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Saint Barthélemy

Coordinates: 17°54′N 62°50′W / 17.900°N 62.833°W / 17.900; -62.833

Saint Barthélemy (French: Saint-Barthélemy, [sɛ̃ baʁtelemi]), officially the Collectivité territoriale de Saint-Barthélemy,[5] also known as St. Barts (English)[6] or St. Barth (French), is an overseas collectivity of France[7] in the Caribbean. The island lies about 30 kilometres (19 mi) southeast of the island of Saint Martin;[8] it is northeast of the Dutch islands of Saba and Sint Eustatius, as well as north of the independent country of Saint Kitts and Nevis.

Saint Barthélemy
Saint-Barthélemy (French)
Territorial Collectivity of Saint Barthélemy
Collectivité de Saint-Barthélemy
Anthem: La Marseillaise
("The Marseillaise")
Territorial song: "L'Hymne à Saint-Barthélemy"
Location of Saint Barthélemy (circled in red)

in the Western Hemisphere

Sovereign state France
Colony established1648
Swedish purchase1 July 1784
Returned to France16 March 1878
Collectivity status22 February 2007
Capital
and largest city
Gustavia
Official languagesFrench
Recognised regional languages
Demonym(s)
  • Barthélemois
  • Saint-Barth
GovernmentDevolved parliamentary dependency
Emmanuel Macron
• Prefect
Sylvie Feucher[1]
Bruno Magras
LegislatureTerritorial Council
French Parliament
• Senate
1 senator (of 348)
1 seat shared with Saint Martin (of 577)
Area
• Total
25[note 1][2] km2 (9.7 sq mi)
• Water (%)
negligible
Population
• 2017[note 2][3] census
9,961 (not ranked)
• Density
398/km2 (1,030.8/sq mi) (not ranked)
GDP (nominal)2014 estimate
• Total
US$487 million (€367 million)[4]
• Per capita
US$51,735 (€38,994)[4]
CurrencyEuro (€) (EUR)
Time zoneUTC-4:00 (AST)
Driving sideright
Calling code+590
ISO 3166 code
Internet TLD

Saint Barthélemy was for many years a French commune forming part of Guadeloupe, which is an overseas region and department of France. In 2003 the island voted in favour of secession from Guadeloupe to form a separate overseas collectivity (collectivité d'outre-mer, abbreviated to COM) of France. The collectivity is one of four territories among the Leeward Islands in the northeastern Caribbean that make up the French West Indies, along with Saint Martin, Guadeloupe (200 kilometres (120 mi) southeast), and Martinique.

Saint Barthélemy, a volcanic island fully encircled by shallow reefs, has an area of 25 square kilometres (9.7 sq mi)[note 3][2] and a population of 9,961 at the Jan. 2017 census.[3] Its capital is Gustavia,[9] which also contains the main harbour. It is the only Caribbean island that was a Swedish colony for any significant length of time (before the end of the Napoleonic Wars, Guadeloupe came under Swedish rule for a year before the Treaty of Paris). It remained so for nearly a century before it returned to French rule after a referendum. Symbolism from the Swedish national arms, the Three Crowns, still appears in the island's coat of arms. The language, cuisine, and culture, however, are distinctly French.[citation needed] The island is a popular tourist destination during the winter holiday season, geared towards the high-end, luxury tourist market.

Etymology

The island was named by Christopher Columbus for his younger brother Bartholomew Columbus in 1493.[7]

History

Early period

Before European contact the island was possibly frequented by Eastern Caribbean Taíno and Arawak people, who called the island 'Ouanalao',[10] though it is believed that the island was not inhabited permanently due to its poor water sources and soil.[note 4] Christopher Columbus was the first European to encounter the island in 1493.[10] Sporadic visits continued for the next hundred years until formal colonisation began taking shape.[9]

17th century

By 1648 the island was settled by the French, encouraged by Phillippe de Longvilliers de Poincy, the lieutenant-governor of the French West India Company, and initially comprised about 50 to 60 settlers, later augmented by smaller numbers coming from St Kitts.[12][13] Led by Jacques Gentes, the new arrivals began cultivating cacao. However, the settlement was attacked by Caribs in 1656 and briefly abandoned.[10][12][14]

De Poincy was the dominant administrator in this period and a member of the Order of Saint John. He facilitated the transfer of ownership from the Compagnie des Îles de l'Amérique to the Order. He continued to rule the island until he died in 1660. Five years later, it was bought by the French West India Company along with the Order's other possessions in the Caribbean.[10][12] By 1674, the company was dissolved and the islands became part of the French Kingdom and added to the colony of Guadeloupe.[14][12]

18th century

 
Seal of the governor of the Swedish colony, 1784–1877
 
Historical quartiers (1801)

The island proved economically unsuccessful, and was subject to the activities of pirates (most notably Daniel Montbars aka 'Montbars the Exterminator'), as well as the British, who attacked the island in 1744.[10][12] Thus deeming it to be of little worth, King Louis XVI traded the island to Sweden in 1784 in return for trading privileges in Gothenburg.[15][12] This change of control saw progress and prosperity as the Swedes declared Gustavia (named after the Swedish king Gustav III who ruled at that time) a free port, convenient for trading by the Europeans for goods, including contraband material.[16][12][10]

19th century

Slavery was practised in St. Barthélemy under the Ordinance concerning the Police of Slaves and free Coloured People[17] of 1787. The last legally owned slaves in the Swedish colony of St. Barthélemy were granted their freedom by the state on 9 October 1847.[18][12] Since the island was not a plantation area, the freed slaves suffered economic hardships due to lack of opportunities for employment.[19][verification needed]

In 1852, a devastating hurricane[verification needed] hit the island and this was followed by a fire.[12] The economy suffered, and thus Sweden sought to relieve themselves of the island. In 1867, a volcano “nearly destroyed the island” as recorded in the Illustrated London News. [12] Following a referendum in 1877, Sweden sold the island back to France in 1878,[20] after which it was administered as part of Guadeloupe.[15][12]

 
View of St. Barthélemy

20th century

On 19 March 1946, the people of the island became French citizens with full rights.[10] With few economic prospects on the islands, many men from St. Barthélemy took jobs on Saint Thomas to support their families.[12] Organised tourism and hotels began in earnest in the 1960s and developed in the 1970s onwards, particularly after the building of the island's landing strip that can accommodate mid-sized aircraft.[12] The island soon became renowned as a high-class luxury destination, being frequented by numerous celebrities such as Greta Garbo, Howard Hughes, Benjamin de Rothschild, David Rockefeller, Lorne Michaels, Chevy Chase, Steve Martin, Jimmy Buffett and Johnny Hallyday.[10] The boost in tourist numbers has led to a rise in living standards and rapid modernisation.[12]

The island was not electrified until the 1980s.[21]

21st century

Saint Barthélemy was for many years a French commune forming part of Guadeloupe, which is an overseas region and department of France. Through a referendum in 2003, island residents sought separation from the administrative jurisdiction of Guadeloupe, and it was finally accomplished in 2007.[12] The island of Saint Barthélemy became an Overseas Collectivity (COM). A governing territorial council was elected for its administration, which has provided the island with a certain degree of autonomy. A senator represents the island in Paris. St. Barthélemy has retained its free port status.[22][23] Saint Barthélemy ceased being an outermost region and left the EU, to become an OCT, (Overseas Country or Territory) on 1 January 2012.

