Northern West Indies (820 – 963 CE): …

Years: 820 - 963

Northern West Indies (820 – 963 CE): Lucayan Beginnings and Hispaniola’s Northern Valleys

Geographic and Environmental Context

Northern West Indies includes: the Bahamas (Lucayan Archipelago), the Turks and Caicos Islands, and northern Hispaniola — northern Haiti (Cap-Haïtien, Massif du Nord, Tortuga excluded since it belongs to Western West Indies) and the Cibao/north coast of the Dominican Republic (Santiago de los Caballeros, Puerto Plata).

  • Anchors: the Bahamas, Turks and Caicos, northern Haiti (Cap-Haïtien, Massif du Nord), and the Cibao Valley of the Dominican Republic.

Climate and Environmental Shifts

  • Warm, humid climate with steady trade winds supported cassava farming and reef fisheries.

  • Seasonal hurricanes shaped settlement dispersal, but fertile soils of northern Hispaniola valleys yielded abundant crops.

Societies and Political Developments

  • Lucayan ancestors (Taíno-related Arawakan peoples) expanded from Hispaniola into the Bahamas, practicing horticulture and fishing.

  • Northern Hispaniola: farming villages thrived in the Cibao Valley, blending cassava, maize, and root crops.

  • Turks and Caicos acted as stepping stones between islands, with small horticultural hamlets.

Economy and Trade

  • Agriculture: cassava, maize, sweet potatoes, peanuts, cotton.

  • Marine economy: reef fishing, turtle hunting, shellfish.

  • Exchange of stone tools, shells, and cotton thread among islands.

Belief and Symbolism

  • Animist cosmologies centered on zemí spirits, ancestor veneration, and ritual ball games.

  • Shamans mediated between communities and spirit forces.

Long-Term Significance

By 963, the Lucayan–Taíno world was firmly established in the Bahamas and Hispaniola’s north, setting the cultural foundations for centuries to follow.

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