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#saintlucia — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #saintlucia, aggregated by home.social.

  1. A view from St Lucia for #SchiffSamstag today. This was evening at the end of a hot day on the Caribbean island, about to depart aboard Grand Princess but waiting for Celebrity Reflection to head out to sea first.

    #Photography #Travel #Cruise #StLucia #ShipSaturday #SchiffsSamstag #Caribbean #SaintLucia #Sunset

  2. Saint Lucia Government Responds to UK Visa Waiver Suspension; Defends CIP

    Prime Minister Philip J. Pierre and Deputy Prime Minister Ernest Hilaire have both publicly rejected the notion that…
    #UnitedKingdom #UK #Europe #EU #Caribbean #cbi #cip #citizenshipbyinvestment #GreatBritain #saintlucia
    europesays.com/2840280/

  3. UK Strips Saint Lucia of Visa-Free Access; Government Vows Diplomatic Fight

    The United Kingdom has imposed a visit visa requirement on nationals of Saint Lucia, the government in Castries…
    #UnitedKingdom #UK #Europe #EU #Caribbean #cbi #cip #citizenshipbyinvestment #club #GreatBritain #saintlucia
    europesays.com/2824332/

  4. Our view for lunch today looking across to The Pitons (well, one of them), the famous volcanic plug landmarks of St Lucia. We're docked at Castries but headed south to Soufrière for some island viewpoints, a fishing village stop, botanical gardens (in this heat? Are we mad?), sulfur springs, then some local food and drink. Yep, still stupidly hot.

    #Travel #Photography #StLucia #Cruise #SaintLucia #Caribbean #ThePitons #Pitons

  5. Verse #OS2024 #Paris2024 Medaillestand per miljoen inwoners.
    #Dominica #SaintLucia en #Grenada steevast op 1, 2 en 3. Nederland doet het beter dan de buurlanden en de #EUR harkt het meeste (30%) metaal naarbinnen.

  6. The fifteen Caricom States and the Dominican Republic adopted in 2020 a strategy known as the “Roadmap for the Implementation of Caribbean Priority Actions on the Illicit Proliferation of Firearms and Ammunition throughout the Caribbean sustainably by 2030.”#SaintLucia #Caricom #RoadmapforFirearms
    Saint Lucia Hosts Forum To Stop Illegal Flow of Weapons
  7. Doorstep by Alva R. #BAPTISTE, Minister of External Affairs, International Trade and Civil Aviation of #SaintLucia, at today's #EUCELAC Summit.
    "We need to discuss issues that are going to contribute to stability and to the future of planet Earth"
    newsroom.consilium.europa.eu/e

    🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/EUCouncilTVNe

  8. Philip Hippolyte, Hotosm's Project Manager for the Caribbean explains the work the LAC Hub wants to do in the region and invites open mapping communities to join.

    tiktok.com/@mapeoabierto_la/vi

    #Dominica #SaintLucia #Barbados #TrinidadandTobago #Jamaica #Haiti #Grenada #SaintVincent

  9. I went for a swim - OK, a bob-about-on-a-flotation device - and had the pool to myself. It was so peaceful, just bobbing and looking at the sky and the green coconuts and bananas growing on the trees. A small bird flew so low over the pool that it almost skimmed my head. Then the sun dipped below the roof and I felt chilly, so I got out and into a hot bath, where Tom brought me a non-alcoholic tropical punch #Holiday #vacation #LivingMyBestLife #SaintLucia

  10. archive.org/details/theycalled

    They Called Us Brigands: The Saga of St. Lucia's Freedom Fighters by Robert J. Devaux; Patrick A.B. Anthony

    Topics
    #brigandage, #brigands, #Ioüanalao, #Iyonola, #Hewanarau, #Hewanorra, #StLucia, #SaintLucia, #LesserAntilles, #Caribbean, #Martinique, #Guadeloupe, #maroonage, #maroons, #marronage, #blackchattelslavery, #war, #guerrillawarfare, #guerrillawar, #guerrillas, #Caribbeanhistory, #NègMawon, #britishimperialism, #frenchimperialism, #colonialism

    The Black freedom fighters of the Lesser Antilles became known as “brigands” during the french revolution. Their fascinating story has never been written, perhaps because they have been dismissed as runaway slaves in a state of insurrection. The author believed that history has been unfair to the “brigands”. He felt indebted to them for sparing the life of his great-great-great-grandmother who was left in their care when the rest of the Devaux family fled to Martinique for safety. His gratitude motivated him to attempt to exonerate the “brigands” from the stigma of their history and present them in a different light, as freedom fighters caught up in a desperate situation.