The island sustained damage from Hurricane Irma in September 2017 but recovered quickly, and by early 2018 transport and electricity were largely operational.[10]

Geography

 
Map showing the location of St. Barts relative to Sint Maarten/Saint Martin and St Kitts
 
Map of Saint-Barthélemy

Approximately 250 kilometres (160 mi) east of Puerto Rico and the nearer Virgin Islands, St. Barthélemy lies immediately southeast of the islands of Saint Martin and Anguilla. St. Barthélemy is separated from Saint Martin by the Saint-Barthélemy Channel. It lies northeast of Saba and St Eustatius, and north of St Kitts. Several smaller uninhabited islands lie offshore, the largest of which are Île Fourchue, Île Coco, Île Chevreau (Île Bonhomme), Île Frégate, Île Toc Vers, Île Tortue, Roche Plate (Table à Diable) and Mancel ou la Poule et les Poussins. There are numerous smaller islets, such as La Petite Islette, L'Îlet au Vent, Île Pelé, Île le Boulanger, Roche le Bœuf, Île Petit Jean, L'Âne Rouge, Les Gros Islets, La Baleine des Gros Islets, Pain de Sucre, Les Baleines du Pain de Sucre, Fourmis, Les Petit Saints, Roches Roubes, Les Baleines de Grand Fond and Les Grenadins.[24]

Marine areas

St. Barthélemy forms, with St. Martin, Anguilla, and Dog Island, a distinct group that lies upon the western edge of a flat bank of soundings composed chiefly of shells, sand, and coral. From St. Barthélemy, the bank extends east-southeast, ending in a small tongue or spit. It is separated from the main bank by a narrow length of deep water. East of the island, the edge of the bank lies 22 kilometres (14 miles) away.[24]

Grande Saline Bay provides temporary anchorage for small vessels while Colombier Bay, to the northwest, has a 4 fathoms patch near mid-entrance. In the bight of St. Jean Bay, there is a narrow cut through the reef.[24] The north and east sides of the island are fringed, to a short distance from the shore, by a visible coral reef. Reefs are mostly in shallow waters and are clearly visible. The coastal areas abound with beaches and many of these have offshore reefs, some of which are part of a marine reserve.[22]

The marine reserve, founded in 1999, covers more than 1,000 hectares (2,500 acres) of protected and vulnerable habitats, bays, and islands, and includes a zone that is restricted to scientific observations only.[25] As the sea surrounding the St. Barthélemy is rich in coral reefs and other precious marine life, the area has been declared a protected area since 1996. Environmental awareness is quite pronounced in St. Barthélemy and is promoted by the Environmental Commission.[26]

 
View of Gustavia
 
Shell Beach (Anse De Grand Galet)

There are as many as 22 public beaches (most beaches on St. Barthélémy are known as "Anse de...") of which 15 are considered suitable for swimming. They are categorized and divided into two groups, the leeward side (calm waters protected by the island itself) and the windward side (some of which are protected by hills and reefs). Windward beaches are popular for windsurfing. The beach of St Jean is suitable for water sports and facilities have been created for that purpose. The long beach at Lorient has shade and is a quiet beach as compared to St. Jean.[27]

Grand-cul-de-sac is a long beach with facilities for water sports. Anse de Flamands is a very wide sandy beach and Le petit Anse (The little beach), just to the north of Anse de Flamands is very safe and popular with the locals for their children. Anse Toiny beach is in a remote location and is considered suitable for experienced surfers as the water current is very strong.[27]

On the leeward side, the notable beaches are Anse du Gouverneur, Anse du Colombier which is only accessible by foot or by boat, Anse de Grand Galet (Shell Beach), and Anse de Grande Saline which is popular with nudists. The area around the salt ponds near the Anse de Grande Saline beach is marshy and is a habitat for tropical birds. Ile islet, an offshoot of the leeward side, has a white sandy beach.[27]

Shell Beach, also called Anse de Grand Galet (in French, 'Anse' means "cove" and Galet means "pebble"), is a beach in the southwestern part of Gustavia. A large number of sea shells are scattered on this beach. This beach was subject to the strong waves of hurricane Lenny in 1999, which resulted in the erosion of the sand. This necessitated supplementing the beach with new sand in 2000.[28]

On the north coast, on the far eastern side of the island, there are two lagoons called the Anse de Marigot[verification needed] and Anse du Grand Cul-de-Sac.[28]

 
Beach at the Anse de Grande Saline

Interior areas

Morne de Vitet, 286 metres (938 feet) in height, is the highest peak on the island.[7] Hills and valleys of varying topography cover the rest of the island.[22] Notable are Morne Rouge, Morne Criquet, Morne de Grand Fond, Morne de Dépoudré and Morne Lurin. The largest bodies of water on the island are Étang de Saint-Jean, Grande Saline, Grand Étang, and Petit Étang.

Populated areas

The population is spread among 40 quartiers, roughly corresponding to settlements. They are grouped into two paroisses (parishes):

 
Territorial subdivisions into two paroisses (parishes) with 40 quartiers
 
Satellite picture of the island

Climate

The island covers an area of 25 square kilometres (10 sq mi). The eastern side is wetter than the western. Although the climate is essentially arid, the rainfall does average 1,000 millimetres (40 inches) annually, but with considerable variation over the terrain. Summer is from May to November, which is also the rainy season. Winter from December to April is the dry season. Sunshine is very prominent for nearly the entire year and even during the rainy season. Humidity, however, is not very high due to the winds. The average temperature is around 25 °C (77 °F) with day temperatures rising to 32 °C (90 °F). The average high and low temperatures in January are 28 °C (82 °F) and 22 °C (72 °F), respectively, while in July they are 30 °C (86 °F) and 24 °C (75 °F). The lowest night temperature recorded is 13 °C (55 °F). The Caribbean sea waters in the vicinity generally maintain a temperature of about 27 °C (81 °F).[29]

Demographics

As of 2017, Saint-Barthélemy had a population of 9,961.[note 5][3] Residents, known as Saint-Barthélemois, are French citizens. Most of them are descendants of the first settlers, of Breton, Norman, Poitevin, Saintongeais and Angevin lineage. There is also a big community of Portuguese emigrants mainly from the North of Portugal, around 3000 people.[30] French is the native tongue of the population, though English is understood in most hotels and restaurants; a small population of Anglophones has been resident in Gustavia for many years.[citation needed] The St. Barthélemy French patois is spoken by some 500–700 people in the leeward portion of the island and is superficially related to Quebec French,[31][32][33] whereas Créole French is limited to the windward side. Unlike other populations in the Caribbean, language preference between the Créole and Patois is geographically, and not racially, determined.[34][page needed]

Historical population

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1671 336—    
1686 448+1.94%
1700 90−10.83%
1732 365+4.47%
1766 523+1.06%
1775 754+4.15%
1785 749−0.07%
1790 1,556+15.75%
1794 2,212+9.19%
1815 5,763+4.67%
1821 5,003−2.33%
1826 4,016−4.30%
1836 3,223−2.18%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1846 2,590−2.16%
1857 2,901+1.04%
1866 2,898−0.01%
1875 2,374−2.32%
1884 2,555+0.82%
1889 2,654+0.76%
1901 2,772+0.36%
1906 2,616−1.15%
1911 2,545−0.55%
1921 2,519−0.10%
1926 2,538+0.15%
1931 2,354−1.49%
1936 2,479+1.04%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1946 2,231−0.95%
1954 2,079−0.94%
1961 2,176+0.63%
1967 2,351+1.29%
1974 2,491+0.83%
1982 3,059+2.82%
1990 5,038+6.42%
1999 6,852+3.48%
2007 8,450+2.72%
2012 9,131+1.56%
2017 9,961+1.76%
Official figures from French and Swedish censuses.[35][36][37][3] Census date for censuses after 1999 is January 1.

