- published: 29 Dec 2015
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Pomeroon is the name of a former Dutch plantation colony on the Pomeroon River in the Guiana region on the north coast of South America. After early colonization attempts in the late 16th century were attacked by Spaniards and local Indians, the original inhabitants fled the interior of Guiana, founding the colony of Essequibo around Fort Kyk-Over-Al shortly after. A second, and more serious attempt at colonization started in 1650, but was ultimately unsuccessful, as French privateers destroyed the colony in 1689. In the late 18th century, a third attempt of colonization was started, this time under the jurisdiction of the Essequibo colony.
On the banks of the Pomeroon River Dutch colonists from Zeeland established a trading post in 1581. This trading post was destroyed by local Indians and Spaniards around 1596. The colonists fled with their commander Joost van der Hooge to an island on the Essequibo River, and started the new Essequibo colony there.
A new, and more serious colonization attempt began 1650, when under the command of the Dutch West India Company, plantations were set up on which African slaves were forced to work. A small town called Nieuw Middelburg was formed, and the fortress Nova Zeelandia was built to protect the small colony. French privateers were a serious menace to the small colony. The French visited the colony in 1689 and destroyed it completely, the buildings and sugar-mills were burned and the slaves were taken away to French colonies. The plantations were not restored, and the colony was abandoned.
In politics and history, a colony is a territory under the immediate political control of a state, distinct from the home territory of the sovereign. For colonies in antiquity, city-states would often found their own colonies. Some colonies were historically countries, while others were territories without definite statehood from their inception.
The Metropolitan state is the state that owns the colony. In Ancient Greece, the city that founded a colony was known as the metropolis. "Mother country" is a reference to the metropolitan state from the point of view of citizens who live in its colony. There is a United Nations list of Non-Self-Governing Territories.
Unlike a puppet state or satellite state, a colony has no independent international representation, and its top-level administration is under direct control of the metropolitan state.
The term informal colony is used by some historians to refer to a country under the de facto control of another state, although this term is often contentious.
British Guiana (also spelled Guyana) was the name of the British colony on the northern coast of South America, since 1966 known as the independent nation of Guyana. Its indigenous people are the Arawak-speaking Lucayan, part of the Taino people.
The first European to discover Guiana was Sir Walter Raleigh, an English explorer. The Dutch were the first Europeans to settle there, starting in the early 17th century, when they founded the colonies of Essequibo and Berbice, adding Demerara in the mid-18th century. In 1796, Great Britain took over these three colonies during hostilities with the French, who had occupied the Netherlands. Britain returned control to the Batavian Republic in 1802, but captured the colonies a year later during the Napoleonic Wars. The colonies were officially ceded to the United Kingdom in 1814, and consolidated into a single colony in 1831. The colony's capital was at Georgetown (known as Stabroek prior to 1812).
As the British developed the colony for sugarcane plantations, they imported many Africans as slave labour. The economy became more diversified since the late 19th century, but has relied on resource exploitation. Guyana became independent of the United Kingdom on 26 May 1966.
The Cold War was a state of political and military tension after World War II between powers in the Western Bloc (the United States, its NATO allies and others) and powers in the Eastern Bloc (the Soviet Union and its allies in the Warsaw Pact).
Historians do not fully agree on the dates, but 1947–91 is common. The term "cold" is used because there was no large-scale fighting directly between the two sides, although there were major regional wars, known as proxy wars, supported by the two sides. The Cold War split the temporary wartime alliance against Nazi Germany, leaving the USSR and the US as two superpowers with profound economic and political differences: the former being a single-party Marxist–Leninist state operating a planned economy and controlled press and owning exclusively the right to establish and govern communities, and the latter being a capitalist state with generally free elections and press, which also granted freedom of expression and freedom of association to its citizens. A self-proclaimed neutral bloc arose with the Non-Aligned Movement founded by Egypt, India, Indonesia and Yugoslavia; this faction rejected association with either the US-led West or the Soviet-led East. The two superpowers never engaged directly in full-scale armed combat, but they were heavily armed in preparation for a possible all-out nuclear world war. Each side had a nuclear deterrent that deterred an attack by the other side, on the basis that such an attack would lead to total destruction of the attacker: the doctrine of mutually assured destruction (MAD). Aside from the development of the two sides' nuclear arsenals, and deployment of conventional military forces, the struggle for dominance was expressed via proxy wars around the globe, psychological warfare, massive propaganda campaigns and espionage, rivalry at sports events, and technological competitions such as the Space Race.
South America is a continent located in the Western Hemisphere, mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, with a relatively small portion in the Northern Hemisphere. It is also considered as a subcontinent of the Americas, which is the model used in Spanish-speaking nations and most of South America.
