Barbados Essays

  • Barbados

    4303 Words  | 9 Pages

    Barbados GEOGRAPHY Barbados is the eastern most island of the Caribbean, located in the North Atlantic Ocean, northeast of Venezuela (13 10 N, 59 32 W). It is considered a “Coral Island” due to its vast coral shore beaches that surround the perimeter of the island. Overall, Barbados is 430 square kilometers, with 97 kilometers being coastline area. The circumference is approximately 55 miles around, and has a pear-like shape to it. Length and width wise, Barbados is 21 miles and 13 miles

  • Barbados

    922 Words  | 2 Pages

    Barbados Barbados is a small country located in the Caribbean Sea. The capital is Bridgetown with a population of about 8,789. The head of state of Barbados is Queen Elizabeth II and she is represented by General Dame Nita Barrow. The total population of the country is around 252,000. The main language is English and the predominant religion is Christianity. Their date of independence was November 30, 1966. Barbados is the eastern most Caribbean Island. It is about 200 miles North-North East of

  • Barbados

    1271 Words  | 3 Pages

    Barbados When one thinks of Barbados, one thinks of luscious, turquoise blue waters; soft white sand beaches; blue, white clouded skies; fresh fruits; exotic, delicious dishes and honeymoons. One, however, tends to forget the formation of this land. This Caribbean luxury Island has much history and great heritage. In this report, I will detail Barbados’s location, history, labor relations, population size and structure, industries, plus add a little zest with the beauty of the Island. Let’s begin

  • Barbados and Business

    1649 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the research I have conducted, I have found many benefits to setting up our factory in Barbados. The intentions of this report is to inform you that setting up a factory here will be rewarding for years to come. We have great amounts of landscape we can use as property for our future factory. Creating a factory here in Barbados will make us plenty of profit with little to no problems. However, one problem may or may not affect our business. It is not a gargantuan problem but it is still disturbing

  • The Barbados Island

    1925 Words  | 4 Pages

    HISTORY Barbados is one of the eastern most Caribbean islands, found at 13.4n, 54.4w. The island that is less than one million years old, the collision of the Atlantic crustal and Caribbean plates created it, along with a volcanic eruption. Later coral formed, accumulating to about 300ft. It is geologically unique. It is. Two land masses that merged over the years. The fist people were the Amerindians who arrived there from Venezuela. They came with families and villages, adventurers, descendants

  • Corporate Expansion in Barbados

    1722 Words  | 4 Pages

    The 1900s led for an era of corporate expansion in Barbados. Many of Barbados largest and most successful companies began to expand over seas within the Caribbean and north to Canada. Companies had a variety of reasons for looking to expand and this varied with each individual company. Foreign companies began to move out of the Caribbean which allowed Barbadian companies to move in and replace them. Advances in technology allowed for companies to export goods to a larger area which allowed for expansion

  • Barbados Research Paper

    814 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Effects of Colonization in Barbados Have you ever been to Barbados? Barbados has been known as a popular vacation spot located among of the many islands in the Caribbean. The island offers a variety of activities you can pick, you can go sightseeing, snorkeling, or even have a romantic getaway. Various Amerindian civilizations have flourished in Barbados. Barbadians have traits similar to the slaves that were brought there years ago. The island became so popular that settlers from Europe became

  • Breathtaking Barbados Breaks

    657 Words  | 2 Pages

    Barbados Overview The mind-blowing range of soft sandy beaches, delightful landscapes, exceptional shoreline and remarkable hospitality on Caribbean Sea, Barbados is eminent for a pleasure of beach holidays in Caribbean region and quite a favourite escape for travellers from UK and other parts of Europe. The extraordinary beach extravaganza and beyond belief range of sightseeing along with kind locals and lively lifestyle makes this breathtaking island more amusing and enjoyable on Caribbean holidays

  • Barbados as a Jewel of the West Indies

    1737 Words  | 4 Pages

    Barbados as a Jewel of the West Indies Most people visiting Barbados only get to see one of the many faces of the Bajan culture, the glamorous hotels, the hot, sandy beaches and the beach bars and restaurants. I was lucky enough to see two aspects of the culture, the tourism and the island's fascination with sport, particularly with cricket. While accompanying my brother's school cricket tour I saw the eagerness of the young Bajan sportsmen even-though they lacked the facilities and funds

  • Crop over

    676 Words  | 2 Pages

    years. Cropover eventually became apart of the Barbadian culture as a celebration of fun and activities. Crop over started as far back at the 1780’s and marked a period in which the ending of the sugar cane season came to a close. During the 1780’s Barbados was one of the worlds largest sugar cane distributors. When crop over was over this did not just mean that the hard work and labor has come to a halt for a little which but it also meant that many people will eventually come to either work less or