Religion

 
Church of Our Lady of the Assumption, Gustavia (Église Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption de Gustavia)
 
Church of Our Lady of the Assumption, Lorient (Église Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption de Lorient)

The majority of the population of Saint Barthélemy is Christian; Saint Barthélemy is considered the most religiously homogeneous[38] territory in the French West Indies, with particular importance given to the Catholic Church.[38]

The territory of Saint-Barthélemy forms the parish of Our Lady of the Assumption (Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption), which in turn depends on the diocese of Basse-Terre and Pointe-à-Pitre ( diocèse de Basse-Terre et Pointe-à-Pitre) whose see is located in the cathedral of Our Lady of Guadeloupe (Notre-Dame-de-Guadeloupe).

The presbytery is located in the district of Lorient and dates from 1822. The building, including the masonry terrace, the staircases, the outbuildings and the gardens have been protected as historic monuments of France since March 28, 2002.[39]

There are two main Catholic churches both dedicated to Our Lady of the Assumption or Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption (the one in Lorient[40] and the one in Gustavia)[41] and a chapel of St. Catherine of Siena (Chapelle de Sainte Catherine de Sienne)[42] in Colombier.[43]

Saint Barthélemy is also part of the Diocese of the North Eastern Caribbean and Aruba (diocèse de la Caraïbe du Nord-Est et d'Aruba), which is under the Church of England (Church in the Province of the West Indies) that serves a small minority on the island that is centered in the Anglican Church of Saint Bartholomew (Église anglicane de Saint-Barthélemy) built between 1853 and 1855.[44] The small Pentecostal Christian community does not have a church building of its own and therefore offers religious services at St Barth's Beach Hotel.[45]

The main religious holidays are Christmas, the day of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary (August 15), All Saints' Day (November 1) and the feast of St. Bartholomew (patron saint of the island) on August 24.

Politics and government

Until 2007 the whole island of St. Barthélemy was a French commune (commune de Saint-Barthélemy), forming part of Guadeloupe which is an overseas région and overseas département of France. In 2003, the population voted through a referendum in favour of secession from Guadeloupe to form a separate overseas collectivity (collectivité d'outre-mer, or COM) of France.[46]

On 7 February 2007,[47] the French Parliament passed a bill granting COM status to both St. Barthélemy and (separately) to the neighbouring Saint Martin. The new status took effect on 15 July 2007, when the first territorial council was elected, according to the law.[48] The island has a president (elected every five years), a unicameral Territorial Council of nineteen members who are elected by popular vote and serve for five-year terms, and an executive council of seven members. Elections to these councils were first held on 1 July 2007 with the most recent election in 2017.

One senator represents the island in the Senate, while a deputy jointly elected with Saint Martin represents it in the National Assembly. St. Barthélemy became an overseas territory of the European Union on 1 January 2012,[49] but the island's inhabitants remain French citizens with EU status holding EU passports. France is responsible for the defence of the island and as such has stationed a security force on the island comprising six policemen and thirteen gendarmes (posted on a two-year term).[22]

The French State is represented by a Prefect appointed by the President on the advice of the Minister of the Interior. As a collectivity of France, the island's national anthem is La Marseillaise, though L'Hymne a St. Barthélemy is also used unofficially.[7]

Economy

 
Sailboats and yachts in St. Barts
 
A proportional representation of Saint Barthélemy exports, 2019

The economy of the island is based on tourism and duty-free retail.[50] The official currency of St. Barthélemy is the euro.[50]

It is estimated that the nominal GDP of Saint Martin amounted to 367 million euros in 2014 (US$487 million at 2014 exchanges rates; US$411 million at Feb. 2022 exchange rates).[4] In that same year the nominal GDP per capita of Saint Barthelemy was 38,994 euros (US$51,735 at 2014 exchanges rates; US$43,626 at Feb. 2022 exchange rates),[4] which was one of the highest GDP per capita in the Caribbean, more than double the GDP per capita of the nearby Collectivity of Saint Martin,[51] as well as 85% higher than Guadeloupe and 19% higher than metropolitan France's GDP per capita in 2014.[52]

Tourism

International investment and the wealth generated by tourists explain the high standard of living on the island.[50] Most of the food is imported from the United States or France.[50] Tourism attracts about 200,000 visitors every year.[50] As a result, there is a boom in house-building activity catering to the tourists and also to the permanent residents of the island.[citation needed]

St. Barthélemy has about 25 hotels, most with 15 rooms or fewer; the largest has 58 rooms.[citation needed] Hotels are classified in the traditional French manner; 3 Star, 4 Star and 4 Star Luxe. Of particular note are Eden Rock and Cheval Blanc. Hotel Le Toiny, the most expensive hotel on the island, has 12 rooms.

Most places of accommodation are in the form of private villas, of which there are some 400 available to rent on the island.[22] The island's tourism industry, though expensive, attracts 70,000 visitors every year to its hotels and villas; another 130,000 people arrive by boat. It also attracts a labour force from Portugal.[50] A team of analysts have analysed Airbnb’s Luxe offerings in 27 of their most popular luxury locations around the world and concluded that St Barths in the Caribbean is the top location for luxury Airbnb accommodation worldwide.[53]

The height of tourism is New Year's Eve, with celebrities and the wealthy converging on the island in yachts up to 170 metres (550 feet) in length for the occasion.[54] Corossol is noted for its handicrafts; weaving hats and bags from palm fronds is a low-income economic activity of the indigenous people.[55]

Wildlife

Flora

 
Vegetation at Baie de Saint-Jean

As the terrain is generally arid, the hills have mostly poor soil and support only cacti and succulent plants. During the rainy season, the area turns green with vegetation and grass. The eastern part of the island is greener as it receives more rainfall. A 1994 survey has revealed several hundred indigenous species of plants including the naturalized varieties of flora; some grow in irrigated areas while the dry areas are dominated by the cacti variety. Sea grapes and palm trees are a common sight with mangroves and shrubs surviving in the saline coastal swamps. Coconut palm was brought to the island from the Pacific islands. Important plants noted on the island include flamboyant trees, frangipanis, sabal palms, wild trumpet and Manchineel trees.[56]

Other trees of note include the royal palm, sea grape trees in the form of shrubs on the beaches, and as 5 to 7 metres (16 to 23 feet) trees in the interior areas of the island, aloe or aloe vera (brought from the Mediterranean),[57] the night blooming cereus, mamillaria nivosa, yellow prickly pear or barbary fig which was planted as barbed wire defences against invading British army in 1773, Mexican cactus, stapelia gigantea, golden trumpet or yellow bell which was originally from South America, bougainvillea and others.[22][58][59]

