Overview
Island country, West Indies.
The most easterly of the Caribbean islands, it lies about 100
mi (160 km) east of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. Area: 166
sq mi (430 sq km). Population (2005 est.): 270,000. Capital:
Bridgetown. More than nine-tenths of the population is of
African ancestry. Language: English (official). Religion:
Christianity (mostly Protestant). Currency: Barbados dollar.
Largely covered by a layer of coral, Barbados is low and flat
except in its north-central part; its highest point is Mount
Hillaby, at 1,115 ft (340 m). There is little surface water. The
island is almost encircled by coral reefs. Bridgetown is its
only seaport. The economy is based on tourism and sugar, while
the offshore financial sector is growing. Barbados is a
constitutional monarchy with two legislative houses; its chief
of state is the British monarch, represented by a
governor-general, and the head of government is the prime
minister. The island was probably inhabited originally by Arawak
and later by Carib Indians. Spaniards may have landed by 1518,
and by 1536 they had apparently wiped out the Indian population.
Barbados was settled by the English in the 1620s. Slaves were
brought in to work the sugar plantations, which were especially
prosperous in the 17th–18th century. The British Empire
abolished slavery in 1834, and all the Barbados slaves were
freed by 1838. In 1958 Barbados joined the West Indies
Federation. When the latter dissolved in 1962, Barbados sought
independence from Britain, which it gained in 1966.
Profile
Official name Barbados
Form of government constitutional monarchy with two legislative
houses (Senate [21]; House of Assembly [30])
Chief of state British Monarch represented by Governor-General
Head of government Prime Minister
Capital Bridgetown
Official language English
Official religion none
Monetary unit Barbados dollar (Bds$)
Population estimate (2008) 282,000
Total area (sq mi) 166
Total area (sq km) 430
Main
island country in the southeastern Caribbean Sea, situated
about 100 miles (160 km) east of Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines. Roughly triangular in shape, the island measures
some 20 miles (32 km) from northwest to southeast and about 15
miles (25 km) from east to west at its widest point. The capital
and largest town is Bridgetown, which is also the main seaport.
The geographic position of Barbados has profoundly influenced
the island’s history and culture and aspects of its economic
life. Barbados is not part of the nearby archipelago of the
Lesser Antilles, although it is usually grouped with it. The
island is of different geologic formation; it is less
mountainous and has less variety in plant and animal life. As
the first Caribbean landfall from Europe and Africa, Barbados
has functioned since the late 17th century as a major link
between western Europe (mainly Great Britain), eastern Caribbean
territories, and parts of the South American mainland. The
island was a British possession without interruption from the
17th century to 1966, when it attained independence. Because of
its long association with Britain, the culture of Barbados is
probably more British than is that of any other Caribbean
island, though elements of the African culture of the majority
population have been prominent. Since independence, cultural
nationalism has been fostered as part of the process of
nation-building.
Land
The rocks underlying Barbados consist of sedimentary
deposits, including thick shales, clays, sands, and
conglomerates, laid down approximately 70 million years ago.
Above these rocks are chalky deposits, which were capped with
coral before the island rose to the surface. A layer of coral up
to 300 feet (90 metres) thick covers the island, except in the
northeast physiographic region known as the Scotland District,
which covers about 15 percent of the area, where erosion has
removed the coral cover. The government has adopted a
conservation plan to prevent further erosion.
Relief, drainage, and soils
Mount Hillaby, the highest point in Barbados, rises to 1,102
feet (336 metres) in the north-central part of the island. To
the west the land drops down to the sea in a series of terraces.
East from Mount Hillaby, the land declines sharply to the rugged
upland of the Scotland District. Southward, the highlands
descend steeply to the broad St. Georges Valley; between the
valley and the sea the land rises to 400 feet (120 metres) to
form Christ Church Ridge. Coral reefs surround most of the
island. Sewerage systems were installed in the late 20th century
to address the threat to the reefs from runoff of fertilizers
and untreated waste.
There are no significant rivers or lakes and only a few
streams, springs, and ponds. Rainwater percolates quickly
through the underlying coralline limestone cap, draining into
underground streams, which are the main source of the domestic
water supply. A desalination plant provides additional fresh
water.
