Anguilla (/æŋˈɡwɪlə/ang-GWIL-ə) is aBritish Overseas Territory in theCaribbean.[6] It is one of the most northerly of theLeeward Islands in theLesser Antilles, lying east ofPuerto Rico and theVirgin Islands and directly north ofSaint Martin.[7] The territory consists of the main island of Anguilla, approximately 16 miles (26 kilometres) long by 3 miles (5 km) wide at its widest point, together with a number of much smaller islands andcays with no permanent population. The territory's capital isThe Valley.[8] The total land area of the territory is 35 square miles (91 km2),[9] with a population of approximately 15,753[2][3] (2021).
The nativeArawak name for the island wasMalliouhana.[7]
In reference to the island's shape, the Italiananguilla, meaning "eel" (in turn, from the Latin diminutive ofanguis, "snake") was used as its name.[8][10][11][12] Anguillan tradition holds thatChristopher Columbus named the island.[13]
Wallblake House, a plantation house thought to be the oldest building in Anguilla
Anguilla was first settled by Indigenous Amerindian peoples who migrated from South America.[7] The earliest Native American artefacts found on Anguilla have been dated to around 1300 BC; remains of settlements date from AD 600.[14][15]There are two knownpetroglyph sites in Anguilla: Big Spring and Fountain Cavern. The rock ledges of Big Spring contain more than 100 petroglyphs (dating back to AD 600–1200), the majority consisting of three indentations that form faces.[16]
Precisely when Anguilla was first seen by Europeans is uncertain: some sources claim that Columbus sighted the island during his second voyage in 1493, while others state that the first European explorer was theFrench Huguenot nobleman and merchantRené Goulaine de Laudonnière in 1564.[15] TheDutch West India Company established a fort on the island in 1631. However, the Company later withdrew after its fort was destroyed by the Spanish in 1633.[17]
Traditional accounts state that Anguilla was first colonised byEnglish settlers fromSaint Kitts beginning in 1650.[10][18][19] The settlers focused on planting tobacco, and to a lesser extent cotton.[7] The French temporarily took over the island in 1666 but returned it to English control under the terms of theTreaty of Breda the next year.[7] Major John Scott, who visited in September 1667, wrote of leaving the island "in good condition" and noted that in July 1668, "200 or 300 people fled thither in time of war".[20] The French attacked again in 1688,1745 and 1798, causing much destruction but failing to capture the island.[7][15]
It is likely that the early European settlers brought enslaved Africans with them. Historians confirm thatAfrican slaves lived in the region in the early 17th century, such as slaves fromSenegal living on St Kitts in the mid-1600s.[21] By 1672 a slave depot existed on the island ofNevis, serving theLeeward Islands.[22] While the time of African arrival in Anguilla is difficult to place precisely, archival evidence indicates a substantial African presence of at least 100 enslaved people by 1683; these seem to have come from Central Africa as well as West Africa.[23] The slaves were forced to work on the sugar plantations which had begun to replace tobacco as Anguilla's main crop.[24] Over time, the African slaves and their descendants came to vastly outnumber the white settlers.[24] The African slave trade was eventually terminated within the British Empire in 1807, and slavery outlawed completely in 1834.[24] Many planters subsequently sold up or left the island.[24]
During the early colonial period, Anguilla was administered by the British through Antigua; in 1825, it was placed under the administrative control of nearby Saint Kitts.[15] Anguilla was federated with St Kitts and Nevis in 1882, against the wishes of many Anguillans.[7] Economic stagnation, and the severe effects of several droughts in the 1890s and later theGreat Depression of the 1930s led many Anguillans to emigrate for better prospects elsewhere.[7]
Flag of the short-lived Republic of Anguilla
Full adult suffrage was introduced to Anguilla in 1952.[7] After a brief period as part of theWest Indies Federation (1958–1962), the island of Anguilla became part of theassociated state ofSaint Kitts-Nevis-Anguilla with full internal autonomy in 1967.[25] However many Anguillans had no wish to be a part of this union, and resented the dominance of St Kitts within it. On 30 May 1967 Anguillans forcibly ejected the St Kitts police force from the island and declared their separation from St Kitts following areferendum.[26][7][27] The events, led byAtlin Harrigan[28] andRonald Webster among others, became known as the Anguillan Revolution; its goal was not independence per se, but rather independence from Saint Kitts and Nevis and a return to being a British colony.