Fauna

Marine mammals are many, such as dolphins, porpoises, and whales, are seen here during the migration period from December until May. Turtles are a common sight along the coastline of the island. They are a protected species and in the endangered list. It is stated that it will take 15–50 years for this species to attain reproductive age. Though they live in the sea, the females come to the shore to lay eggs and are protected by private societies. Three species of turtles are particularly notable. These are: The leatherback sea turtles which have leather skin instead of a shell and are the largest of the type found here, sometimes measuring as much as 3 metres (10 feet) (average is about 1.5 m or 5 ft) and weighing about 450 (jellyfish is their favourite diet); the hawksbill turtles, which have hawk-like beaks and found near reefs, generally about 90 centimetres (35 inches) in diameter and weigh about 60 and their diet consists of crabs and snails; and the green turtles, herbivores which have rounded heads, generally about 90 centimetres (35 inches) in diameter and live amidst tall sea grasses.[22][60]

Avifauna

Avifauna in the wild, both native and migrating include brown pelican along the shoreline, magnificent frigatebirds with long wingspans of up to 1.8 metres (6'), green herons, snowy egrets, belted kingfishers; bananaquits; broad-winged hawks; two species of hummingbirds, the green-throated carib and Antillean crested hummingbird; and zenaida doves.[22][61]

Aquafauna

The marine life found here consists of anemones, urchins, sea cucumbers, and eels, which all live on the reefs along with turtles, conch and many varieties of marine fishes.[62] The marine aquafauna is rich in conch, which has pearly-pink shells. Its meat is a favourite food supplement item and their shells are a collector's item. Other species of fish that are recorded close to the shoreline in shallow waters are: sergeant majors, the blue chromis, brown chromis, surgeon fish; blue tangs and trumpet fish. On the shore are ghost crabs, which always live on the beach in small burrowed tunnels made of sand, and the hermit crabs, which live on land but lay eggs in water and which also eat garbage and sewerage. They spend some months in the sea during and after the hatching season.[63]

Marine Reserve

Saint-Barthélemy has a marine nature reserve, known as the Reserve Naturelle[64] that covers 1200 ha (4¾ sq.mi.), and is divided into 5 zones all around the island to form a network of protected areas. The Reserve includes the bays of Grand Cul de Sac, Colombier, Marigot, Petit Cul de Sac, and Petite Anse as well as waters around offshore rocks such as Les Gross Islets, Pain de Sucre, Tortue, and Forchue. The Reserve is designed to protect the islands' coral reefs, seagrass, and endangered marine species including sea turtles. The Reserve has two levels of protection, the yellow zones of protection where certain non-extractive activities, like snorkeling and boating, are allowed and the red zones of high protection where most activities including SCUBA are restricted to protect or recover marine life. Anchoring is prohibited in the Reserve and mooring buoys are in place in some of the protected bays like Colombier.

Landmarks and architecture

As well as Gustavia, the capital of St. Barthélemy, there are many notable places and monuments on the island which testify to the island's colonial history under the Spanish, Swedish, British, and French, and now a French territory.[28]

Gustavia

 
Gustavia Harbour

Gustavia is in a U-shaped cove facing the harbour on the west. The coastal arm of this cove is in a peninsula while the dockyard is on the east side.

When the British invaded the harbour town in 1744[verification needed], the town's architectural buildings were destroyed.[verification needed] Subsequently, new structures were built in the town around the harbour area[verification needed] and the Swedes had also further added to the architectural beauty of the town in 1785 with more buildings, when they had occupied the town. Earlier to their occupation, the port was known as "Carénage". The Swedes renamed it as Gustavia in honour of their king Gustav III. It was then their prime trading center. The port maintained a neutral stance since the Caribbean war was on in the 18th century. They used it as a trading post of contraband and the city of Gustavia prospered but this prosperity was short-lived.[23]

These buildings also underwent further destruction during the hurricanes and also by gutting in 1852. However, some monuments are still intact such as the residence of the then Swedish governor, now the town hall[verification needed]. The oldest colonial structure in the town is stated to be the bell tower (now without a bell) built in 1799, as part of a church (destroyed in the past), in the southeast end of the town on Rue Du Presbytere. Now, a large clock is installed in place of the bell.[28]

The road that runs parallel to the harbour face of the sea is called the Rue de la Republique and two other roads connect to the two arms of the U-shaped bay. The city has a network of roads, inherited from the Swedish period, that are laid in a grid pattern, which are either parallel or perpendicular to the three main roads that encompass the bay.[65]

Église anglicane de Gustavia

Église anglicane de Gustavia, the Saint-Bartholomew Anglican Church, is an important religious building in the town built in 1855 with stones brought from St Eustatius. It is on one of the town's most elegant roads, called the Rue du Centenaire. It has a bell tower. A rock wall encircles the church.[28]

Ancien presbytère de l'église catholique de Gustavia

Ancien presbytère de l'église catholique de Gustavia is the Catholic Church built in 1822 and is a replacement of the oldest church of the same name in Lorient.[verification needed] This church also has a bell tower which is separated from the main church and which rings loud and clear.[28]

Musée Territorial de St.-Barthélemy

Musée Territorial de St.-Barthélemy is a historical museum known as the "St. Barts Municipal Museum" also called the "Wall House" (musée – bibliothèque) in Gustavia, which is located on the far end of La Pointe. The museum is housed in an old stone house, a two-story building that has been refurbished. The island's history relating to the French, Swedish and British periods of occupation is well presented in the museum with photographs, maps, and paintings. Also on display are ancestral costumes, antique tools, models of Creole houses, and ancient fishing boats. It also houses a library.[28][66]

Gustavia Lighthouse

 
Gustavia Lighthouse

The 9 metres (30 ft) white tower of the Gustavia Lighthouse was built in 1961. Situated on the crest of a hill north of the town, its focal plane is 64 metres (210 ft) above the level of the sea. It flashes every 12 seconds, white, green, or red depending on direction. The round conical tower has a single red band at the top.[67]

Forts

Among the notable structures in the town are the three forts built by the Swedes for defense purposes. One of these forts, known as Fort Oscar (formerly Gustav Adolph), which overlooks the sea is located on the far side of La Pointe. However, the ruins have been replaced by a modern military building which now houses the local gendarmerie. The other fort known as Fort Karl now presents very few ruins. The third fort built by the Swedes is Fort Gustav, which is also seen in ruins strewn around the weather station and the Light House. The fort built in 1787 over a hill slope has ruins of ramparts, a guardhouse, a munitions depot, a wood-burning oven, and so forth.[28][66]

Savaku

A statue, "Savaku", representing the Arawak peoples is present at Saint-Jean.[68]

Education

The island's public preschools and primary schools, under the authority of the Académie de la Guadeloupe [fr], are [69]

  • École primaire Gustavia
  • École maternelle Gustavia

Private primary schools:[69]

  • École primaire privée Saint Joseph
  • École primaire privée Sainte Marie

Culture

Festivals and holidays

Some of the festivals held each year in St. Barthélemy are:

  • The St. Barts Music Festival is held every January, usually during the 2nd and 3rd weeks.
  • A French Carnival in February / March held for two weeks before Ash Wednesday and concluding with Ash Wednesday; on Ash Wednesday a black and white parade held at Shell Beach is the occasion of a notional burning of the image of Vaval, the Carnival King.
  • St. Barth Film Festival, held annually at the end of April, was established in 1996, and hosts Caribbean films for five days.[70]
  • Armistice Day on 8 May.
  • Abolition of Slavery Day on 27 May and 9 October.
  • Bastille Day on 14 July.
  • Victor Schoelcher Day on 21 July honouring Schoelcher, a French parliamentarian for his noble humanitarian act of abolishing slavery in French territory on 27 April 1848.
  • Assumption Day on 15 August.
  • Fête de Saint Barthélemy feast day of Saint Barthélemy on 24 August, in honour of the island's patron saint. Church bells are rung, boats are blessed and a regatta is held, followed by fireworks and a public ball.
  • Festival of Gustavia held in August, an occasion of dragnet fishing and partying.
  • All Saints Day on 1 November
  • Remembrance Day (Armistice Day).
  • Christmas Day on 25 December; and New Year's Eve on 31 December.[71]

Some other festivals held are the Festival Gastronomique (April) and Yacht Festival (May).[72] The national holidays observed are the Bastille Day and St. Barthélemy Day (day of adoption of French Constitution).[7] Feast of St Louis[verification needed] is held on 1 November when thousands of candles are lit in the evening hours, which is a public holiday. All Souls Day is observed on 2 November, and it is a public holiday.[73]

Music

The Caribbean, the birthplace of the calypso, méringue, soca, zouk and reggae music influence the culture tremendously.[74] The St. Barthélemy Music Festival[75] is a major international performing arts event held every year.

Cinema

Film director Dylan Verrechia is originally from St. Barthélemy.

Cuisine

French cuisine, West Indian cuisine, Creole cuisine, Italian cuisine and Asian cuisine are common in St. Barthélemy. The island has over 70 restaurants serving many dishes and others are a significant number of gourmet restaurants; many of the finest restaurants are located in the hotels.[76] There are also several snack restaurants which the French call "les snacks" or "les petits creux" which include sandwiches, pizzas, and salads.[77] In West Indian cuisine, steamed vegetables with fresh fish is common; Creole dishes tend to be spicier.[77] The island hosts gastronomic events throughout the year, with dishes such as spring roll of shrimp and bacon, fresh grilled lobster, Chinese noodle salad with coconut milk, and grilled beef fillet, etc.[78]

Restaurants such as Maya's which serves Creole dishes and L'Isola which serves Italian are some of the most popular restaurants on the island. Maya's also has a "to go" store where you can take out food on the beach or just take it home. [79]

In the early 1990s, the island had two cooking schools: the Saint Barts Cooking School which emphasizes classical French cuisine and Cooking in Paradise which emphasizes creole cuisine.[80]

Fashion

The traditional costume which is seen only among older women consists of starched white bonnets called kichnottes.[55]

Legend

A popular legend related to St. Barthélemy is of a seafarer hooligan looking to loot Spanish ships. French pirate Daniel Montbars, who was given the epithet "Montbars the Exterminator", took shelter in St. Barthélemy during his pirate operations and hid the loot in the sandy coves at Anse du Gouverneur.[81]

Sports

 
Kitesurfing at Baie de Saint-Jean

Rugby is a popular sport on the island. One of the major teams on the island is "Les Barracudas," named after the ferocious fish of the Caribbean. They often play teams from Anguilla and other surrounding islands.[82]

Gustavia is also known as a haven for yachting, with many events being held there each year. These include the St Barths Bucket Regatta, the Saint Barth's Cup and Les Voiles de St. Barth in April, and the International Regatta in May.[83] Deep sea fishing is also undertaken from the waterfront of Lorient, Flamands, and Corossol to fish for tuna, marlin, bonito, barracuda and wahoo.[84] St Barth Open Fishing tournament is held in July.[73]

The Transat AG2R Race, held every alternate year, is an event that originates in Concarneau in Brittany, France, reaching St. Barthélemy. It is a boat race with boats of 10-metre (33-foot) length with a single hull and with essential safety equipment. Each boat is navigated by two sailors. Kitesurfing and other water sports have also become popular on the island in recent years, especially at Grand Cul-de-Sac beach (Baie de Grand Cul de Sac) for windy sports as kitesurfing and Saint Jean Beach ( Baie de Saint Jean), Lorient, Toiny and Anse des Cayes for surfing. Tennis is also popular on the island and it has several tennis clubs, Tennis Clube de Flamboyant in Grand Cul-de-Sac, AJOE Tennis Club in Orient, and ASCO in Colombier.[85]

The Swedish Marathon Race, also called the Gustavialoppet, is held in December. Races of 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) and 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) are conducted when children, women, and men participate in the races.[73]

Transport

 
Private boat docked in St. Barts

St. Barthélemy has a small airport Gustaf III Airport with a runway length of 646 meter/2,119 ft. Airport codes: SBH (IATA), TFFJ (ICAO). The airport is served by small regional commercial aircraft and charters of up to 19 passengers, as well as helicopters. Passengers for destination St. Barth arrive on international commercial airlines jet airliners and large private jets mainly via the neighboring island Sint Maarten's Princess Juliana International Airport, which is a hub to connect with the regional carriers. Several international airlines and regional Caribbean airlines operate from this hub.

St. Barth has its own airline, St. Barth Commuter which in addition to the scheduled and charter flight services, provides medical transport services.

Many inter-island ferry services operate regularly between St. Martin and St. Barts.[86] There are three ferry services active at the moment, one is operated by Voyager (which leaves from Marigot) one day-trip ferry by the Edge (Leaving from Simpsons Bay) and one regular ferry service by the Great Bay Ferry from Philipsburg.

The narrow and congested roads, and difficulty in parking, have been an impetus for driving Smart cars.[87][verification needed]

Media

A weekly journal entitled Journal de St. Barth is published in the French language. Its English-language abridged version, St. Barth Weekly, is published only during the winter (for Anglophone tourists). Reflecting the island's popularity with the rich and famous, the high-fashion magazine L'Officiel publishes a seasonal local edition. Other tourist-related information is available at the airport and in the offices of the Tourist Authority.[22]

There are two local TV broadcasters and five FM radio channels (2021). The island has a fully integrated access telephone system with capability for the direct dialing on fixed and wireless systems. There is a 4G/LTE mobile service since 2019.[88]

Health facilities

The island has a small hospital, the Hôpital de Bruyn, in Gustavia with an adjacent diagnostic laboratory. There is also at least one private diagnostic facility.[89] Specialists in cardiology, general medicine, dentists, ENT, OB/GYN, paediatrics and rheumatology are also available. There are many pharmacies dispensing medicines. For more advanced facilities, patients go to Guadeloupe, United States, San Juan or France.[22]

