#OnThisDay, 13 Mar 1990, Ertha Pascal-Trouillot became the provisional president of Haiti. She was the first woman to hold the role.

She stabilised the country for long enough for it to hold a free and fair election.

“I accepted the position in the name of Haitian women. I did it as a service to my country. I did it with love and determination.”

#WomenInHistory #OTD #History #WomensHistory #WomensHistoryMonth #CaribbeanHistory #Histodons

What they know about black history if they know only about America? Know more on Carribbean Black History through this book.

C.L.R. James’s "Beyond A Boundary" reveals the game’s deeper cultural and political role. Dive into this insightful review! Read review

https://yayaver.blogspot.com/2025/10/book-review-beyond-boundary-clr-james.html

#BLM #BlackHistory #caribbean #CaribbeanHistory #Racism #Bookrecommendations #Bookreview

Book Review: Beyond A Boundary- C.L.R. James

Beyond A Boundary, C L. R. James, Cricket, Colonialism, Caribbean Identity, Sports, England, WestIndies, Decolonization, Black History, Trinidad, Book

Explore cricket as more than a game—it's poetry, politics, and resistance in "Beyond A Boundary" by C.L.R. James. A compelling journey through Caribbean history and identity. 🏏📖

Read the detailed review here:

https://yayaver.blogspot.com/2025/10/book-review-beyond-boundary-clr-james.html

#BookReview #Postcolonialism #CricketAndCulture #CLRJames #CaribbeanHistory #SocialJustice #MarxistTheory #BlackHistory #Cricket
#Carribean

Visiting the Bequia Whaling Museum

From rusted anchors to hand-thrown harpoons, the Bequia Whaling Museum preserves a deeply local story—one of skill, sea, and survival.

https://islandinthenet.com/visiting-the-bequia-whaling-museum/

From rusted anchors to hand-thrown harpoons, the Bequia Whaling Museum preserves a deeply local story—one of skill, sea, and survival.

#Bequia #CaribbeanHistory #WhalingHeritage #MaritimeMuseum #SVGHistory

https://islandinthenet.com/visiting-the-bequia-whaling-museum/

Visiting the Bequia Whaling Museum - Island in the Net

From rusted anchors to hand-thrown harpoons, the Bequia Whaling Museum preserves a deeply local story—one of skill, sea, and survival.

Island in the Net

Am Internationalen Tag der #Tropen erinnern wir daran, wie beschwerlich & gefährlich für ihre Körper & Gesundheit Europäer*innen einst das Leben dort beschrieben haben:

▶ Annika Raapke, Zusammen sind wir schwach? Kranke Körper und Vergemeinschaftung in der französischen #Karibik des 18. Jh., #WerkstattGeschichte 78/2018, https://werkstattgeschichte.de/abstracts/nr-78-annika-raapke/

@histodons @historikerinnen

#histodons #TropicsDay #Kolonialgeschichte #Körpergeschichte #PrizePapers #CaribbeanHistory #FrenchHistory #18thCentury

Nr. 78 | Annika Raapke - WerkstattGeschichte

WerkstattGeschichte

🧵 2/3

I then came upon the conservative historian Robert Tombs claiming that shoddy historical research had led notable British institutions into error regarding their past involvement wit slavery:

>>Does the term "South Sea Annuity" ring a bell? There is no reason why it should. It is a recondite feature of eighteenth-century government finances, when Britain, engaged in the "Second Hundred Years War" with France, was borrowing unprecedented sums to sustain global conflict. Yet misconstruing this term has turned out to be probably the most expensive historical error in modern British history. It is set to cost the Church Commission at least 100 million [pounds sterling] and severe reputational damage. The University of Cambridge has also certainly spent a considerable sum and has damaged its own international reputation in part by making the same error. How could this have come about?<<

https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A839229777/AONE?u=txshrpub100020&sid=bookmark-AONE&xid=6e3faa82

