MARTINIQUE

märtĭnēkˈ, overseas department and administrative region of France (1995 est. pop. 395,000), 425 sq mi (1,101 sq km), in the Windward Islands, West Indies. Fort-de-France is the capital. The department and the island of Martinique are coextensive.

Land, People, and Economy

Of volcanic origin, the island is rugged and mountainous and reaches its greatest height in Mt. Pelée. The mainly Roman Catholic population is largely of African descent; minorities include those of European, Asian Indian, Lebanese, and Chinese origin. French and a creole patois are spoken.

Most agriculture exists in the hot valleys and along the coastal strips; a large part of this area is devoted to sugarcane, which was introduced from Brazil in 1654 and which provides one of Martinique's chief exports, rum. Bananas and pineapples are also important agricultural products. The island's industries consist mainly of petroleum refining, sugar and rum production, and pineapple canning. Tourism, which has eclipsed agriculture as a source of foreign exchange, constitutes a major sector of the economy, and the majority of the people work in the service sector or administration.

History

Visited by Columbus, probably in 1502, the island was ignored by the Spanish; colonization began in 1635, when the French, who had promised the native Caribs the western half of the island, established a settlement. The French proceeded to eliminate the Caribs and later imported African slaves as sugar plantation workers. In the 18th cent. Martinique's sugar exports made it one of France's most valuable colonies; although slavery was abolished in 1848, sugar continued to hold a dominant position in the economy. A target of dispute during the Anglo-French worldwide colonial struggles, Martinique was finally confirmed as a French possession after the Napoleonic wars. In 1902 an eruption of Mt. Pelée destroyed the town of St. Pierre.

Martinique supported the Vichy regime after France's collapse in World War II, but in 1943 a U.S. naval blockade forced the island to transfer its allegiance to the Free French. It became a department of France in 1946 and an administrative region in 1974. Although the island has recovered from the extensive damage caused by a hurricane in 1980, France has continued its attempts to improve the economic life of the Martinique, which is plagued by overpopulation and a lack of development.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Martinique  - 2441 results

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...homes of the poorest in Guadeloupe and Martinique. Since the 1980s, French has been...rural areas of the two islands. In both Martinique and Guadeloupe, there is a marked movement...possible third rejection of Creole in Martinique. Concurrently, a fourth rejection...
In the case of Martinique, the only perceived threat is France...movements of cultural resistance in Martinique seeking to construct and assert a...population at large. And in this way, Martinique is different from Puerto Rico and...
...that there would be many people in Martinique trying to avoid these taxes by...declaring the income they made. With Martinique society so delib- erately tied...the economic logic operating in Martinique the same as that of continental...
...hastily on the eve of the poets return to Martinique after eight long years in Paris. But...we now know that Cesaire returned to Martinique in 1936 for a summer vacation, then...narrator able to project a second return to Martinique, a return which, this time, he will...
...or so Lorraine refugees who entered Martinique in the immediate post-Armistice period...French officers and 1,233 sailors from Martinique on their way to France. Although most...this regard, the French Admiralty at Martinique had apparently instructed the captain...
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journal articles on: Martinique  - 379 results

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Contradictions in the Caribbean: Martinique and the 2002 French National Elections...Snapshot in Overseas France Once again, Martinique confounds by voting. In 2002, incumbent...compared with the 96 percent he obtained in Martinique. For sure, there is no surprise that...
...Colonial Society in Early 19th Century Martinique. by John Savage "Le poison est une...30, 1826, the Provostial Court of Martinique delivered its final verdict on an unwieldy...societies, the case of Restoration era Martinique presents a unique example of the phenomenon...
...Rodentia), the Extinct Giant Rat of Martinique Island, Lesser Antilles/Markmed Martiniquei...Fischer, 1829) (known only from Martinique), M. luciae Forsyth Major, 1901...desmarestii probably survived until 1902 on Martinique (Alen, 1942; McFarlane Lundberg...
Harlem New York - Haarlem Paris: America-martinique: Daniel Picoulys Caribbean Bridge over the Atlantic by Francoise Cevaer Chester Himes, African American writer exiled in Europe...
...interaction in bele, a performance art from Martinique in the French West Indies. It examines...dancer. In my twenty-two months on Martinique, I studied with many of the performers...levels of competence after returning from Martinique and have not had the opportunity to...
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magazine articles on: Martinique  - 211 results