It is bordered on the west by the Pacific Ocean and on the north and east by the Atlantic Ocean; North America and the Caribbean Sea lie to the northwest. It includes twelve sovereign states – Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Uruguay, and Venezuela – and two non-sovereign areas – French Guiana, an overseas department of France, and the Falkland Islands, a British Overseas Territory (though disputed by Argentina). In addition to this, the ABC islands of the Netherlands and Trinidad and Tobago may also be considered part of South America.
South America has an area of 17,840,000 square kilometers (6,890,000 sq mi). Its population as of 2005 has been estimated at more than 371,090,000. South America ranks fourth in area (after Asia, Africa, and North America) and fifth in population (after Asia, Africa, Europe, and North America). The most populous countries are Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, Venezuela and Peru.
Pomeroon (colony) =======Image-Copyright-Info======= Image is in public domain Author-Info: Flag_of_the_Netherlands.svg: Zscout370 derivative work: Fentener van Vlissingen (talk) Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_the_Dutch_West_India_Company.png =======Image-Copyright-Info======== ☆Video is targeted to blind users Attribution: Article text available under CC-BY-SA image source in video
The coffee industry in Guyana dates back to the inception of Guyana as a colony. In recent years, many longstanding coffee plantations are now destroying their trees and moving to more profitable crops. Seeing the slow destruction of a centuries-long industry prompted Louis Holder to start Amy’s Pomeroon Foods who manufactures Amy’s Pomeroon Coffee. In order to familiarize Guyanese with the product, Amy’s Pomeroon Coffee is holding taste testing events around the city. This particular event was held at the Ministry of Agriculture on Regent Street. Since its inception last year, sales have been sluggish. Holder attributes this to widely held negative perceptions of locally made products. Amy’s Pomeroon Coffee aims to change this fact. Holder believes that it is vital for the nation’s econ...
Go to http://www.lamanchamedia.org for more info about this film and to see more. The Wild Coast is a physical, historical and philosophical exploration of the Guianas, the three countries that make up the northeast of South America. None of these three countries speak Spanish as an official language and one has English as the official language. They are quite unique and still very much wild and untamed. In our filming the main theme of the Guianas is freedom. As you will see in the film, freedom has both been trampled on and clinged-to at very great costs. The film explores what happened at Jonestown, where 900 people died during a mass suicide/murder led by cult leader Jim Jones in 1973. It explores the freedom-loving Maroon people of Suriname who were brought as slaves from Africa but...
http://www.RustyJohnson.tv This is one of the horrors of 3rd world markets. This is in Belen Peru (in the Amazon) Every morning this bustling market is loaded with protected and endangered animals being sold for food. the bustling village of Belen, a third world open air market in the city of Iquitos, Peru (an isolated jungle-locked city of 600,000 known as the gateway of the Amazon). Belen was once coined the Venice of Peru, yet it is really a depressed jungle slum with a Wild West mentality. A tight slummy corridor of tables piled with dead fish, deer, monkeys, giant turtles and bush meat killed during the night for food. Black vultures leer from tin roofs inches overhead, while live monkeys, macaws, baby caimans, and sloths are crudely leashed to tables or piled into buckets to feed ...
13-03-13 Institute for the Study of the Americas http://www.sas.ac.uk/ http://events.sas.ac.uk/isa/events/view/13360/Fifty+Years+Without+JFK%3A+Rethinking+Global+Diplomacy Fifty Years Without JFK: Rethinking Global Diplomacy Americas: Panel 2 Kennedy and British Guiana: A Cold War International History Robert Anthony Waters Jr. (Ohio Northern University) This paper will re-examine the Kennedy administration's relations with British Guiana and Premier Cheddi Jagan. It is a revisionist account that puts U.S. policy in the larger context of Cuban and Soviet intervention. The paper will do the following: 1) Trace Kennedy's views on British Guiana and explain the reasons for his sometimes tangled policy. Included in this assessment will be the probable role of the U.S.S. Oxford spy ship, w...
PART 1: During our vacation in Guyana 2015 we took a visit to North Georgetown Secondary School located on Wolford Ave. in Georgetown, Guyana South America. Located in South America, Guyana is approximately 83,000 square miles and, is situated six feet below sea level. It is the only English-speaking country on the continent of South America but it's also considered a part of the Caribbean. Georgetown is the capital city of Guyana which was once a British colony but gained it's independence in 1966. Enjoyed the video? PLEASE.... LIKE + COMMENT & SHARE Want to see more of Guyana? SUBSCRIBE For New Videos! Plan your dream vacation tours right away with cheap airfares: http://q.gs/11638725/cheapairfares