Barbados has mainly residual soils. They are clayey and rich
in lime and phosphates. Soil type varies with elevation; thin
black soils occur on the coastal plains, and more-fertile
yellow-brown or red soils are usually found in the highest parts
of the coral limestone.
Climate
The climate of Barbados is generally pleasant. The
temperature does not usually rise above the mid-80s F (about 30
°C) or fall below the low 70s F (about 22 °C). There are two
seasons: the dry season, from early December to May, and the wet
season, which lasts for the rest of the year. Average rainfall
is about 60 inches (1,525 mm) annually, but, despite the small
size of the island, rainfall varies, rising from the low-lying
coastal areas to the high central district. Barbados lies in the
southern border of the Caribbean hurricane (tropical cyclone)
zone, and hurricanes have caused great devastation, notably in
1780, 1831, 1898, and 1955.
Plant and animal life
Very little of the original vegetation remains on Barbados;
the pale green of cultivated sugarcane has become the
characteristic colour of the landscape. Tropical trees,
including poinciana, mahogany, frangipani, and cabbage palm, are
widespread, and flowering shrubs adorn parks and gardens.
The few wild animals, such as monkeys, hares, and mongooses,
are considered pests by farmers. Birds include doves,
hummingbirds, sparrows, egrets, and yellow breasts. Marine life
includes flying fish, sprats, green dolphins, kingfish,
barracudas, mackerels, and parrot fish.
People
Ethnic groups and languages
People of African descent and of mixed African-European
descent make up more than nine-tenths of the population. A small
fraction of the population is of European (mainly British)
descent, and there is an even smaller number of inhabitants who
originated from the Indian subcontinent. There are small groups
of Syrians, Lebanese, and Chinese. There is also a sizable
expatriate community—primarily from the United States and Great
Britain—made up of international civil servants,
businesspersons, and retirees. English is the official language,
and a nonstandard English called Bajan is also spoken.
Religion
The majority of the population is Christian. Anglicanism,
the religious legacy of the British colonists who arrived in the
17th century, is the largest single denomination. Other churches
established since the 18th century are the Methodist and the
Moravian. Since the 19th century, however, significant religious
diversity has developed. Pentecostal churches have large
congregations, as does the Seventh-day Adventist church. Smaller
groups include Roman Catholics, Bahaʾīs, Jews, Hindus, and
Muslims.
Settlement patterns
Barbados is densely populated. More than one-third of the
population is concentrated in Bridgetown and the surrounding
area. Most of the farmland is owned by large landowners or
corporations. As a result, “tenantries”—clusters of wooden
houses locally known as chattel houses and located on the
borders of the large estates—are as common as villages. They are
usually owned by the occupants but stand on rented ground from
which they may easily be moved for relocation to another site.
Most of them have electricity and running water. In Bridgetown’s
commercial and administrative centre, multistory buildings are
altering the features of the 19th-century town. Apart from
Bridgetown, the largest towns or settlements are Speightstown,
Oistins, and Holetown.
Demographic trends
Until the mid-20th century, Barbados had a high rate of
population growth, which created problems of overpopulation.
Over the second half of the 20th century and into the 21st, the
rate of growth was slowed by the successful implementation of a
nationwide family-planning program and by steady emigration,
first to Britain and later to other parts of the Caribbean and
to North America. In the same period the death and infant
mortality rates declined sharply, and life expectancy rose above
70 years.
Economy
Barbados has an open, market-oriented economy. Services,
manufacturing, and agriculture are the most significant sectors.
A large amount of income in the form of remittances is received
from Barbadians overseas. Barbados has a relatively high per
capita income.
Agriculture and fishing
About three-fourths of the land is arable, and most of it is
planted with sugarcane. Sugar production dominated the economy
until the 1950s, but the industry has declined in importance.
Agricultural production remains dominated by large farm units,
but the pattern of production has changed, mainly as a result of
falling sugar prices and of government-sponsored programs of
agricultural diversification and limited land settlement. As a
result, there has been significant growth in food production
(vegetables, fruits, and livestock), mainly for local
consumption. High-quality sea island cotton is also grown. The
growing of tropical flowers and foliage has also proved
profitable. Fishing has always been part of the island’s basic
economy, and the government has supported the industry with
modernization programs.