  • The Witch Of Blackbied Pond

    509 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Witch of Blackbird Pond Kit Tyler, the main character of Elizabeth George Spear's book, The Witch of Blackbird Pond, must leave her carefree life in tropical Barbados, and go and live in Connecticut. She learns that playing is what is to life, but hard work. She learns that if people do not know you, that they pre judge you. She also learns that if you don't live up to the Puritan life style, that they will look down at you. Kit must learn to cope, and learn from all these changes in her life

  • The Early Modern Atlantic Economy Edited by J. McCusker and K. Morgan

    1370 Words  | 3 Pages

    Dyde in their book Amerindians to Africans they support the argument that there was a sugar revolution in the Caribbean. In the Caribbean, especially Barbados there was a change of diversified agriculture to practicing monoculture cultivating sugar was a result of the falling prices in West Indian tobacco and other crops like ginger and cotton. Barbados and other islands had competition from Virginia who was producing cheaper tobacco therefore these islands were forced to find another crop to bring

  • A Look at the Past: Colonial South Carolina

    543 Words  | 2 Pages

    settlers from Barbados and other colonies and, “. . . encourage them to develop a profitable export crop comparable to West Indian sugar and Chesapeake tobacco . . .” (Roark). At last, in 1670 the colony’s first permanent English settlement Charles Towne, later spelled Charleston, was established. A map of the location of Charles Town or Charleston can be seen in the Appendix on page four. Just as the proprietors had anticipated, many of the early settlers to this new colony were from Barbados. Actually

  • Comparing the Treatment of Death in the Movie Antz and Antony and Cleopatra

    843 Words  | 2 Pages

    retains a certain nobleness and dignity because the audience does not see unpleasant moments of suffering nor disfigured war victims. Antz, by contrast, shows the brutality of war and the disfigured corpses of the ants and termites after the battle. Barbados, who saves Z’s life during the battle, is dismembered -- at the neck -- by the ter... ... middle of paper ... ...mes most horrible at the end when General Mandible, in a sudden uncontrolled rage against Cutter, reveals his whole cruelty and shouts:

  • History of Barbados

    897 Words  | 2 Pages

    The island of Barbados was first inhabited by an Amerindian migrant group called the Saladoid-Barrancoid around 350 to 650 AD. Their ancestors are believed to be from the Orinoco Basin in South America. The Spanish were the first Europeans to land on the island in the sixteenth century and reported the Amerindian settlement. However, when the Portuguese explorer, Pedro a Campus landed there in 1536, he claimed that the island was uninhabited. The original inhabitants, the Saladoid-Barrancoid

  • Comparing Jamestown

    1105 Words  | 3 Pages

    Unlike Virginia’s colony Jamestown, it took years before this became a fully established colony. The name given to it was Charles town and most of the colonists who settled there came from the Caribbean island of Barbados. Which had more experienced people in order to start a sugar-cane plantation like in the West Indies (America: A Narrative History, 85). These people has years of experience tending to the land. Compared to the gentlemen, who were unfamiliar with

  • Elizabeth George Speare’s The Witch of Blackbird Pond

    632 Words  | 2 Pages

    Elizabeth George Speare’s The Witch of Blackbird Pond Elizabeth George Speare’s The Witch of Blackbird Pond shows the maturation process of a young girl from Barbados. Kit’s life in Barbados is shattered when her grandfather dies. As a result of his death, Kit is forced to leave the island and her carefree lifestyle. She travels to Connecticut to find her only living relatives. Once she reaches Connecticut her persona evolves from an island girl, to hard worker, and finally to wife. Kit is

  • Hurricanes

    1580 Words  | 4 Pages

    central pressure outrivalled the 899 mbar of the Florida Keys hurricane of 1935. Gilbert, at that stage an un-named tropical depression with maximum sustained winds around 30kt, was first spotted on Thursday 8 September some 300km east of Barbados. It brushed past Barbados and St Lucia the following day with limited wind-damage and some flooding, and was upgraded to ‘tropical storm’ status (means winds 34kt or more). Gathering strength over the warm waters of the eastern Caribbean, Gilbert achieved ‘hurricane’

  • Essay On Caricom

    956 Words  | 2 Pages

    pressing issues which have remained unresolved. For example the July 1996 dispute between Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, where Trinidad accused Jamaica of putting barriers to its exports of food and drink and also the tension with Barbados over the accusation that Barbados was imposing trade restrictions on pasta ... ... middle of paper ... ...here to. As it relates to the Shanique Myrie case with the Barbadian government the treaty is clearly not being rationalized. It was in 2007, the Barbadian

  • Grenada

    1230 Words  | 3 Pages

    was expected to continue to have good relations with the ¡°Government¡± (Weinberger 108). This display of good will coincided with the report Margaret Thatcher, Britian¡¯s Prime Minister, received from the Deputy High Commissioner in Bridgetown, Barbados, who had visited Grenada, that the British citizens were safe and that the new regime was cooperating in making arrangement for those who wished to leave(Thatcher 330). The same cooperation was being offer to the U.S., contradicting the President¡¯s