pont guayamouc en construction.- passerelle en bois à la position du pont suspendu Auteur(s) : direction générale des travaux publics Éditeur(s) : direction générale des travaux publics direction générale des travaux publics Résumé : (Funding) Support for the development of the technical infrastructure and partner training provided by the United States Department of Education TICFIA program. plateau centrale,hinche 28 janvier 1935 Droits : All rights reserved by the source institution. 11938 | Partager |
The form of landing : our troops on the island of Cuba for the besieging of the Havanna, 1762. Auteur(s) : unknown Résumé : Show six men-of-war and a number of launches, in position for the attack. Havana (Cuba) Droits : All rights reserved by the source institution. 1998-515-1 | Partager |
Malouet Auteur(s) : Faivre-Duffer Éditeur(s) : Danguin Extrait de : Mémoires de Malouet. T. 1 (Frontispice) Résumé : Portrait de Pierre-Victor Malouet, planteur de sucre de Saint-Domingue et homme politique français dont l'activité s'exerce pendant la période de la Révolution de 1789. Il prit des positions favorables au maintien de l'esclavagisme. Description : Anglophone et anglophile, Malouet négocie puis signe le 19 février 1793 le Traité de Whitehall entre les anglais et les colons de Saint-Domingue, la Martinique et la Guadeloupe, qui permet à ces derniers de combattre la Révolution française et l'émancipation des noirs, afin de récupérer la fiscalité sur les plantations de sucre française (source Wikipédia). Droits : Domaine public Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/images/SCH132370010i1 SCH132370010i1 | Partager |
Des élèves de troisième s'expriment sur le français et le créole en Martinique Auteur(s) : Heeroma, David J.H. Barreteau, Daniel Année de publication : Description : Cette étude résulte d'une enquête sociolinguistique menée auprès d'élèves de troisième, en Martinique. Il s'agissait, d'une part, de préciser comment, dans une situation de diglossie, deux langues en présence (le créole et le français) sont pratiquées à l'oral (pratiques quotidiennes) et à l'écrit (lecture/écriture) et, d'autre part, de décrire les positions des élèves à l'égard de l'introduction du créole dans le système éducatif français. Droits : Ce document est protégé par le droit d'auteur. Il ne peut en aucun cas être utilisé sans l'autorisation de l'auteur et des ayant droits Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/recherch/HASH952f1810b0d88fa1654dc3 HASH952f1810b0d88fa1654dc3 | Partager |
Des élèves de troisième s'expriment sur le français et le créole en Martinique Auteur(s) : Barreteau, Daniel Heeroma, David J.H. Résumé : Cette étude résulte d'une enquête sociolinguistique menée auprès d'élèves de troisième, en Martinique. Il s’agissait, d’une part, de préciser comment, dans une situation de diglossie, deux langues en présence (le créole et le français) sont pratiquées à l’oral (pratiques quotidiennes) et à l’écrit (lecture/écriture) et, d’autre part, de décrire les positions des élèves à l’égard de l’introduction du créole dans le système éducatif français. Martinique Droits : Ce document est protégé par le droit d'auteur. Il ne peut en aucun cas être utilisé sans l'autorisation de l'auteur et des ayant droits recherch:HASH952f1810b0d88fa1654dc3 | Partager |
Breaking Sexual Silences : Readings and Discussions - Audio of the event Auteur(s) : Breaking Sexual Silences Project - University of Reading/ University of West Indies Éditeur(s) : Breaking Sexual Silences Project - University of Reading/ University of West Indies Breaking Sexual Silences Project - University of Reading/ University of West Indies ( Barbados ) Résumé : (Funding) Support for the development of the technical infrastructure and partner training provided by the United States Department of Education TICFIA program. In recent years, some of the most urgent and highly-charged public and political debates in the Caribbean have centred on sexual citizenship and gay rights. To date, popular cultural forms and the acute homophobia of the dancehall have dominated national and international attention. The very public exchanges between Caribbean musicians and western-based gay rights campaigners have given the region a reputation for homophobia, intolerance and hate crimes. This project seeks to shift the axes of these debates by drawing on a recent body of Caribbean creative writing that addresses issues of sexual self-determination and sexual diversity in a more positive and progressive way. It will make visible the possibilities for understanding sexual differences and the modes of reconciliation to be found in a literary archive. The project will also engage a group of Caribbean scholars across other disciplines to develop a new language for articulating sexual difference. It will stage a panel debate for a Caribbean public, as well as producing academic publications and supporting graduate work. Droits : All rights reserved by the source institution. | Partager |