Tombs is challenged about the "misconstruction" of "South Sea Annuity" in a waspish letter from Richard Drayton in a subsequent issue of the TLS:

>>It is so nice to see my old Cambridge colleague Robert Tombs turning his hand in retirement to British history and culture war. I appreciate that, not being familiar with eighteenth-century sources, nor with economic history, some things might not be immediately clear to him.<<

https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A841611049/AONE?u=txshrpub100020&sid=bookmark-AONE&xid=18a1e0ee

The next week sees the Tombs riposte, with assistance from financial historian Richard Dale:

>>Richard Drayton kindly offers to guide me through the arcana of eighteenth-century finance (Letters, May 23). His letter is, however, a better guide to the confused thinking of the Church Commissioners and their historical advisers, among whom he is prominent... Nothing he writes alters the embarrassing reality: certain historians have given leading institutions wrong information on the nature of their historic investments, and contentious and expensive decisions have been based on historical error.<<

https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A842180062/AONE?u=txshrpub100020&sid=bookmark-AONE&xid=cbe67bcd

Entertaining as this British historiographical bitchery might be, the argument over the significance of the term "South Sea Annuity" should not obscure two important points.

In the first place, Tombs and other conservatives are making these criticisms of the Church Commissioners, Cambridge, and their associated historians less out of a concern for historical accuracy than from a deeply held desire to shelve the entire debate about Britain, slavery, and what is or is not owed to the descendants of those enslaved.

This debate goes astray if the right of former British colonies in the West Indies to reparations for slavery is made to depend either on the discovery of financial benefits accruing to particular British institutions or on the strength or weakness of the Williams thesis, that the Atlantic slave trade and slavery were crucial for the development of British capitalism and the Industrial Revolution. These arguments in financial and economic history should not obscure the larger truth that Britain inflicted a serious injury on people inhabiting and imported to the Caribbean by enslaving them. Regardless of any benefits that might or might not have flowed to Britain, and regardless of the motives and actions of British abolitionists, that injury to those enslaved and their descendants and the moral injury to Britain itself have not been made good. Reparations are therefore a legitimate demand; what form these should take must be a matter of discussion between the British and Caribbean governments. Attempting to dismiss the question by calling attention to errors in detail is an attempt to whitewash an ugly history.

To those who would point out all sorts of societies, including those of Africa, have engaged in slavery, I would argue that Atlantic slavery is distinctive on account of its racialised nature, its connection with the depersonalizing economies of the plantation and of industrial capitalism, its sheer scale, and the depth of its cruelty.

#History #Histodons #AtlanticSlavery #Slavery #RobertTombs #Conservatives #Reparations #WilliamsThesis #CaribbeanHistory

The University of the West Indies Press is a not-for-profit scholarly publisher of books and journals particularly well known for its work in #CaribbeanHistory, #Caribbean cultural studies, Caribbean #Literature, #GenderStudies, #Education and #PoliticalScience: https://www.scienceopen.com/collection/UWIPress_Books
University of the West Indies Press - Books

<p>The University of the West Indies Press’s mission is to be the premier scholarly book publisher in the Caribbean, to enhance and encourage research and publication of Caribbean scholarship, to promote the global reputation of the University of the West Indies by empowering the scholarly community it serves, and to disseminate Caribbean scholarship to the world within a cost-effective environment.</p>

ScienceOpen

Giant land-dwelling croc-like predators survived in the Caribbean millions of years longer than thought. Discover the sebecids' surprising last stand. #FossilDiscovery #PrehistoricPredators #CaribbeanHistory

https://geekoo.news/sebecids-the-caribbeans-unexpected-apex-predators/

Sebecids: The Caribbean's Unexpected Apex Predators | Geekoo

Fossil finds in the Dominican Republic reveal that sebecids, giant terrestrial croc-like predators, survived in the Caribbean millions of years after their extinction in South America, reshaping our understanding of prehistoric island life.

Geekoo