An aerial view of the western portion of the island of Anguilla. The Blowing Point ferry terminal is visible in the lower right, as are (right to left) Shaddick Point, Rendezvous Bay, Cove Bay and Maundays Bay.
Anguilla is a flat, low-lying island ofcoral andlimestone in theCaribbean Sea, measuring some 16 miles (26 km) long and 3.5 miles (6 km) in width.[7] It lies to the east ofPuerto Rico and theVirgin Islands and directly north ofSaint Martin, separated from that island by theAnguilla Channel.[7][8] The soil is generally thin and poor, supporting scrub, tropical and forest vegetation.[8] The terrain is generally low-lying, with the highest terrain located in the vicinity of The Valley;Crocus Hill, Anguilla's highest peak at 240 feet (73 m), lies in the western regions of the town.[8]
Anguilla is noted for its ecologically importantcoral reefs and beaches. Apart from the main island of Anguilla itself, the territory includes a number of other smaller islands andcays, mostly tiny and uninhabited:
In Anguilla,forest cover is around 61% of the total land area, equivalent to 5,500 hectares (ha) of forest in 2020, which was unchanged from 1990.[31][32]
Anguilla (and the wider Anguilla Bank) is of volcanic origin, lying on the Lesser Antilles volcanic island arc, andtuffs and volcaniclasticbreccias ofEocene age are exposed locally on the island.[33] The island was largely submerged during theMiocene, leading to the formation of the reefal limestone Anguilla Formation, which was subsequently tectonically uplifted and covers most of the island today.[33][34] Since the late Pleistocene, however, Anguilla has undergone tectonic subsidence at a rate of around 1–2 mm/yr.[35]
Map showing the location of Anguilla relative toSint Maarten/Saint Martin and other islands to its south
Northeastern trade winds keep this tropical island relatively cool and dry. Average annual temperature is 80 °F (27 °C).[9] July–October is its hottest period, December–February, its coolest.
Rainfall averages 35 inches (890 mm) annually,[9] although the figures vary from season to season and year to year. The island is subject to both sudden tropical storms and hurricanes, which occur in the period from July to November. The island suffered damage fromHurricane Luis in 1995, severe flooding 5 to 20 feet (1.5 to 6 metres) fromHurricane Lenny in 1999 and severe damage fromHurricane Irma in 2017, which remains the most powerful hurricane to hit the island.[36][37]
As a British overseas territory, the UK is responsible for Anguilla's military defence,[7][8] although there are no activegarrisons or armed forces present in the territory. Since 2020, theRoyal Navy has forward-deployed the offshore patrol vesselHMSMedway long-term to the Caribbean for patrol and sovereignty protection duties.[38] In October 2023, the destroyerHMS Dauntless (which had temporarily replacedMedway on her normal Caribbean tasking), visited the territory in order to assist local authorities in preparing for the climax of the hurricane season.[39]
The majority of residents (90.08%) are of West African ancestry, most of whom are the descendants of enslaved people transported from Africa.[7] Minorities include whites at 3.74% and people of mixed race at 4.65% (figures from 2001 census). Of the population, 72% is Anguillan while 28% is non-Anguillan (2001 census). Of the non-Anguillan population, many are citizens of the United States, United Kingdom,St Kitts & Nevis, theDominican Republic, andJamaica.[40]
The years 2006 and 2007 saw an influx of large numbers of Chinese, Indian andMexican workers, brought in as labour for major tourist developments due to the local population not being large enough to support the labour requirements.[41]
Christian churches did not have a consistent or strong presence during the initial period of English colonisation; spiritual and religious practices of Europeans and Africans tended to reflect their regional origins. As early as 1813, Christian ministers formally ministered to enslaved Africans and promoted literacy among converts.[42] TheWesleyan (Methodist)Missionary Society of England built churches and schools from 1817.[43]
Today most people in Anguilla speak a British-influenced variety of standard English.[8] Other languages are also spoken on the island, including varieties of Spanish, Chinese and the languages of other immigrant communities. However, the most common language other than Standard English is the island's own English-lexifier Creole language (not to be confused withAntillean Creole ('French Creole'), spoken in French islands such asMartinique andGuadeloupe). It is referred to locally by terms such as "dialect" (pronounced "dialek"), Anguilla Talk or "Anguillian".[47] It has its main roots in early varieties of English and West African languages, and is similar to the dialects spoken in English-speaking islands throughout the Eastern Caribbean in terms of its structural features.[48]