  11. archive.org/details/theycalled

    They Called Us Brigands: The Saga of St. Lucia's Freedom Fighters by Robert J. Devaux; Patrick A.B. Anthony

    Topics
    #brigandage, #brigands, #Ioüanalao, #Iyonola, #Hewanarau, #Hewanorra, #StLucia, #SaintLucia, #LesserAntilles, #Caribbean, #Martinique, #Guadeloupe, #maroonage, #maroons, #marronage, #blackchattelslavery, #war, #guerrillawarfare, #guerrillawar, #guerrillas, #Caribbeanhistory, #NègMawon, #britishimperialism, #frenchimperialism, #colonialism

    The Black freedom fighters of the Lesser Antilles became known as “brigands” during the french revolution. Their fascinating story has never been written, perhaps because they have been dismissed as runaway slaves in a state of insurrection. The author believed that history has been unfair to the “brigands”. He felt indebted to them for sparing the life of his great-great-great-grandmother who was left in their care when the rest of the Devaux family fled to Martinique for safety. His gratitude motivated him to attempt to exonerate the “brigands” from the stigma of their history and present them in a different light, as freedom fighters caught up in a desperate situation.

  12. archive.org/details/theycalled

    They Called Us Brigands: The Saga of St. Lucia's Freedom Fighters by Robert J. Devaux; Patrick A.B. Anthony

    Topics
    #brigandage, #brigands, #Ioüanalao, #Iyonola, #Hewanarau, #Hewanorra, #StLucia, #SaintLucia, #LesserAntilles, #Caribbean, #Martinique, #Guadeloupe, #maroonage, #maroons, #marronage, #blackchattelslavery, #war, #guerrillawarfare, #guerrillawar, #guerrillas, #Caribbeanhistory, #NègMawon, #britishimperialism, #frenchimperialism, #colonialism

    The Black freedom fighters of the Lesser Antilles became known as “brigands” during the french revolution. Their fascinating story has never been written, perhaps because they have been dismissed as runaway slaves in a state of insurrection. The author believed that history has been unfair to the “brigands”. He felt indebted to them for sparing the life of his great-great-great-grandmother who was left in their care when the rest of the Devaux family fled to Martinique for safety. His gratitude motivated him to attempt to exonerate the “brigands” from the stigma of their history and present them in a different light, as freedom fighters caught up in a desperate situation.

  13. archive.org/details/theycalled

    They Called Us Brigands: The Saga of St. Lucia's Freedom Fighters by Robert J. Devaux; Patrick A.B. Anthony

    Topics
    #brigandage, #brigands, #Ioüanalao, #Iyonola, #Hewanarau, #Hewanorra, #StLucia, #SaintLucia, #LesserAntilles, #Caribbean, #Martinique, #Guadeloupe, #maroonage, #maroons, #marronage, #blackchattelslavery, #war, #guerrillawarfare, #guerrillawar, #guerrillas, #Caribbeanhistory, #NègMawon, #britishimperialism, #frenchimperialism, #colonialism

    The Black freedom fighters of the Lesser Antilles became known as “brigands” during the french revolution. Their fascinating story has never been written, perhaps because they have been dismissed as runaway slaves in a state of insurrection. The author believed that history has been unfair to the “brigands”. He felt indebted to them for sparing the life of his great-great-great-grandmother who was left in their care when the rest of the Devaux family fled to Martinique for safety. His gratitude motivated him to attempt to exonerate the “brigands” from the stigma of their history and present them in a different light, as freedom fighters caught up in a desperate situation.

