|
 |
The
History of Haiti
French Settlement and Sovereignty
Reportedly expelled by the Spanish from Saint Christopher (Saint Kitts),
the original French residents of Tortuga Island (Ile de la Tortue), off
the northwest coast of Hispaniola, sustained themselves mostly through two
means: curing the meat and tanning the hides of wild game, and pirating
Spanish ships. The former activity lent these hardy souls the colorful designation
of buccaneers, derived from the Arawak word for the smoking of meat. It
took decades for the buccaneers and the more staid settlers that followed
them to establish themselves on Tortuga. Skirmishes with Spanish and English
forces were common. As the maintenance of the empire tried the wit, and
drained the energies, of a declining Spain, however, foreign intervention
became more forceful.
The freewheeling
society of Tortuga that was often described in romantic literature had
faded into legend by the end of the seventeenth century. The first permanent
settlement on Tortuga was established in 1659 under the commission of
King Louis XIV. French Huguenots had already begun to settle the north
coast of Hispaniola by that time. The establishment in 1664 of the French
West India Company for the purpose of directing the expected commerce
between the colony and France underscored the seriousness of the enterprise.
Settlers steadily encroached upon the northwest shoulder of the island,
and they took advantage of the area's relative remoteness from the Spanish
capital city of Santo Domingo. In 1670 they established their first major
community, Cap François (later Cap Français, now Cap-Haïtien).
During this period, the western part of the island was commonly referred
to as Saint-Domingue, the name it bore officially after Spain relinquished
sovereignty over the area to France in the Treaty of Ryswick in 1697.
| Source:
U.S. Library of Congress |
|
 |