Resources and manufacturing
Apart from some small deposits of crude oil and natural gas
that provide about one-third of the island’s energy needs,
Barbados has few natural resources. Sustained exploitation of
the climate and beaches for their tourist potential has been the
most impressive feature of ongoing economic activity. An
abundant population, which provides a ready labour source, may
also be considered one of the island’s resources. The population
working abroad has made significant contributions to the economy
through remittances.
Apart from some quarrying of clay, limestone, and sand, the
mining industry is limited to oil and natural gas production.
Manufacturing, stimulated by government incentives, was one of
the main growth areas of the economy; however, beginning in the
later 20th century, this trend was reversed as a result of
globalization and trade liberalization that increased the
competition from cheaper imports.
Finance and trade
Barbados’s banking system consists of the national bank (the
Central Bank of Barbados, established in 1972), commercial
banks, and various development-oriented financial institutions,
notably credit unions. Most of the commercial banks are branches
of international banks; others are regional and local banks. The
national currency is the Barbados dollar.
A small stock exchange, trading shares of locally and
regionally owned companies, has operated since 1987. It now
trades exclusively online. Cross-border trading is facilitated
by links with similar exchanges in Trinidad and Tobago and
Jamaica. In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, there was
considerable growth in the offshore financial sector, closely
regulated by legislation.
Chief exports include food and beverages, chemicals, and
electrical components. Principal imports include capital goods,
food and beverages, mineral fuels, and chemicals. Barbados’s
main trading partners are the United States, the United Kingdom,
Canada, and Trinidad and Tobago, as well as other members of the
Caribbean Community and Common Market (Caricom).
Services
Most employment is in services and wholesale and retail
trade. Tourism is vital to the economy as the chief
foreign-exchange earner as well as a major employer. The number
of both long-stay visitors and day tourists from cruise-ship
dockings increased greatly during the second half of the 20th
century.
Labour
The Barbados Workers’ Union was registered in 1941 and
functions successfully as a general trade union. Other unions
include the National Union of Public Workers and the Barbados
Union of Teachers.
Transportation
The island has a network of good roads. Bridgetown has a
deepwater harbour, and there is a luxury marina development,
Port St. Charles, on the west coast. An international airport is
located near the southern coast. Several international and
regional airlines offer regular scheduled and charter services.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
The constitution of 1966 established a governmental structure
based on the British parliamentary system. The British monarch
is the head of state and is locally represented by a
governor-general. The prime minister, generally the leader of
the largest political party in the elected House of Assembly
(lower house of the legislature), is the head of government. The
prime minister appoints a cabinet. The upper house of the
legislature is an appointed Senate.
Justice
The Supreme Court of Judicature consists of the High Court
and Court of Appeal. Final appeal in civil and criminal matters
was formerly made to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council
in London, until members of Caricom agreed in the early 21st
century to establish a Caribbean Court of Justice. This court
was to serve as a regional judicial tribunal and would take over
the appellate function of the Privy Council. Magistrates’ courts
have civil and criminal jurisdiction.
Political process
The Barbados Labour Party (founded in 1938) and the
Democratic Labour Party (founded in 1955) are the main political
parties. All Barbadians 18 years of age or older are eligible to
vote. Women were granted the right to vote in 1950.
Health and welfare
The poor social conditions that existed in the early 20th
century were ameliorated by political changes after World War II
and by improvement in the economy. Sustained efforts by
government agencies in sanitation, public health, and housing
significantly improved health conditions. The diseases
associated with poverty and underdevelopment have been
eliminated or controlled. Health care is provided by both public
and private agencies. Other areas of social welfare, notably
child care, family life, pension plans for the elderly and
disabled, and the status of women, have benefited from
government attention. Community centres and playing fields have
been established throughout the island.
Education
Barbados has near-total literacy. This success is
attributable to the presence of a comprehensive, mainly
government-funded primary and secondary school network. The
government places high priority on education, to which it
allocates a significant proportion of its budget. All education
in public institutions is free. There are facilities for
secondary, technical, and vocational education, including a
polytechnic school, a community college, and a teacher’s
college. Education is compulsory to age 16. Most study at the
university level is done at the University of the West Indies,
which maintains a Barbados campus at Cave Hill, near Bridgetown.