  14. archive.org/details/theycalled

    They Called Us Brigands: The Saga of St. Lucia's Freedom Fighters by Robert J. Devaux; Patrick A.B. Anthony

    Topics
    #brigandage, #brigands, #Ioüanalao, #Iyonola, #Hewanarau, #Hewanorra, #StLucia, #SaintLucia, #LesserAntilles, #Caribbean, #Martinique, #Guadeloupe, #maroonage, #maroons, #marronage, #blackchattelslavery, #war, #guerrillawarfare, #guerrillawar, #guerrillas, #Caribbeanhistory, #NègMawon, #britishimperialism, #frenchimperialism, #colonialism

    The Black freedom fighters of the Lesser Antilles became known as “brigands” during the french revolution. Their fascinating story has never been written, perhaps because they have been dismissed as runaway slaves in a state of insurrection. The author believed that history has been unfair to the “brigands”. He felt indebted to them for sparing the life of his great-great-great-grandmother who was left in their care when the rest of the Devaux family fled to Martinique for safety. His gratitude motivated him to attempt to exonerate the “brigands” from the stigma of their history and present them in a different light, as freedom fighters caught up in a desperate situation.

  15. archive.org/details/frenchsuga

    The French Sugar Business in the Eighteenth Century by Robert Louis Stein

    Topics
    #blackchattelslavery, #france, #frenchcolonialism, #frenchimperialism, #economics, #history, #Caribbean, #sugar, #sugarplantations, #Guadeloupe, #Haiti, #saintdomingue, #Martinique, #Tobago, #SaintLucia, #StLucia, #Guiana, #frenchGuyana, #Guyane, #sugarcane, #Antilles

    Plantations in the French Antilles (principally in Haiti) became major sugar producers in the 18th century, and France became a main distributor to other European countries. Stein provides a clear and coherent (if sometimes repetitious) explanation of the three-pronged trade; ships from France carried slaves from Africa to the Antilles, and then returned to Europe with sugar. The slaves, most of whom died of disease and overwork, were victims of the French sugar trade.

  16. archive.org/details/frenchsuga

    The French Sugar Business in the Eighteenth Century by Robert Louis Stein

    Topics
    #blackchattelslavery, #france, #frenchcolonialism, #frenchimperialism, #economics, #history, #Caribbean, #sugar, #sugarplantations, #Guadeloupe, #Haiti, #saintdomingue, #Martinique, #Tobago, #SaintLucia, #StLucia, #Guiana, #frenchGuyana, #Guyane, #sugarcane, #Antilles

    Plantations in the French Antilles (principally in Haiti) became major sugar producers in the 18th century, and France became a main distributor to other European countries. Stein provides a clear and coherent (if sometimes repetitious) explanation of the three-pronged trade; ships from France carried slaves from Africa to the Antilles, and then returned to Europe with sugar. The slaves, most of whom died of disease and overwork, were victims of the French sugar trade.

  17. archive.org/details/frenchsuga

    The French Sugar Business in the Eighteenth Century by Robert Louis Stein

    Topics
    #blackchattelslavery, #france, #frenchcolonialism, #frenchimperialism, #economics, #history, #Caribbean, #sugar, #sugarplantations, #Guadeloupe, #Haiti, #saintdomingue, #Martinique, #Tobago, #SaintLucia, #StLucia, #Guiana, #frenchGuyana, #Guyane, #sugarcane, #Antilles

    Plantations in the French Antilles (principally in Haiti) became major sugar producers in the 18th century, and France became a main distributor to other European countries. Stein provides a clear and coherent (if sometimes repetitious) explanation of the three-pronged trade; ships from France carried slaves from Africa to the Antilles, and then returned to Europe with sugar. The slaves, most of whom died of disease and overwork, were victims of the French sugar trade.

  18. archive.org/details/frenchsuga

    The French Sugar Business in the Eighteenth Century by Robert Louis Stein

    Topics
    #blackchattelslavery, #france, #frenchcolonialism, #frenchimperialism, #economics, #history, #Caribbean, #sugar, #sugarplantations, #Guadeloupe, #Haiti, #saintdomingue, #Martinique, #Tobago, #SaintLucia, #StLucia, #Guiana, #frenchGuyana, #Guyane, #sugarcane, #Antilles

    Plantations in the French Antilles (principally in Haiti) became major sugar producers in the 18th century, and France became a main distributor to other European countries. Stein provides a clear and coherent (if sometimes repetitious) explanation of the three-pronged trade; ships from France carried slaves from Africa to the Antilles, and then returned to Europe with sugar. The slaves, most of whom died of disease and overwork, were victims of the French sugar trade.