S.E . Les
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Saintes, a
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group of seven small islands, 7 M . S., one of the strategic points of the
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Antilles, with a magnificent and strongly fortified
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naval harbour; St Martin, 142 M . N.N.W.; and St Bartholomew, 130 M .

N.N.W .

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History.—Guadeloupe was discovered by Columbus in 1493, and received its name in honour of the monastery of S . Maria de Guadalupe at Estremadura in Spain . In 1635 l'Olive and Duplessis took possession of it in the name of the French
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Company of the Islands of
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America, and 1'O1ive exterminated the Caribs with great cruelty . Four chartered companies were ruined in their attempts to colonize the island, and in 1674 it passed into the possession of the French
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crown and long remained a dependency of
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Martinique . After unsuccessful attempts in 1666, 1691 and 17o3, the British captured the island in 1759, and held it for four years . Guadeloupe was finally separated from Martinique in 1775, but it remained under the governor of the French Windward Islands . In 1782 Rodney defeated the French
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fleet near the island, and the British again obtained possession in
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April 1794, but in the following summer they were driven out by Victor Hugues with the assistance of the slaves whom he had liberated for the purpose . In 1802
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Bonaparte, then first consul, sent an expedition to the island in order to re-establish
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slavery, but, after a heroic defence, many of the negroes preferred suicide to submission . During the
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Hundred Days in 181o, the British once more occupied the island, but, in spite of its cession to Sweden by the treaty of 1813 and a French invasion in 1814, they did not withdraw till 1816 . Between 1816 and 1825 the code of
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laws
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peculiar to the island was introduced . Municipal institutions were established in 1837; and slavery was finally abolished in 1848 .

End of Article: GUADELOUPE
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