Cultural life
Most cultural facilities are located in Bridgetown. The
Barbados Museum was established in 1933 and offers permanent and
temporary exhibits covering the natural history and culture of
the island. Nearby is the Barbados Art Gallery, which houses the
national collection. The National Library Service, which
comprises a main library in Bridgetown and several branches, has
its origins in the early 19th century. There are a number of
special libraries at educational institutions, government
ministries, and other facilities. The Barbados Department of
Archives holds primary historical documentation from public and
private sources. The country has dramatic groups, schools of
dancing, and art exhibitions. Barbadian writers of international
reputation include George Lamming and Kamau Brathwaite. Music is
a popular pastime in Barbados. The country hosts a popular
annual jazz festival (January).
One of the country’s cultural traditions is Crop Over, an
annual multi-week summer festival that has its historical
origins in sugarcane harvest celebrations. The harvest
celebrations died out in the mid-20th century, but Crop Over was
reborn in the 1970s as a festival of musical (notably calypso),
culinary, and other arts. Crop Over culminates in the Grand
Kadooment, a carnival parade that features elaborately costumed
bands.
Cricket is the national sport, and Barbados contributes many
players to the West Indies team, which is known throughout the
world. International Test matches are often played at
Bridgetown’s Kensington Oval (the country hosted the
International Cricket Council World Cup final in 2007). Garfield
Sobers and Frank Worrell are two of Barbados’s cricketing
legends. The first cricket team was formed in 1877 for white
players only, but teams of all races soon sprang up. Other
popular recreations are sailing, surfing, snorkeling, and
swimming. Road tennis, originally played on little-traveled
streets with a wooden paddle and a de-fuzzed tennis ball, is
believed to have been invented on the island. Barbados first
sent athletes to the Olympics in 1952 and first participated as
an independent country in 1968.
Daily and weekly newspapers and a number of tourism-related
periodicals are published. A wide range of newspapers and
magazines from other Caribbean countries, the United States,
Canada, Britain, and Europe can be bought or consulted in
libraries.
History
Little of the island’s prehistory is known, but
archaeological investigation indicates that it may have been
settled as early as 1600 bce by people from northern South
America who later disappear from the archaeological record. From
about 500 to 1500 ce, Arawak and Carib Indians probably lived on
the island, which they called Ichirouganaim. The first contact
with Europeans may have occurred in the early 16th century, when
Spaniards visited Barbados. Portuguese explorers also touched on
the island, which they named Barbados (“Bearded Ones”), either
for bearded fig trees or bearded men on the island. The island
was depopulated because of repeated slave raids by the Spanish
in the 16th century; it is believed that those Indians who
avoided enslavement migrated to elsewhere in the region. By the
mid-16th century—largely because of the island’s small size,
remoteness, and depopulation—European explorers had practically
abandoned their claims to it, and Barbados remained effectively
without a population.
British rule
An English expedition of 1625 assessed the potential of the
island, and on Feb. 17, 1627, the ship William and John landed
with 80 Englishmen and about 10 Africans. The early period of
English settlement was marked by the insecurity resulting from
infrequent provision of supplies from Europe and the difficulty
in establishing a profitable export crop. This was complicated
by bitter squabbles over the claims of rival lords proprietors
and over the question of allegiance to either the British crown
or Parliament during the constitutional conflicts of the 1640s
that led to the English Civil Wars.
As in the earlier cases of Bermuda and Virginia, an assembly
made up of owners of at least 10 acres (4 hectares) of freehold
land was established in Barbados in 1639. Elections were held
annually. There were also a council and a governor who was
appointed first by the lord proprietor and, after the 1660s, by
the king.
The economy of the early colonial era was marked by a pattern
of family farms and by a diversity of products including aloes,
fustic (a dye-producing wood), indigo, and, above all, cotton
and tobacco. The search for a profitable export crop ended in
the 1640s, when Dutch assistance enabled the colonists to
convert to sugar production.
The Sugar Revolution, as it is called, had momentous social,
economic, and political consequences. The elite in Barbados
chose a form of sugar production that yielded the greatest level
of profit—but at great social cost. They decided to establish
large sugarcane plantations, cultivated by oppressed labourers
from West Africa, who were brought to the island and enslaved in
accordance with a series of slave laws enacted from 1636 onward.