Fort George overlooking the city of Saint George's, Grenada ; The Bryant Slides Collection ; The Bryant Slides Collection, Grenada Auteur(s) : Unknown ( Photographer ) Résumé : The slides were taken on collecting trips sponsored by the William L. Bryant Foundation, where books, music and art indigenous to the regions were gathered. The are organized by geographical location. In the distance overlooking the harbor is Fort George, Grenada’s oldest fort which was built by the French in 1705. Fort George continues (2013) to function as the headquarters for the Royal Grenada Police Force, which it has housed since 1854 when the Colonial Government took over control of the fort. Flying above the fort is the Grenada flag (1967-1974). In 1967 when Grenada became a British Associated State, it adopted a blue-yellow-green flag with a nutmeg in the center. The nutmeg represented Grenada’s position as the “Spice Isle” and is also featured on the Coat of Arms. This flag was used until 1974 when Grenada gained independence. Below the fort is a red roofed house with a balcony and red and white striped window awnings. To the left of the fort is a two story house which is partially on stilts. To the right of the fort is a view of Saint George’s, the capital of Grenada. Slide labeled Gren. 2 Grenada -- Caribbean region -- Saint George's, Saint George Droits : All rights to images are held by the respective holding institution. This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. For permission to reproduce images and/or for copyright information contact Special Collections & University Archives, University of Central Florida Libraries, Orlando, FL 32816 phone (407) 823-2576, email: speccoll@mail.ucf.edu CFM1972_01a Sheet 43:2 http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00029598/00001 | Partager |
Mots créoles et mots d'Hindi dans "The Swinging Bridge" de Ramabai Espinet Auteur(s) : Solbiac, Rodolphe Loading the player... Éditeur(s) : CASEE CRILLASH : Centre de recherches interdisciplinaires en lettres, langues, arts et sciences humaines CASEE CRILLASH : Centre de recherches interdisciplinaires en lettres, langues, arts et sciences humaines Résumé : Dans ce roman qui raconte le retour à Trinidad d'une canadienne, indo-trinidadienne, quadragénaire, Rodolphe Solbiac nous explique comment "la résurgence obsessionnelle de mots créoles et de mots d'Hindi constitue le point de départ de l'intrigue et annonce son articulation autour de la reconnotation positive de la créolisation et une récupération de la mémoire indienne". Rodolphe Solbiac nous montre la signification essentielle de cet élément de sémantique narrative : l'apaisement du mal-être indo-trinidadien nord-américain de son héroïne à travers la conciliation de son héritage indien et créole. Trinité-et-Tobago 21 Trinidad Droits : Document protégé par le droit d'auteur fichiers:HASHbfbbaaa3aa8c17a331c209 | Partager |
Correspondance secrette des colons députés à l'Assemblée constituante ; Correspondance secrète des colons députés à l'Assemblée constituante Auteur(s) : Saint-Domingue -- Députés France -- Assemblée nationale constituante (1789-1791) Éditeur(s) : De l'Impr. d'Anjubault, Maison de l'Assomption, Rue Honoré, no. 20 De l'Impr. d'Anjubault, Maison de l'Assomption, Rue Honoré, no. 20 ( À Paris ) Résumé : (Citation/Reference) Bissainthe, M. Dict. de bib. haïtienne, (Citation/Reference) Martin & Walter. Révolution française. Anonymes, Title from PDF t.p. (LLMC Digital, viewed on Oct. 4, 2011) Last printed date in text is 1790. Bissainthe gives date of publication with no imprint as 1790? in ii, 43 p. Another 1790 edition with imprint of Paris : Anjubault, 1790 (Bissainthe 5238) given with 31, [1] p. Martin & Walter gives date of publication of 1793. Bissainthe lists another 1790 edition with 31, [1] p. Symbol of Les amis des Noirs with "Ne suis-je pas ton frère?" and a slave in a supplicating position printed on title page. Haiti Haïti Haiti France America Haïti France Amérique France Haiti 755734910 ocn755734910 | Partager |
Du nom indigène des îles de l’archipel des Antilles Auteur(s) : L'Etang, Gerry Résumé : Construit à partir de l’examen systématique de la plupart des sources disponibles, cartes, archives, chroniques, ouvrages et relations des XVIème et XVIIème siècles, le présent travail se définit comme une présentation générale de la toponymie indigène des Antilles. Y sont présentées, quand elles existent, les tentatives de définition formulées par les auteurs modernes, ainsi toutes celles que nous permettent l’état actuel des connaissances relatives aux dialectes Arawak des Grandes et des Petites Antilles. Les îles sont distribuées ci-après selon l’ordre naturel de leur position le long de l’arc antillais, de la Floride au Venezuela. Droits : Ce document est protégé par le droit d'auteur. Il ne peut en aucun cas être utilisé sans l'autorisation de l'auteur et des ayant droits recherch:HASH01770dab508ee9674171765c | Partager |