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Martinique: in Gauguins footsteps by Philip Vickers In the Gauguin literature Martinique does not figure as evidently as does Tahiti...or Brittany and yet, in a certain sense, Martinique was perhaps the most influential of all his...
Martinique gardens of bounty and tears: from vestiges...greeted the original inhabitants of Martinique, its small wonder that they called...the rich soil. Like France itself, Martinique encompasses an astonishing variety of...
Martinique. by Rosa Luxemburg This article, written...Pierre in the Caribbean island of Martinique,<br/ reflects Luxemburgs intense...The old, long-suffering titan of Martinique paid no heed to the reports of the honorable...
The Rose of Martinique. by Linda Porter Andrea Stuart Macmillan...French West Indian sugar island of Martinique, Josephine knew a thing or two about...chapters are overwritten. The Rose of Martinique will, however, serve as a line introduction...
...Vicente-Fatna On most world maps, Martinique is a tiny dot in the Caribbean archipelago...the French overseas territory of Martinique lives up to the climate and picturesque...legendary Mont Pele, and rustic landscape, Martinique is home to an Afro-Caribbean ancestral...
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newspaper articles on: Martinique  - 371 results

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TrEs Chic Martinique; ABROAD. Byline: DAVID SPITTLES...property prices are lower? Then try Martinique. This little piece of France in the...Urbanisation has spread to much of Martinique, which is about 50 miles by 22 miles...
...Britons Are Starting to Buy Homes in Martinique - and You Dont Have to Be a Millionaire...airline because although the island of Martinique is a French region, its 4,261 miles...prickly, then steer clear of their Martinique counterparts, who revel in being spectacularly...
...the World with Bob and Christine Harper 23rd April 1997, Martinique to St Lucia. by Bob , Christine Harper We were awakened by...was a beautiful day and as we sailed down the west coast of Martinique the bow wave created little rainbows formed in the foam we...
Kawana Island; 4 Martinique Court. AGENTS REPORT FROM the moment you walk up the driveway you are aware of the enormity of this property. The first thing...
Point the Cruise Compass North! Scandinavia Is the New Caribbean. Join the Cruisers Who Have Swapped Martinique for Reykjavik and Antigua for Russia. Byline: Sarah Gordon CRUISING in northern europe is big business. so big, in fact, that...
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encyclopedia articles on: Martinique  - 27 results

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MARTINIQUE martinek , overseas department and administrative...capital. The department and the island of Martinique are coextensive. Land, People, and...French worldwide colonial struggles, Martinique was finally confirmed as a French possession...
SAINT-PIERRE town, Martinique , town (1990 est. pop. 5,550), Martinique, West Indies. Founded by Esnambuc in 1635 and once the chief commercial city of the island, it was engulfed by a mass of flame, lava, and ash in the eruption...
...Windward Islands consist of the French overseas dept. of Martinique and the former British Windward Islands (c.700 sq mi...considerable interisland commerce. Fort-de-France , on Martinique, and Castries , on Saint Lucia, are the islands chief cities...
FORT-DE-FRANCE for-d -fraNs, city (1999 pop. 94,049), capital of the French overseas dept. of Martinique , West Indies. It is a popular tourist resort and a free port, exporting mainly bananas, sugar, and rum. It was settled in...
...affairs through difficult times and explored and settled other islands. In 1635 he founded a colony at Saint-Pierre on Martinique. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia...
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