Society in Barbados was composed of three categories of persons:
free, indentured, and enslaved. “Race” was a central determinant
of status. There were three “racial,” or ethnic, groups—whites,
coloureds (those of part-European and part-African parentage or
ancestry), and blacks. Some whites were free and some were
indentured; some coloureds were free and some were enslaved; and
some blacks were free and some were enslaved. No whites were
enslaved.
There was a twofold population movement between 1640 and
1700. Many small family farms were bought up and amalgamated
into plantations. Consequently, there was a significant
emigration of whites to Jamaica and to the North American
colonies, notably the Carolinas. At the same time the Royal
African Company (a British slaving company) and other slave
traders were bringing increasing numbers of African men, women,
and children to toil in the fields, mills, and houses. The
ethnic mix of the population changed accordingly. In the early
1640s there were probably 37,000 whites and 6,000 blacks; by
1684 there were about 20,000 whites and 46,000 blacks; and in
1834, when slavery was abolished, there were some 15,000 whites
and 88,000 blacks and coloureds.
In European markets, sugar was a scarce and therefore
valuable commodity, and Barbadian sugar planters, particularly
in the 17th century, reaped huge profits out of the early lead
that the island established in sugar production. Increasing
wealth brought consolidation of political power for a planter
elite, and Barbadian society became a plantocracy, with white
planters controlling the economy and government institutions.
Though enslaved people continually resisted their bondage, the
effective authoritarian power of slave-owning planters ensured
that, apart from a major slave rebellion in 1816 that was put
down by the local militia and British troops, there was no
effective threat to their control.
Sugar remained ascendant in Barbados even through the
19th-century crises caused by the emancipation of enslaved
people, free trade, and competition from the European beet sugar
industry. This was mainly because a dense population provided
cheap labour and because the political power of the white
planters and merchant elite ensured that government resources
would be used to rescue the industry in any emergency. The
workers therefore carried the burden in low wages and minimal
social services. This situation encouraged emigration (often
frustrated by the elite) and occasional, futile political
protests.
By the 1930s the social and political pressures from below
could no longer be contained. Population increase, the closing
of emigration outlets, the economic effects of the worldwide
Great Depression, and the spread of socialist ideology and the
black nationalist movement of the Jamaican leader Marcus Garvey
had created conditions for a labour revolt. By then,
middle-class reformers had begun to agitate against the
restricted political franchise (the right to vote was limited to
males and restricted by income and property qualifications) and
the inadequate social services.
Out of a series of labour disturbances of 1937 emerged a
clear challenge to the existing order. The British government’s
response assisted this successful challenge. The West Indies
Royal Commission (Moyne Commission), dispatched in 1938 to
report on social and economic conditions in the British West
Indies, endorsed some of the political and social reforms that
were advocated by the leaders of the new mass organizations,
particularly the full legalization of trade unions and the
extension of the political franchise. The implementation of
these reforms during the 1940s provided the essential base for
the institutionalization of mass political organizations, which
became the principal means through which the elite’s political
power was curtailed. In Barbados black political leaders gained
ascendancy by 1944, universal adult suffrage was adopted in
1950, and full internal self-government was achieved in 1961.
Barbados since independence
Barbados became independent on Nov. 30, 1966, after joining
the ill-fated West Indies Federation (1958–62). By then the
economy was expanding and diversifying, mainly as a result of
the policies pursued by the governments formed after the
planter-merchant elite lost power.
Barbados is a member of the Commonwealth and continues to
play a leading role in the establishment of regional
cooperation. In 1968 Errol Barrow, who served as prime minister
in 1966–76 and 1986–87, helped form the Caribbean Free Trade
Association, which became the Caribbean Community and Common
Market (Caricom) in 1973. The island has also established close
ties with countries elsewhere in the developing world.
Throughout the postindependence period, Barbados has had one
of the most stable political systems in the English-speaking
Caribbean. The Democratic Labour Party (DLP) led the country
into independence and continued in office until 1976.
Thereafter, in free and fair elections held at regular
intervals, the DLP and the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) have
alternated in leading the government.
Christopher Stewart Jackson
Woodville K. Marshall
Anthony De Vere Phillips