Expathaven - Anguilla Information Guide & Facts
International Expat Marketplace
ExpatHaven Country Information Pages Discover South America and the Caribbean The Caribbean Information about Anguilla Printer Friendly

Anguilla Information Guide & Facts

Flag of Anguilla AnguillaMap of Anguilla

Located in the Eastern Caribbean, most northerly of the Leeward Islands
Official language: English  
Rentals: Car, jeeps, scooters & bikes
Nearest International Gateways: San Juan & Antigua (1 hr. flight); St. Martin, (7 minute flight).  Ferry: from Marigot Bay, St. Martin to Blowing Point, Anguilla, 20 minute crossing, half hour intervals. Ferry service available from Blowing Point to Juliana via Link Ferry.
Entry: Passport preferred or official photo ID accompanied by birth certificate w/raised seal, plus onward/return ticket.  
Dress Code: Casual, in good taste. (Short-shorts, bikinis, bra-type tops and topless in both men and women are undesirable in public places; nude and topless swimming and/or sunbathing are not permitted.) All beaches are public.

Culture

Anguilla's history is embodied in the island's culture and heritage. From the ancient Amerindian settlements and European colonization to its recent 1967 Revolution, these and other events are woven into the tapestry of Anguilla's life that is passed on with pride from generation to generation.

Holidays and festivals are centered on historical events. Anguilla's most spectacular display of culture is the Summer Festival, beginning August Monday at 5AM with J'Ouvert Mornin,' a daybreak jam through the streets to celebrate emancipation. Nearly a fortnight of dancing, competitions, fairs, costumes and parades color the evenings. During the days, as with almost all of Anguilla's major holidays, the island is filled with the excitement of beach picnics and boat racing, Anguilla's national sport.

The Anguilla community is peaceful and joyous. The island is largely Christian in denomination with nearly one church for every two square miles. English holidays such as the Queen's Birthday, Whit Monday and others are celebrated, but English speaking Anguilla maintains a unique balance of all its historic influences that make this island a truly individual nation.

History

Around 4000 years ago, Anguilla was a lush island covered in dense rain forest. It was discovered by Amerindian peoples who came by dugout canoes and rafts from South America's mainland. They called Anguilla "Malliouhana" which meant arrow-shape sea serpent and they developed villages, farms and ceremonial sites to their gods.
 
Evidence of these Amerindians as old as 3300 years has been found at the eastern end of Anguilla. Shell axes, conch shell drinking vessels, flint blades and stone objects from the pre-ceramic era have all been uncovered on Anguilla. There is no record of how long this first group of Amerindians lived on the island.

By the fourth century AD, Amerindians of the Saladoid culture settled in Anguilla. The Saladoids were adept farmers, pottery makers, weavers and basket makers. Many of their creations incorporated their religious beliefs.

The Arawak Indian belief was based on the sun and moon and two sacred caverns, where they believed all of mankind originated. There is much evidence of this belief system in Anguilla's two impressive cave sites located at the eastern end of the island, Big Springs at Island Harbour and The Fountain at Shoal Bay. The Fountain is the Eastern Caribbean's most intact ceremonial site from this period and features a stalagmite carved in the likeness of Jocahu, the Supreme Deity of the Arawak people, petroglyphs and offering bowls. Big Springs, a limestone sinkhole which provides an overhang to a fresh water source, contains a large petroglyph, a small carved stalagmite and other interesting artifacts.

The Fountain is currently closed to the public. The National Parks System, administered by the National Trust, is developing this site into a historic tourism attraction. Big Springs can be viewed through the Anguilla National Trust but has not been developed into a tourist attraction. The Trust is currently raising funds to establish this site as a tourist attraction.

Christopher Columbus sailed by Anguilla is 1493 but never landed. During this time the Europeans changed the island's name from Malliouhana to Anguilla, for its long eel shape.

It was in 1650 that Anguilla first became colonized. English settlers found that the soil in Anguilla was good for growing corn and tobacco, so plantations began. When they arrived on the island there were no Amerindians inhabiting Anguilla, but by 1656 Indians from a neighboring island destroyed their settlement.