La Guyane fut-elle un jour prospère ? Idéologie et propagande coloniale au XIXe siècle Auteur(s) : Lamaison, Denis Année de publication : Loading the player... Éditeur(s) : APHGG : Association des Professeurs d'Histoire-Géographie de Guyane SAAHG : Société des Amis des Archives de l'Histoire de la Guyane Extrait de : "La Guyane au temps de l'esclavage : discours, pratiques et représentations, XVIIe-XIXe siècle" : colloque international, du 16 au 19 novembre 2010. Université des Antilles et de la Guyane Description : Après une présentation de la colonie guyanaise au début du XIXe siècle, il est abordé la période prospère des années 1830. Suite à la chute du cours du roucou, de la girofle et du coton, il ne reste comme production agricole à forte valeur ajoutée que le sucre. En quelques années, la superficie sucrière est triplée, les habitations sont équipées de machine à vapeur... La balance commerciale devient alors pour la première et unique fois positive. Pour autant l'économie coloniale et esclavagiste ne fût pas prospère mais il fallait justifier la colonisation, rendre viable l'expansionnisme territorial. Siècle(s) traité(s) : 19 Droits : CC-BY-NC-ND - Attribution - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Pas de modification Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/fichiers/V11062 V11062 | Partager |
Mots créoles et mots d'Hindi dans "The Swinging Bridge" de Ramabai Espinet Auteur(s) : Solbiac, Rodolphe Année de publication : Loading the player... Éditeur(s) : CASEE : Cellule d'Aide Sociale et d'Epanouissement de l'Etudiant CRILLASH : Centre de Recherches Interdisciplinaires en Lettres, Langues, Arts et Sciences Humaines Extrait de : "Kréyol bo kampis-nou", le 28 octobre 2009. Université des Antilles et de la Guyane Description : Dans ce roman qui raconte le retour à Trinidad d'une canadienne, indo-trinidadienne, quadragénaire, Rodolphe Solbiac nous explique comment "la résurgence obsessionnelle de mots créoles et de mots d'Hindi constitue le point de départ de l'intrigue et annonce son articulation autour de la reconnotation positive de la créolisation et une récupération de la mémoire indienne". Rodolphe Solbiac nous montre la signification essentielle de cet élément de sémantique narrative : l'apaisement du mal-être indo-trinidadien nord-américain de son héroïne à travers la conciliation de son héritage indien et créole. Siècle(s) traité(s) : 21 Droits : CC-BY-NC-ND - Attribution - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Pas de modification Provenance : Université des Antilles et de la Guyane. Service commun de la documentation Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/fichiers/HASHbfbbaaa3aa8c17a331c209 HASHbfbbaaa3aa8c17a331c209 | Partager |
Breaking Sexual Silences : Readings and Discussions - Newspaper Clippings Auteur(s) : Breaking Sexual Silences Project Éditeur(s) : University of the West Indies Cave Hill/University of Reading University of the West Indies Cave Hill/University of Reading ( Barbados ) Résumé : (Funding) Support for the development of the technical infrastructure and partner training provided by the United States Department of Education TICFIA program. Outline In recent years, some of the most urgent and highly-charged public and political debates in the Caribbean have centred on sexual citizenship and gay rights. To date, popular cultural forms and the acute homophobia of the dancehall have dominated national and international attention. The very public exchanges between Caribbean musicians and western-based gay rights campaigners have given the region a reputation for homophobia, intolerance and hate crimes. This project seeks to shift the axes of these debates by drawing on a recent body of Caribbean creative writing that addresses issues of sexual self-determination and sexual diversity in a more positive and progressive way. It will make visible the possibilities for understanding sexual differences and the modes of reconciliation to be found in a literary archive. The project will also engage a group of Caribbean scholars across other disciplines to develop a new language for articulating sexual difference. It will stage a panel debate for a Caribbean public, as well as producing academic publications and supporting graduate work. Droits : All rights reserved by the source institution. | Partager |