Notable people

  • Eugénie Blanchard was the world's oldest living person (114 years, 261 days) at the time of her death on 4 November 2010. She was born on St. Barthélemy and spent most of her life on Curaçao and St. Barthélemy as a Catholic nun.[90]
  • Johnny Hallyday chose to be buried on St. Barthélemy in the Église de Lorient parish cemetery.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ 25 km² including the outlying uninhabited islets. 21 km² without the outlying islets.
  2. ^ Last population census in January 2017. The next population census in Saint Barthélemy will take place in January 2023.
  3. ^ 25 km² including the outlying uninhabited islets. 21 km² without the outlying islets.
  4. ^ There currently is not enough archeological evidence to give a more detailed description about the pre-Columbian presence.[11]
  5. ^ Last population census in January 2017. The next population census in Saint Barthélemy will take place in January 2023.[1]

References

  1. ^ Government of the French Republic (18 June 2018). "Décret du 18 juin 2018 portant nomination de la préfète déléguée auprès du représentant de l'Etat dans les collectivités de Saint-Barthélemy et de Saint-Martin - Mme DANIELO-FEUCHER (Sylvie)". legifrance.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  2. ^ a b INSEE. "2008, An 1 de la collectivitéde Saint-Barthélemy" (PDF) (in French). p. 7. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d INSEE. "Populations légales 2017 des départements et collectivités d'outre-mer" (in French). Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d "Estimation du Produit Intérieur Brut de Saint-Barthélemy en 2014" (PDF). IEDOM. June 2018. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  5. ^ Territorial Collectivity of Saint-Barthélemy
  6. ^ R. P. Raymond BRETON. Dictionnaire caraïbe-françois, Auxerre, Chez Gilles Bouquet, 1665.
  7. ^ a b c d e "The World Fact Book". Government. CIA. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  8. ^ Larsen, Peter A.; Genoways, Hugh H.; Pedersen, Scott C. (1 March 2006). "New records of bats from Saint Barthélemy, French West Indies / Nouvelles captures de chauve Souris de Saint Barthélemy, Antilles françaises". Mammalia. 70 (3–4): 321–325. doi:10.1515/MAMM.2006.056. ISSN 1864-1547. S2CID 56341953.
  9. ^ a b "Saint Barthelemy: People and Society". The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. 13 September 2012. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i "History of St. Barths Island". Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  11. ^ Sebastiaan Knippenberg, 'Much To Choose From: The Use and Distribution of Siliceous Stone in the Lesser Antilles' in Corinne L. Hofman, Anne van Duijvenbode (eds.), Communities in Contact: Essays in Archaeology, Ethnohistory & Ethnography of the Amerindian Circum-Caribbean (Sidestone Press, Leiden, 2011). p. 175.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Saint Barthelemy – History". Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  13. ^ Julianne Maher, 'Fishermen, Farmers, Traders: Language and Economic History on St. Barthélemy, French West Indies' in Language in Society, Vol. 25, No. 3 (Sep. 1996), pp. 374–406.
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  16. ^ Sullivan, pp. 22–23
  17. ^ Ordinance concerning the Police of Slaves and free Coloured People. Source: 'Mémoire St Barth', Saint-Barthélemy. Memoirestbarth.com; Francine M. Mayer, and Carolyn E. Fick, "Before and After Emancipation: Slaves and Free Coloreds of Saint-Barthélemy (French West Indies) in The 19th Century." Scandinavian Journal of History 1993 18 (4): 251–273.
  18. ^ « 9 octobre » (1847) Source: 'Mémoire St Barth', Saint-Barthélemy. Memoirestbarth.com (in French).
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  34. ^ CALVET, Louis-Jean et Robert Chaudenson. Saint-Barthélemy: une énigme linguistique, Paris, CIRELFA, Agence de la Francophonie, 1998, 165 p.
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External links

  • Mémoire St Barth
Government
  • Collectivity of Saint Barthélemy (official government website) (in French)
  • Comité Territorial du Tourisme (tourism board website) (in French)
Historical and botanical information
  • Mémoire St Barth: Saint-Barthelemy's history (slave trade, slavery, abolitions)
  • Histoire et aménagement linguistique à Saint-Barthélemy (in French)
  • Saint Barth Fauna & Flora
General information

