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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MAR-MEC |
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MARTINIQUE , an island of the West Indies, belonging to the chain of the Lesser Antilles, and constituting a French colony, between the British islands of Dominica and St Lucia, 25 M. S. of the one and 20 M. N. of the other, about 14 40' N., 61 W. Its length is 4o m., its greatest width 21 m.;. and the area comprises 38o sq. m. A cluster of volcanic mountains in the north, a similar group in the south, and a line of lower heights between them, form the backbone of the island. Its deep ravines and precipitous escarpments are reduced in appearance to gentle undulations by the drapery of the forests. The massif of Mont Pele in the north is the culminating point of the island (4430 ft.); that of Carbet is little inferior (3963 ft.), but the mountains in the south are much lower. Mont Pele is notorious for an appalling eruption in May 1902. Of the numerous streams which traverse the few miles of country between the watershed and the sea (the longest radiating from Mount
rainy
The mean annual temperature is 8o F. in the coast region, the monthly mean for June being 83, and that for January 77. Of the annual rainfall of 87 in., August has the heaviest share (I1.3 in.), though the rainy
elevation
damp
The population increased from 162,861 in 1878 to 175,863 in 1888 and 203,781 in Igoe. In 1902 the great eruption of Mont Pele occurred, and in 1905 the population was only 182,024. The bulk of the population consists of Creole negroes and half-castes of various grades, ranging from the " Saccatra," who has retained hardly any trace of Caucasian blood, to the so-called Sangmele," with only a suspicion of negro commixture. The capital of the island is Fort de France, on the west-coast bay of the same name, with a fine harbour defended by three forts, and a population of 18,000. The other principal centres of population are, on the west coast Lamentin, on the same bay as the capital , and on the east coast Le Francois and Le Robert. The colony is administered by a governor and a general council, and returns a senator and two deputies. There are elective municipal councils. The chief
cotton
II the year following the eruption of Mont Pele, exports were valued at 604,163. Martinique, the name of which may be derived from a native form Madiana or Mantinino, was probably discovered by Columbus on the 15th of June 15o2; although by some authorities its discovery is placed in 1493. It was at that time inhabited by Caribs who had expelled or incorporated an older stock. It was not until the 25th of June 1635 that possession was taken of the island in the name of the French Compagnie des Iles d'Amerique. Actual settlement was carried out in the same year by Pierre Belain, Sieur d'Esnambuc, captain-general of the island of St Christopher. In 1637 his nephew Dyel Duparquet (d. 1658) became captain-general of the colony, now numbering seven hundred men, and subsequently obtained the seigneurie of the island by purchase from the company under the authority of the king of France. In 1654 welcome was given to three hundred Jews expelled from Brazil, and by 1658 EmerytPalke, ,c there were at least five thousand people exclusive of the Caribs, who were soon after exterminated. Purchased by the French government from Duparquet's children for 120,000 livres, Martinique was assigned to the West India Company, but in 1674 it became part of the royal domain. The habitants (French landholders) at first devoted themselves to the cultivation of cotton
Martinique has suffered from occasional severe storms, as in 1767, when 1600 persons perished, and M. de la Pagerie, father of the Empress Josephine, was practically ruined, and in 1839, 1891 and 1903, when much damage was done to the sugar crop. Earthquakes have also been frequent, but the most terrible natural disaster was the eruption of Mont Pele in 1902, by which the town of St Pierre, formerly the chief
See Annuaire de la Martinique (Fort de France) ; H. Mouet, La Martinique (Paris, 1892) ; M. J. Guet, Origines de la Martinique (Vannes, 1893); G. Landes, Notice sur la Martinique (with full bibliography), (Paris, 1900) ; M. Dumoret, Au pays du sucre (Paris, 1902) ; and on the eruption of 1902, A. Heilprin, Mont Pelee and the Tragedy of Martinique (Philadelphia and London, 1903) ; A. Lacroix, La Montagne Pelee et ses eruptions (Paris, 1904) ; and the report of Drs J. S. Flett and T. Anderson (November 20, 1902), who investigated the eruptions on behalf of the Royal Society; cf. T. Anderson, " Recent
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