De la responsabilisation de l'élève de lycée professionnel dans l'acte d'apprentissage. Noter et évaluer en langue vivante ; De la responsabilisation de l'élève de lycée professionnel dans l'acte d'apprentissage. Noter et évaluer en langue vivante Auteur(s) : Bernard Sinseau, Marie-Françoise Bernard Sinseau, Marie-Françoise Année de publication : Loading the player... Éditeur(s) : CRILLASH : Centre de Recherches Interdisciplinaires en Lettres, Langues, Arts et Sciences Humaines CRILLASH : Centre de Recherches Interdisciplinaires en Lettres, Langues, Arts et Sciences Humaines Extrait de : "L'évaluation en langues étrangères à l'école et/ou à l'université. Pour une démarche qualité : entre tensions, ruptures et continuités" : journée d'étude, le 27 mai 2015. Université des Antilles et de la Guyane Description : Les lycées professionnels accueillent des élèves en difficulté d'apprentissage, pour la plupart, dans des groupes hétérogènes. Les ressources et l'accompagnement institutionnel qui, s'ils leur permettent d'évaluer au plus juste les compétences linguistiques des élèves, ne résolvent pas la difficulté à rendre compte de la réalité de ces acquisitions par une notation chiffrée. Accompagner l'élève dans son projet implique une évaluation positive des connaissances et des procédures mais également une prise en compte de son degré d'autonomie et de responsabilité. Ainsi le moment de l'évaluation, positionnement linguistique différencié du moment de la notation, motivé par l'accompagnement personnalisé, est un levier dont l'élève est encouragé à se servir tant au sein de l'école que lors des périodes de formation en entreprise. A la lumière des instructions officielles et de situations observées, des modèles prenant en compte l'élève comme acteur de son apprentissage se dessinent. Siècle(s) traité(s) : 21 Droits : CC-BY-NC-ND - Attribution - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Pas de modification Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/fichiers/V15196 V15196 V15196 | Partager |
British Guiana 1898 : Punishment for Sodomy meted out to Nabi Baksh and Mohangoo on the Mersey ; Report from the Governor to the Colonial Office Auteur(s) : Walter Sendall Governor of British Guiana Résumé : (Donation) This report was donated by Gaiutra Bahadur who came across it in when doing research for her soon to be published book "Coolie Woman" "Coolie Woman" is scheduled to be published in 2012 by The University of Chicago Press in the US and Hurst & Co. in the UK. An excerpt from the book first appeared in the Spring 2011 issue of the U.S. literary magazine The Virginia Quarterly Review (http://www.vqronline.org/articles/2011/spring/bahadur-coolie/) and
was then reprinted in India in the Sept. 2011 issue of The Caravan magazine. The whole excerpt is up at the Caravan's Web site: http://www.caravanmagazine.in/Story/1058/Her-Middle-Passage.html (Internal Comments) Notes from the Report Arrived October 31, 1898 Dr. Arthur Harrison, SS G.H. Rock, Captain 673 landed 436 men // 438 embarked 191 women // 192 embarked 19 boys 19 girls 8 infants 9 births 4 deaths, one a baby born on board 54 marriages 37 served before in BG, 21 in other colonies * measles epidemic early in voyage until they crossed the Equator, 38 days in, almost daily there were heavy squalls with rain; misery of seasickness, vessel pitching and rolling heavily * got to sea July 14 - the very worst month of the whole year, having to face the full force of the southwest monsoon, Sujaria's would have been the same timing the coal of inferior quality and ran short, meaning water and cooked meals less for immigrants surgeon's journal: july 28: no 167 baijooporai, m, 20, was reported missing at 3 p.m. [cause of death in death list "lost over board" no. 178 lachman states that on 25th instant at sunset baijoo was in his berth suffering from seasickness; later on he saw him take his blanket, get up and go away... lachman states baijoo was a very quiet well-behaved man, shewing no signs of mental aberration, but was very seasick. no further information could be obtained regarding his disappearance. from the emigrants or crew. ... september 25: "No 696, Nobibux, m., 20 years, and No 351 Mohangu, m, 22 years, were caught about midnight by a sirdar named Rambocus committing sodomy. When brought up before the Captain and myself they both confessed their guilt. Nobibux stated that for the last ten years he had allowed men to commit acts of beastliness: he had no doubt induced Mohangu to do this criminal act. Nobibux was put in irons and Mohangu, after blistering his penis, was made to holystone [scrub the decks] from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily." [latitude 35.17 s. and longitude 22.10 e.] [nobibux handcuffed every night from sept 25 to landing on oct 31, as was a man who