Linguists who are interested in the origins of Anguillan and other Caribbean Creoles point out that some of its grammatical features can be traced to African languages while others can be traced to European languages. Three areas have been identified as significant for the identification of the linguistic origins of those forced migrants who arrived before 1710: theGold Coast, theSlave Coast and theWindward Coast.[49]
Sociohistorical information from Anguilla's archives suggest that Africans and Europeans formed two distinct, but perhaps overlapping speech communities in the early phases of the island's colonisation. "Anguillian" is believed to have emerged as the language of the masses as time passed, slavery was abolished and locals began to see themselves as "belonging" to Anguillan society.[23]
The beach at the Cap Juluca resort on Maundays BaySandy Ground beach
The island's cultural history begins with the nativeTaino,Arawak andCarib. Their artefacts have been found around the island, telling of life before European settlers arrived.[55]
Anguillan culture has also been built through immigration. Many European families have moved to the island and have impacted the formalities of the Anguillan people.
Similar to nearby islands, Anguillans geography and location require a cultural reliance on the ocean. The island's abundance of sea life has led to the incorporation of many fish and crustacean into daily life. They have become a part of the local cuisine, opened up opportunities for ecotourism, and introduced celebrations such as Lobster Fest and boat races.
As throughout theCaribbean, holidays are a cultural fixture. Anguilla's most important holidays are of historic as much as cultural importance – particularly the anniversary of the emancipation (previously August Monday in the Park), celebrated as the Summer Festival, or Carnival,[7] the sailboat races, and Lobster Fest. British festivities, such as theKing's Birthday, are also celebrated.[56]
Music in Anguilla presents itself as an important part of its culture as well. All different genres of music are played at the celebrations mentioned above. This music represents the deep history of talent that Anguillans have displayed for decades.
The Anguilla National Trust (ANT) was established in 1989 and opened its current office in 1991 charged with the responsibility of preserving the heritage of the island, including its cultural heritage.[57]
Sunshine Shack Beachbar N Grill located in Rendezvous Bay
Anguillan cuisine is influenced by native Caribbean, West African, Spanish, French, and English cuisines.[59] Seafood is abundant, including prawns, shrimp, crab,spiny lobster,conch,mahi-mahi,red snapper,marlin, andgrouper.[59]Salt cod is a staple food eaten on its own and used in stews, casseroles and soups.[59] Livestock is limited due to the small size of the island and people there use poultry, pork, goat, and mutton, along with imported beef.[59] Goat is the most commonly eaten meat, used in a variety of dishes.[59] The official national food of Anguilla ispigeon peas and rice.[60]
A significant amount of the island's produce is imported due to limited land suitable for agriculture production; much of the soil is sandy and infertile.[59] The agriculture produce of Anguilla includes tomatoes,peppers, limes and othercitrus fruits, onion, garlic, squash, pigeon peas, andcallaloo. Starch staple foods include imported rice and other foods that are imported or locally grown, includingyams,[61] sweet potatoes[61] andbreadfruit.[59]
The Anguilla National Trust has programmes encouraging Anguillan writers and the preservation of the island's history. In 2015,Where I See The Sun – Contemporary Poetry in Anguilla A New Anthology byLasana M. Sekou was published by House of Nehesi Publishers.[62] Among the forty three poets in the collection are Rita Celestine-Carty,Bankie Banx, John T. Harrigan,Patricia J. Adams, Fabian Fahie, Dr. Oluwakemi Linda Banks, and Reuel Ben Lewi.[63]
Bankie Banx, noted reggae artist and poet from Anguilla who has built up an international following
Various Caribbean musical genres are popular on the island, such assoca andcalypso, but reggae most deeply roots itself in Anguillan society. Anguilla has produced many artists and groups in this genre.
Reggae has shown itself to be the most popular genre in Anguilla. The most successful of reggae artists originating in Anguilla come from the Banks family. Bankie "Banx" and his son Omari Banks have had many chart-topping songs listened to around the world. The two musicians continue to provide live performances across the island quite often.