In 1666 Anguilla was captured by a French expedition and settlers fled to the forests. The following year the island was returned to Britain under the Treaty of Breda. In 1744 Anguilla, assisted by privateers from St. Kitts captured the French half of neighboring St. Martin. Retaliation came on May 21, 1745, when two French frigates and some small craft attacked at Crocus Bay. The Anguillians repulsed them in less than fifteen minutes. St. Martin was returned to the French in 1748 under the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle.

Heading into the 1800's Anguilla possessed a plantation economy like most of the Caribbean. Rum, sugar, cotton, indigo, fustic and mahogany were its chief exports. Unfortunately, the soil on Anguilla was thin and rainfall was unreliable making conditions for a plantation economy unfavorable. Estates were small and could not employ many slaves. Those who were employed spent most of their time tending their own food plots rather than the plantation. Eventually, slaves began to develop into individual peasant proprietors, fisherman or sailors, which increased their personal independence. By 1833 the British Parliament passed the Emancipation Act which came into force on August 1, 1834. By this time the population on Anguilla shrunk to a mere 1,956 persons due to the island's difficult natural conditions.

Meanwhile, the 1830's brought the union of St. Kitts -Nevis-Anguilla on Britain's recommendation -- a union protested by the majority of Anguilla's freeholders. Anguilla was allowed one freeholder representative to the House of Assembly on the Island of St. Kitts and was mostly neglected by the tri-island legislature.

In 1958, St. Kitts -Nevis-Anguilla became part of the Federation of the West Indies. The Federation collapsed in 1962, which resulted in individual constitutions for most islands St. Kitts -Nevis-Anguilla was made an associated statehood, a political decision that sparked the Anguilla Revolution. Anguilla wanted its independence from the state and the proposed union was not a viable option for the island.

May 30, 1967 is celebrated today as Anguilla Day. This day commemorates the repulsion of the Royal St. Kitts police force from the island. Britain intervened and a peacekeeping committee was established. Debates over Anguilla's succession continued to be negotiated for another decade until December 19, 1980, Anguilla became a separate Dependent Territory with some measure of autonomy in Government.

( Adapted from works by Coville Petty, O.B.E. and Nik Douglas )

 

Expathaven - Anguilla Information Guide & Facts


International offshore and relocation listing network

All information in this Site is provided as is with no guarantee of completeness, accuracy, timeliness or of the results obtained from the use of this information, and without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including, but not limited to warranties of performance, merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. Certain links in this Site connect to other Web Sites maintained by third parties over whom we have no control. We make no representations as to the accuracy or any other aspect of information contained in other Web Sites. Some information available on this site is provided under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover Texts. Some content on Akaterra.com has been used with the courtesy of the The World Fact Book.


Add Your Listing For FREE

------------------------------------

Information about Anguilla
Anguilla Immigration Information
Return to Previous


The Anguilla Tourist Board

Old Factory Plaza
The Valley, Anguilla, BWI
1-800-553-4939
Tel: 264-497-2759
Fax: 264-497-2710
Email: atbtour@anguillanet.com

USA

Anguilla Tourist Board
Marketing Office
111 Decatur Street
Doylestown, PA 18901
Tel.: 267-880-3511
Fax: 267-880-3507
Email: enterprisefx@aol.com
anguillabwi@aol.com

United Kingdom

River Communications
Unit 8A Oakwood House
414-422 Hackney Road
London E2 7SY
Tel.: 011-44 207 729 8003
Fax: 011-44 207 729 8829
Email: rivercoms@aol.com
anguilla4info@aol.com

Italy, Monaco and France

Anguilla Tourist Board
Ms. Florence Bersans-Zannoli,
Le Coronado, 20 Avenue De Fontvieille
MC 98000, Monaco

Germany

Anguilla Tourist Board
c/o Sergat Deutschland
IM Guldenen Wingert 8-C
D-64342 Seeheim, Germany
Tel.: 011-49-6257-962920
Fax: 011-49-6257-962919
Email: r.morozow@sergat.de

Home | Discover Europe | Discover Asia | Discover the Middle East and North Africa | Discover North America | Discover Africa | Discover Oceania

If your business offers services to Expats you can submit your URL to our free International Web Directory


Free listings for real estate agents and home owners who want to sell or rent their properties
Free listings for yacht owners, charterers and brokers who want to sell or charter their sailing boats or Yachts

Directory Search Engine

© Tradepoint Ltd. 2003 | Disclaimer | Sitemap