had jumped overboard and was rescued] criminal charges brought against two immigrants; in CO marginalia, discussion over the legality of the punishment and doubt expressed over whether there was any sodomy committed at all; indication there wasn't enough proof to prosecute: "the men should have been put in confinement and tried in British Guiana for an offense committed on the high seas on board a British vessel..."; fine the surgeon but should he be barred from re-employment? inspector general of police investigated; attorney general decided not to prosecute; IAG criticizes SS for punishing the two without fully and carefully enquiring into the case. violated Rule 165 relating to colonial emigration, which strictly prohibits harsh treatment of the people The contract with the surgeon superintendant enclosed shows that each was granted a pint of wine per day and stout. This surgeon was given 20 shillings per immigrant landed alive. for immigrants classified as invalids on embarking, if they died during voyage, he received a pro-rated amount, based on how long they lived; wife not allowed to go along. Arthur Harrison, SS, states on November 4, 1898: [on 25th Sept, when near the Cape of Good Hope, his compounder Abdul Wahed reported to him at 8 a.m. that he heard two men had committed sodomy during the night. he told the compounder to take the men to the hospital, where he would question them.] [witness, the sirdar Rambuccus, brought in with the two men. questioned in front of them, he said that he was on watch in between decks at midnight and "saw something unusual between these two men, they being under one blanket; he pulled off the blanket and saw them committing sodomy." he called the head sirdar at once. the prisoners denied it to the head sirdar but then later confessed. they were left in the charge of the hear sirdar for the rest of the night. captain also present at inquiry. while Rambuccus was giving this testimony, neither prisoner said anything.] [the head sirdar Salikram is then questioned. confirms being called as above. says he separated the men and "asked them why they were doing this wrong thing, that they at first denied it and afterwards they confessed they did it for pleasure."] [when questioned by SS, men at once confessed. Nabibux: "I have done it." Mohungu said same, "as far as I can remember. I cannot remember the words they used in confessing." Nabibux placed in irons fastened to a stanchion in the hospital. Mohangu placed in hospital and ordered to holystone from 6 a.m to 6 p.m. "I blistered the penis of Mohungu. I did so as a punishment as I thought he deserved it." did this right after enquiry concluded. the captain knew Harrison did this. "Mohungu was the man who committed the act on Nabibuccus. I blistered him as a preventitive, as he might have attempted the act again. I have known cases where the penis has been blistered as a preventitive treatment, in case of masturbation with boys."] [says he didn't see it as a crime committed against the laws of England, but "as a matter of discipline on board ship"; didn't examine their private parts for evidence] "Since this all occurred, it has come to my knowlegde that the head sirdar had threatend the two men to make them confess. Since I heard this, I have questioned them. Both denied the act and said Salikram had threatened to make them confess. My compounder's name is Abdul Wahed. I have heard from him since that the man Rambuccus who caught them had a spite against one of the men, owing to something that had occurred in the country Depot in India." ABDUL WAHED, THE CHIEF COMPOUNDER, STATES: [the inquiry occurred at about 8:30 p.m. on the 25th Sept.] "I heard Mohungu say he had put his penis in Nabibux' anus, and some days afterwards both men said to me that Rambux and Salikram had threatened to beat them throughout the voyage if they did not confess to having committed the sodomy." "Nabibux told me that he and Rambux had had a row in the Fizabad depot and he told me that Rambux had a spite against him." [the prisoners were under his charge in the hospital] [doesn't know what the depot quarrel was about. didn't ask. never noticed any ill feeling between Rambux and any of the men before this happened. never noticed Mohangu and Nabibux to be much in each other's company] RAMBUCCUS [an Ahir. says he knew Nabibuccus for a month in the Fyzabad depot, where he was a sirdar] "The men were under a platform sleeping. There were other coolies sleeping there too. The men were sleeping in their usual place... I noticed two men under one blanket. I have orders not to allow this, so I hauled the blanket off. Mohangu was on top of Nabibux who was lying on his back. Mahangu was lying on his stomach. I asked them what they were doing. They gave no reply. Mahangu