British Dependency has also gained popularity throughout the 21st century. The band, who began in Anguilla, boasts the island's first female bass player. Performing alongside The Wailers on tour, British Dependency have earned attention from an American audience.
One of many musical events that take place in Anguilla is Moonsplash. Moonsplash is an annual reggae music festival that has occurred in Anguilla for 33 consecutive years and proves to be the oldest independent musical event in the Caribbean. Along with its longstanding history, it is the largest festival annually alongside carnival.
While not many soca and calypso artists have gained extreme popularity, the genres are still widely listened to across the island.
Boat racing has deep roots in Anguillan culture and is the national sport.[7] There are regular sailingregattas on national holidays, such as Carnival, which are contested by locally built and designed boats. These boats have names and have sponsors that print their logo on their sails.
Rugby union is represented in Anguilla by the Anguilla Eels RFC, who were formed in April 2006.[64] The Eels have been finalists in the St. Martin tournament in November 2006 and semi-finalists in 2007, 2008, 2009 and Champions in 2010. The Eels were formed in 2006 by Scottish club national second row Martin Welsh, Club Sponsor and President of the AERFC Ms. Jacquie Ruan, and Canadian standout Scrumhalf Mark Harris (Toronto Scottish RFC).
Shara Proctor, British Long Jump Silver Medalist at the World Championships in Beijing, first represented Anguilla in the event until 2010 when she began to represent Great Britain and England. Under the Anguillan Flag she achieved several medals in theNACAC games.[67]
Keith Connor, triple jumper, is also an Anguillan. He represented Great Britain and England and achieved several international titles including Commonwealth and European Games gold medals and an Olympic bronze medal. Connor later became Head Coach of Australia Athletics.[68]
Anguilla has habitat for theCuban tree frogs (Osteopilus septentrionalis).[69] Thered-footed tortoise (Chelonoidis carbonaria) is a species of tortoise found here, which originally came from South America.[55] Hurricanes in the mid-90s led to over-water dispersal of thegreen iguanas (Iguana iguana) to Anguilla.[70] All three animals are introductions.[55]
Anguilla's currency is theEast Caribbean dollar, though theUS dollar is also widely accepted.[7] The exchange rate is fixed to the US dollar at US$1 = EC$2.70.
The economy, and especially the tourism sector, suffered a setback in late 1995 due to the effects ofHurricane Luis in September. Hotels were hit particularly hard but a recovery occurred the following year. Another economic setback occurred during the aftermath ofHurricane Lenny in 2000.[72] Before the 2008 worldwide crisis, the economy of Anguilla was growing strongly, especially the tourism sector, which was driving major new developments in partnerships with multi-national companies. Anguilla's tourism industry received a major boost when it was selected to host the World Travel Awards in December 2014. Known as "the Oscars of the travel industry", the awards ceremony was held at theCuisinArt Resort and Spa and was hosted byVivica A. Fox. Anguilla was voted the World's Leading Luxury Island Destination from a short list of top-tier candidates such as St. Barts, the Maldives, and Mauritius.[73] The economy, including the tourism sector, suffered its biggest setback in late 2017 due to the effects ofHurricane Irma in September, which was the most powerful hurricane to hit the island and which caused major material damage of $320 million. A lot of infrastructure was damaged, which was repaired in 2018/19 and the economy began to recover in 2019. However, the onset of theCOVID-19 pandemic in 2020/21, caused a setback in the economy.[74][36][37]
Anguilla's financial system comprises seven banks,[75] two money services businesses, more than 40 company managers, more than 50 insurers, 12 brokers, more than 250 captive intermediaries, more than 50 mutual funds, and eight trust companies.[76]
Anguilla has become a populartax haven, having no capital gains, estate, profit, sales, or corporate taxes. In April 2011, faced with a mounting deficit, it introduced a 3% "Interim Stabilisation Levy", Anguilla's first form ofincome tax. Anguilla also has a 0.75% property tax.[77]
Anguilla aims to obtain 15% of its energy fromsolar power to become less reliant on expensive imported diesel. TheClimate & Development Knowledge Network is helping the government gather the information it needs to change the territory's legislation, so that it can integrate renewables into its grid.Barbados has also made good progress in switching to renewables, but many otherSmall Island Developing States are still at the early stages of planning how to integrate renewable energy into their grids. "For a small island we're very far ahead," said Beth Barry, Coordinator of the Anguilla Renewable Energy Office. "We've got an Energy Policy and a draft Climate Change policy and have been focusing efforts on the question ofsustainable energy supply for several years now. As a result, we have a lot of information we can share with other islands."[78]
According to aBloomberg report, due to a skyrocketing interest inartificial intelligence, Anguilla was expected to profit in 2023 from a surge in demand for web addresses ending with the country'stop-level domain.ai. The total number of registrations of .ai domain names had already doubled in 2022, and according toVince Cate, who has managed the top-level domain, Anguilla will bring in as much as $30 million in domain-registration fees for 2023.[79][needs update]
Anguilla is served byClayton J. Lloyd International Airport (prior to 4 July 2010 known as Wallblake Airport). The primary runway at the airport is 5,462 feet (1,665 m) in length and can accommodate moderate-sized aircraft. Regional scheduled passenger services connect to various other Caribbean islands via local airlines.
