Paragraph: (History-Anthropology/oanc-HistoryJamaica-1.txt)
Sent 1: The earliest signs of people on Jamaica are the remains of the Arawak, an AmerIndian society that originated on the north coast of South America.
Sent 2: Arawak peoples migrated to various Caribbean islands, arriving in Jamaica by the beginning of the eighth century.
Sent 3: They were peaceful and lived by "slash-and-burn" farming.
Sent 4: For meat, they bred pigs and ate iguana, both native to the island.
Sent 5: They were highly skilled in such manual activities as thatching and weaving.
Sent 6: In fact, the hammock was an AmerIndian invention that remains with us today; it is an object which, more than any other, evokes an image of a warm sunny day on a tropical isle.
Sent 7: The Arawak left a legacy of paintings in places such as Runaway Caves near Discovery Bay, and shards of pottery found at their settlements near Nueva Sevilla and Spanish Town have added a little to our knowledge about them.
Sent 8: Over 200 Arawak sites have been identified, and it is said that when the Spanish arrived in Jamaica there were approximately 100,000 Arawak living on the island.
Sent 9: They called Jamaica "Xaymaca" ("land of wood and water").
Sent 10: Columbus and the Arrival of Europeans Columbus first arrived in Jamaica on 5 May 1494 at Discovery Bay, where there is now a small park in his honor.
Sent 11: He stayed for only a few days but returned in 1502, landing here when the ships of his fleet became unserviceable; he waited at St. Ann's Bay for help to arrive from Cuba.
Sent 12: After the death of Columbus in 1505, Jamaica became the property of his son Diego, who dispatched Don Juan de Esquivel to the island as Governor.
Sent 13: Esquivel arrived in 1510 and created a base called Nueva Sevilla near St. Ann's Bay, from which he hoped to colonize the rest of the island.
Sent 14: The Spanish immediately began subjugating the Arawak population, many of whom died under the yoke of oppression and of diseases carried by the Europeans.
Sent 15: A number of them committed suicide rather than live the life created for them by the Spanish.
Sent 16: The site of Nueva Sevilla proved to be unhealthy and mosquito-ridden, and in 1534 the Spanish founded Villa de la Vega, today known as Spanish Town.
Sent 17: Pig breeding was the main occupation of these early settlers, but they also planted sugar cane and other crops that required large numbers of laborers.
Sent 18: The number of Arawak had already fallen dramatically, so the Spanish began to import slaves from Africa to work the land; the first Africans arrived in 1517.
Question: Who waited at St. Ann's Bay for help to arrive from Cuba when his ships became unserviceable? (false/0)
Question: In what ways was the coming of the Europeans to Jamaica bad for the Arawak people? (true/1)
Question: Name some things the Arawak ate and invented. (false/2)
Question: When did the Arawak people first arrive in Jamaica? (false/3)
Question: Who called Jamaica "Xaymaca" ("land of wood and water")? (false/4)
Question: Approximately how many years did the AmerIndians live in Jamaica before the Spanish imported slaves from Africa? (false/5)
Question: What meat was consumed by both the Arawak and the European settlers of Jamaica? (true/6)
Question: On what island were Arawak pottery shards found? (false/7)
Question: Explain the decline in number of the Arawak and Spain's response to this decline. (false/8)
Question: Was the arrival of the Europeans a positive development for the Arawaks? (true/9)
Question: What are three causes of the Arawak's population decline? (true/10)
Question: What crops would the Spanish force the people they took from Africa to work? (false/11)
Question: For approximately how many years were the Arawak on Jamaica before the arrival of the Europeans? (false/12)
Question: Which group of people were highly skilled at weaving and thatching? (false/13)
Question: How many AmerIndians were said to be living in the land of "land of wood and water" by the time Columbus arrived? (false/14)
Question: What did the Arawak excel at prior to the coming of the Europeans? (true/15)
Question: After Esquival arrived, did the Spanish remain in Nueva Sevilla? (true/16)
Question: What labor intensive crop did the Spanish import slaves to grow? (true/17)
Question: What was the response to Spanish oppression by a large number of Arawak people? (false/18)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
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