came off. I did not see his private parts. His baba was loose. I did not notice the state of Nabibux' baba. He had it on, but I don't know whether the crupper of the baba was undone or not. I did not see his private parts. I did not see his anus. I did not see Mahungu's penis in Nabibux' anus, but from their position I suspected that they were committing sodomy... These two men always slept together during the voyage." SALIKRAM "They said Rambux hauled the blanket and shook them up while they were asleep. Rambuccus said they were committing sodomy but I don't think they were. They appeared to me just as if they had just been awakened. Their eyes seemed heavy with sleep." "I never knew either of these men before I met them onboard. Myself and Rambuccus do not agree. I never noticed Rambuccus and either of the two men have any quarrel. I never noticed Nabibux and Monungu keeping much company. I don't know whether these men were in the habit of sleeping alongside of one another. I never threatened these men to make them confess. I never heard the men confess they had done it. They did not confess before me." IN THE END: 50 pounds deducted from Harrison's gratuity for inflicting corporal punishment Droits : All rights reserved by the source institution. | Partager |
Jose Antonio Saco. Nació el 7 de mayo de 1797. - Murió el 26 de septiembre de 1879 Extrait de : Próceres, ensayos biográficos (p. 252) Résumé : Portrait de José Antonio Saco, historien journaliste et économiste cubain. Il s'est distingué par ses positions hostiles à l'esclavage et contre l'annexion de Cuba aux Etats-Unis. E, 1836, il fut élu député. Droits : Domaine public Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/images/IHE140220258i1 IHE140220258i1 | Partager |
Breaking Sexual Silences : Readings and Discussions - Pictures ; living and loving in different ways in the Caribbean Auteur(s) : Breaking Sexual Silences Project - University of Reading/ University of West Indies Éditeur(s) : Breaking Sexual Silences Project - University of Reading/ University of West Indies Breaking Sexual Silences Project - University of Reading/ University of West Indies ( Barbados ) Résumé : (Funding) Support for the development of the technical infrastructure and partner training provided by the United States Department of Education TICFIA program. In recent years, some of the most urgent and highly-charged public and political debates in the Caribbean have centred on sexual citizenship and gay rights. To date, popular cultural forms and the acute homophobia of the dancehall have dominated national and international attention. The very public exchanges between Caribbean musicians and western-based gay rights campaigners have given the region a reputation for homophobia, intolerance and hate crimes. This project seeks to shift the axes of these debates by drawing on a recent body of Caribbean creative writing that addresses issues of sexual self-determination and sexual diversity in a more positive and progressive way. It will make visible the possibilities for understanding sexual differences and the modes of reconciliation to be found in a literary archive. The project will also engage a group of Caribbean scholars across other disciplines to develop a new language for articulating sexual difference. It will stage a panel debate for a Caribbean public, as well as producing academic publications and supporting graduate work. Droits : All rights reserved by the source institution. | Partager |
A beach in Grenada ; The Bryant Slides Collection ; The Bryant Slides Collection, Grenada Auteur(s) : Unknown ( Photographer ) Résumé : The slides were taken on collecting trips sponsored by the William L. Bryant Foundation, where books, music and art indigenous to the regions were gathered. The are organized by geographical location. A beach filled with tourists and beach umbrellas in Grenada. Near the wooden buildings in the lower right of the image is the Grenadian flag (1967-1974). In 1967 when Grenada became a British Associated State, it adopted a blue-yellow-green flag with a nutmeg in the center. The nutmeg represented Grenada’s position as the “Spice Isle” and is also featured on the Coat of Arms. In the distance are houses along the mountain side. Slide labeled Gren. 13 Grenada -- Caribbean region Droits : All rights to images are held by the respective holding institution. This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. For permission to reproduce images and/or for copyright information contact Special Collections & University Archives, University of Central Florida Libraries, Orlando, FL 32816 phone (407) 823-2576, email: speccoll@mail.ucf.edu CFM1972_01a Sheet 43:13 http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00029610/00001 | Partager |