In December 2021 Anguilla inaugurated its first ever international regular commercial jet service flight to and from the mainland U.S.American Eagle operating on behalf ofAmerican Airlines began nonstopEmbraer 175 regional jet service to Anguilla from Miami[80] in an aviation watershed moment for Anguilla with the airport also currently attempting to attract other international air carriers.[citation needed]
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^abcd"Anguilla's History",The Anguilla House of Assembly Elections, Government of Anguilla, 2007, archived fromthe original on 13 August 2007, retrieved9 June 2015
^abWalicek, Don E. (2009). "The Founder Principle and Anguilla's Homestead Society,"Gradual Creolization: Studies Celebrating Jacques Arends, ed. by M. van den Berg, H. Cardoso, and R. Selbach. (Creole Language Library Series 34), Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 349–372.
^abCangialosi, John P.; Andrew S. Latto; Robbie J. Berg (9 March 2018).Hurricane Irma (AL112017)(PDF) (Report). Tropical Cyclone Report. National Hurricane Center.Archived(PDF) from the original on 31 August 2018. Retrieved12 March 2018.
^Walicek, Don E. (2011). "Christianity, Literacy, and Creolization in Nineteenth-Century Anguilla". InAnansi's Defiant Webs, Contact, Continuity, Convergence, and Complexity in the Language, Literatures and Cultures of the Greater Caribbean, ed. by N. Faraclas, R. Severing, et al., Willemstad: University of Curaçao and Fundashon pa Planifikashon di Idioma, pp. 181–189.
^Hodge, S. Wilfred (2003). "Bethel—the road—and due west" In Wilbert Forker (Ed.),Born in Slavery: A Story of Methodism in Anguilla and Its Influence in the Caribbean (pp. 20–29). Edinburgh: Dunedin Academic Press.
^Selassie I, PhD, W. Gabriel (2017).Introduction and Analysis: The Holy Piby, The Blackman's Bible. Los Angeles: Orunmilla, Inc. pp. xiii.ISBN978-0986381904.
^Singler, John. 1993. African influence upon Afro-American language varieties: A consideration of sociohistorical factors. In Africanisms in Afro-American language varieties, S. Mufwene and n. Condon (eds.), 235–253. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press.
Hakluyt, Richard (1904)."The second voyage unto Florida, made and written by Captaine Laudonniere, which fortified and inhabited there two Summers and one whole Winter".The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, & Discoveries of the English Nation Made by Sea or Over-land to the Remote and Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth at any time within the compasse of these 1600 Yeeres. Vol. IXMade to Florida and New Mexico, certeine Voyages made for the discovery of the Gulfe of California, and to the famous city of Mexico, with the Discourses and Letters depending upon the Voyages of this ninth Volume. Glasgow: James MacLehose & Sons..
Marten, Neil (1969).Their's Not to Reason Why: Study of the Anguillan Operations as Presented to Parliament. London: Conservative Political Centre.ISBN0-85070-437-5.
24Claimed in 1908; territory formed 1962; overlaps portions of Argentine and Chilean claims, borders not enforced but claim not renounced under theAntarctic Treaty.