saint, barthélemy, saint, barthélemy, redirects, here, other, uses, saint, barthélemy, disambiguation, coordinates, french, saint, barthélemy, baʁtelemi, officially, collectivité, territoriale, saint, barthélemy, also, known, barts, english, barth, french, ove. Saint Barthelemy redirects here For other uses see Saint Barthelemy disambiguation Coordinates 17 54 N 62 50 W 17 900 N 62 833 W 17 900 62 833 Saint Barthelemy French Saint Barthelemy sɛ baʁtelemi officially the Collectivite territoriale de Saint Barthelemy 5 also known as St Barts English 6 or St Barth French is an overseas collectivity of France 7 in the Caribbean The island lies about 30 kilometres 19 mi southeast of the island of Saint Martin 8 it is northeast of the Dutch islands of Saba and Sint Eustatius as well as north of the independent country of Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint BarthelemySaint Barthelemy French Overseas collectivity of FranceTerritorial Collectivity of Saint BarthelemyCollectivite de Saint BarthelemyFlagCoat of armsAnthem La Marseillaise The Marseillaise source track Territorial song L Hymne a Saint Barthelemy Location of Saint Barthelemy circled in red in the Western HemisphereSovereign state FranceColony established1648Swedish purchase1 July 1784Returned to France16 March 1878Collectivity status22 February 2007Capitaland largest cityGustaviaOfficial languagesFrenchRecognised regional languagesSaint Barthelemy FrenchAntillean CreoleDemonym s BarthelemoisSaint BarthGovernmentDevolved parliamentary dependency President of FranceEmmanuel Macron PrefectSylvie Feucher 1 President of the Territorial CouncilBruno MagrasLegislatureTerritorial CouncilFrench Parliament Senate1 senator of 348 National Assembly1 seat shared with Saint Martin of 577 Area Total25 note 1 2 km2 9 7 sq mi Water negligiblePopulation 2017 note 2 3 census9 961 not ranked Density398 km2 1 030 8 sq mi not ranked GDP nominal 2014 estimate TotalUS 487 million 367 million 4 Per capitaUS 51 735 38 994 4 CurrencyEuro EUR Time zoneUTC 4 00 AST Driving siderightCalling code 590ISO 3166 codeBLFR BLInternet TLD bl frSaint Barthelemy was for many years a French commune forming part of Guadeloupe which is an overseas region and department of France In 2003 the island voted in favour of secession from Guadeloupe to form a separate overseas collectivity collectivite d outre mer abbreviated to COM of France The collectivity is one of four territories among the Leeward Islands in the northeastern Caribbean that make up the French West Indies along with Saint Martin Guadeloupe 200 kilometres 120 mi southeast and Martinique Saint Barthelemy a volcanic island fully encircled by shallow reefs has an area of 25 square kilometres 9 7 sq mi note 3 2 and a population of 9 961 at the Jan 2017 census 3 Its capital is Gustavia 9 which also contains the main harbour It is the only Caribbean island that was a Swedish colony for any significant length of time before the end of the Napoleonic Wars Guadeloupe came under Swedish rule for a year before the Treaty of Paris It remained so for nearly a century before it returned to French rule after a referendum Symbolism from the Swedish national arms the Three Crowns still appears in the island s coat of arms The language cuisine and culture however are distinctly French citation needed The island is a popular tourist destination during the winter holiday season geared towards the high end luxury tourist market Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Early period 2 2 17th century 2 3 18th century 2 4 19th century 2 5 20th century 2 6 21st century 3 Geography 3 1 Marine areas 3 2 Interior areas 3 3 Populated areas 3 4 Climate 4 Demographics 4 1 Historical population 4 2 Religion 5 Politics and government 6 Economy 6 1 Tourism 7 Wildlife 7 1 Flora 7 2 Fauna 7 2 1 Avifauna 7 2 2 Aquafauna 7 3 Marine Reserve 8 Landmarks and architecture 8 1 Gustavia 8 1 1 Eglise anglicane de Gustavia 8 1 2 Ancien presbytere de l eglise catholique de Gustavia 8 1 3 Musee Territorial de St Barthelemy 8 1 4 Gustavia Lighthouse 8 2 Forts 8 3 Savaku 9 Education 10 Culture 10 1 Festivals and holidays 10 2 Music 10 3 Cinema 10 4 Cuisine 10 5 Fashion 10 6 Legend 11 Sports 12 Transport 13 Media 14 Health facilities 15 Notable people 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 External linksEtymology EditThe island was named by Christopher Columbus for his younger brother Bartholomew Columbus in 1493 7 History EditSee also French West Indies Early period Edit Before European contact the island was possibly frequented by Eastern Caribbean Taino and Arawak people who called the island Ouanalao 10 though it is believed that the island was not inhabited permanently due to its poor water sources and soil note 4 Christopher Columbus was the first European to encounter the island in 1493 10 Sporadic visits continued for the next hundred years until formal colonisation began taking shape 9 17th century Edit By 1648 the island was settled by the French encouraged by Phillippe de Longvilliers de Poincy the lieutenant governor of the French West India Company and initially comprised about 50 to 60 settlers later augmented by smaller numbers coming from St Kitts 12 13 Led by Jacques Gentes the new arrivals began cultivating cacao However the settlement was attacked by Caribs in 1656 and briefly abandoned 10 12 14 De Poincy was the dominant administrator in this period and a member of the Order of Saint John He facilitated the transfer of ownership from the Compagnie des Iles de l Amerique to the Order He continued to rule the island until he died in 1660 Five years later it was bought by the French West India Company along with the Order s other possessions in the Caribbean 10 12 By 1674 the company was dissolved and the islands became part of the French Kingdom and added to the colony of Guadeloupe 14 12 18th century Edit See also Swedish colony of Saint Barthelemy Seal of the governor of the Swedish colony 1784 1877 Historical quartiers 1801 The island proved economically unsuccessful and was subject to the activities of pirates most notably Daniel Montbars aka Montbars the Exterminator as well as the British who attacked the island in 1744 10 12 Thus deeming it to be of little worth King Louis XVI traded the island to Sweden in 1784 in return for trading privileges in Gothenburg 15 12 This change of control saw progress and prosperity as the Swedes declared Gustavia named after the Swedish king Gustav III who ruled at that time a free port convenient for trading by the Europeans for goods including contraband material 16 12 10 19th century Edit Slavery was practised in St Barthelemy under the Ordinance concerning the Police of Slaves and free Coloured People 17 of 1787 The last legally owned slaves in the Swedish colony of St Barthelemy were granted their freedom by the state on 9 October 1847 18 12 Since the island was not a plantation area the freed slaves suffered economic hardships due to lack of opportunities for employment 19 verification needed In 1852 a devastating hurricane verification needed hit the island and this was followed by a fire 12 The economy suffered and thus Sweden sought to relieve themselves of the island In 1867 a volcano nearly destroyed the island as recorded in the Illustrated London News 12 Following a referendum in 1877 Sweden sold the island back to France in 1878 20 after which it was administered as part of Guadeloupe 15 12 View of St Barthelemy 20th century Edit On 19 March 1946 the people of the island became French citizens with full rights 10 With few economic prospects on the islands many men from St Barthelemy took jobs on Saint Thomas to support their families 12 Organised tourism and hotels began in earnest in the 1960s and developed in the 1970s onwards particularly after the building of the island s landing strip that can accommodate mid sized aircraft 12 The island soon became renowned as a high class luxury destination being frequented by numerous celebrities such as Greta Garbo Howard Hughes Benjamin de Rothschild David Rockefeller Lorne Michaels Chevy Chase Steve Martin Jimmy Buffett and Johnny Hallyday 10 The boost in tourist numbers has led to a rise in living standards and rapid modernisation 12 The island was not electrified until the 1980s 21 21st century Edit Saint Barthelemy was for many years a French commune forming part of Guadeloupe which is an overseas region and department of France Through a referendum in 2003 island residents sought separation from the administrative jurisdiction of Guadeloupe and it was finally accomplished in 2007 12 The island of Saint Barthelemy became an Overseas Collectivity COM A governing territorial council was elected for its administration which has provided the island with a certain degree of autonomy A senator represents the island in Paris St Barthelemy has retained its free port status 22 23 Saint Barthelemy ceased being an outermost region and left the EU to become an OCT Overseas Country or Territory on 1 January 2012 The island sustained damage from Hurricane Irma in September 2017 but recovered quickly and by early 2018 transport and electricity were largely operational 10 Geography Edit Map showing the location of St Barts relative to Sint Maarten Saint Martin and St Kitts Map of Saint Barthelemy Approximately 250 kilometres 160 mi east of Puerto Rico and the nearer Virgin Islands St Barthelemy lies immediately southeast of the islands of Saint Martin and Anguilla St Barthelemy is separated from Saint Martin by the Saint Barthelemy Channel It lies northeast of Saba and St Eustatius and north of St Kitts Several smaller uninhabited islands lie offshore the largest of which are Ile Fourchue Ile Coco Ile Chevreau Ile Bonhomme Ile Fregate Ile Toc Vers Ile Tortue Roche Plate Table a Diable and Mancel ou la Poule et les Poussins There are numerous smaller islets such as La Petite Islette L Ilet au Vent Ile Pele Ile le Boulanger Roche le Bœuf Ile Petit Jean L Ane Rouge Les Gros Islets La Baleine des Gros Islets Pain de Sucre Les Baleines du Pain de Sucre Fourmis Les Petit Saints Roches Roubes Les Baleines de Grand Fond and Les Grenadins 24 Marine areas Edit St Barthelemy forms with St Martin Anguilla and Dog Island a distinct group that lies upon the western edge of a flat bank of soundings composed chiefly of shells sand and coral From St Barthelemy the bank extends east southeast ending in a small tongue or spit It is separated from the main bank by a narrow length of deep water East of the island the edge of the bank lies 22 kilometres 14 miles away 24 Grande Saline Bay provides temporary anchorage for small vessels while Colombier Bay to the northwest has a 4 fathoms patch near mid entrance In the bight of St Jean Bay there is a narrow cut through the reef 24 The north and east sides of the island are fringed to a short distance from the shore by a visible coral reef Reefs are mostly in shallow waters and are clearly visible The coastal areas abound with beaches and many of these have offshore reefs some of which are part of a marine reserve 22 The marine reserve founded in 1999 covers more than 1 000 hectares 2 500 acres of protected and vulnerable habitats bays and islands and includes a zone that is restricted to scientific observations only 25 As the sea surrounding the St Barthelemy is rich in coral reefs and other precious marine life the area has been declared a protected area since 1996 Environmental awareness is quite pronounced in St Barthelemy and is promoted by the Environmental Commission 26 View of Gustavia Shell Beach Anse De Grand Galet There are as many as 22 public beaches most beaches on St Barthelemy are known as Anse de of which 15 are considered suitable for swimming They are categorized and divided into two groups the leeward side calm waters protected by the island itself and the windward side some of which are protected by hills and reefs Windward beaches are popular for windsurfing The beach of St Jean is suitable for water sports and facilities have been created for that purpose The long beach at Lorient has shade and is a quiet beach as compared to St Jean 27 Grand cul de sac is a long beach with facilities for water sports Anse de Flamands is a very wide sandy beach and Le petit Anse The little beach just to the north of Anse de Flamands is very safe and popular with the locals for their children Anse Toiny beach is in a remote location and is considered suitable for experienced surfers as the water current is very strong 27 On the leeward side the notable beaches are Anse du Gouverneur Anse du Colombier which is only accessible by foot or by boat Anse de Grand Galet Shell Beach and Anse de Grande Saline which is popular with nudists The area around the salt ponds near the Anse de Grande Saline beach is marshy and is a habitat for tropical birds Ile islet an offshoot of the leeward side has a white sandy beach 27 Shell Beach also called Anse de Grand Galet in French Anse means cove and Galet means pebble is a beach in the southwestern part of Gustavia A large number of sea shells are scattered on this beach This beach was subject to the strong waves of hurricane Lenny in 1999 which resulted in the erosion of the sand This necessitated supplementing the beach with new sand in 2000 28 On the north coast on the far eastern side of the island there are two lagoons called the Anse de Marigot verification needed and Anse du Grand Cul de Sac 28 Beach at the Anse de Grande Saline Interior areas Edit Morne de Vitet 286 metres 938 feet in height is the highest peak on the island 7 Hills and valleys of varying topography cover the rest of the island 22 Notable are Morne Rouge Morne Criquet Morne de Grand Fond Morne de Depoudre and Morne Lurin The largest bodies of water on the island are Etang de Saint Jean Grande Saline Grand Etang and Petit Etang Populated areas Edit The population is spread among 40 quartiers roughly corresponding to settlements They are grouped into two paroisses parishes Territorial subdivisions into two paroisses parishes with 40 quartiers Satellite picture of the island Sous le Vent Leeward Au Vent Windward Nr Quartier Nr Quartier1234567891011121314151617181920 ColombierFlamandsTerre NeuveGrande VigieCorossolMerletteLa Grande MontagneAnse des LezardsAnse des CayesLe PalidorPublicCol de la TourmenteQuartier du RoiLe ChateauAeroportSaint JeanGustaviaLa PointeLurinCarenage 2122232425262728293031323334353637383940 Morne CriquetMorne de DepoudreGouverneurAnse du GouverneurMorne RougeGrande SalinePetite SalineLorientBarriere des Quatres VentsCamarucheGrand FondToinyDevetVitetGrand Cul de SacPointe MilouMont JeanMarigotAnse du Grand Cul de SacPetit Cul de SacClimate Edit The island covers an area of 25 square kilometres 10 sq mi The eastern side is wetter than the western Although the climate is essentially arid the rainfall does average 1 000 millimetres 40 inches annually but with considerable variation over the terrain Summer is from May to November which is also the rainy season Winter from December to April is the dry season Sunshine is very prominent for nearly the entire year and even during the rainy season Humidity however is not very high due to the winds The average temperature is around 25 C 77 F with day temperatures rising to 32 C 90 F The average high and low temperatures in January are 28 C 82 F and 22 C 72 F respectively while in July they are 30 C 86 F and 24 C 75 F The lowest night temperature recorded is 13 C 55 F The Caribbean sea waters in the vicinity generally maintain a temperature of about 27 C 81 F 29 Demographics EditAs of 2017 Saint Barthelemy had a population of 9 961 note 5 3 Residents known as Saint Barthelemois are French citizens Most of them are descendants of the first settlers of Breton Norman Poitevin Saintongeais and Angevin lineage There is also a big community of Portuguese emigrants mainly from the North of Portugal around 3000 people 30 French is the native tongue of the population though English is understood in most hotels and restaurants a small population of Anglophones has been resident in Gustavia for many years citation needed The St Barthelemy French patois is spoken by some 500 700 people in the leeward portion of the island and is superficially related to Quebec French 31 32 33 whereas Creole French is limited to the windward side Unlike other populations in the Caribbean language preference between the Creole and Patois is geographically and not racially determined 34 page needed Historical population Edit Historical populationYearPop p a 1671336 1686448 1 94 170090 10 83 1732365 4 47 1766523 1 06 1775754 4 15 1785749 0 07 17901 556 15 75 17942 212 9 19 18155 763 4 67 18215 003 2 33 18264 016 4 30 18363 223 2 18 YearPop p a 18462 590 2 16 18572 901 1 04 18662 898 0 01 18752 374 2 32 18842 555 0 82 18892 654 0 76 19012 772 0 36 19062 616 1 15 19112 545 0 55 19212 519 0 10 19262 538 0 15 19312 354 1 49 19362 479 1 04 YearPop p a 19462 231 0 95 19542 079 0 94 19612 176 0 63 19672 351 1 29 19742 491 0 83 19823 059 2 82 19905 038 6 42 19996 852 3 48 20078 450 2 72 20129 131 1 56 20179 961 1 76 Official figures from French and Swedish censuses 35 36 37 3 Census date for censuses after 1999 is January 1 Religion Edit Church of Our Lady of the Assumption Gustavia Eglise Notre Dame de l Assomption de Gustavia Church of Our Lady of the Assumption Lorient Eglise Notre Dame de l Assomption de Lorient The majority of the population of Saint Barthelemy is Christian Saint Barthelemy is considered the most religiously homogeneous 38 territory in the French West Indies with particular importance given to the Catholic Church 38 The territory of Saint Barthelemy forms the parish of Our Lady of the Assumption Notre Dame de l Assomption which in turn depends on the diocese of Basse Terre and Pointe a Pitre diocese de Basse Terre et Pointe a Pitre whose see is located in the cathedral of Our Lady of Guadeloupe Notre Dame de Guadeloupe The presbytery is located in the district of Lorient and dates from 1822 The building including the masonry terrace the staircases the outbuildings and the gardens have been protected as historic monuments of France since March 28 2002 39 There are two main Catholic churches both dedicated to Our Lady of the Assumption or Notre Dame de l Assomption the one in Lorient 40 and the one in Gustavia 41 and a chapel of St Catherine of Siena Chapelle de Sainte Catherine de Sienne 42 in Colombier 43 Saint Barthelemy is also part of the Diocese of the North Eastern Caribbean and Aruba diocese de la Caraibe du Nord Est et d Aruba which is under the Church of England Church in the Province of the West Indies that serves a small minority on the island that is centered in the Anglican Church of Saint Bartholomew Eglise anglicane de Saint Barthelemy built between 1853 and 1855 44 The small Pentecostal Christian community does not have a church building of its own and therefore offers religious services at St Barth s Beach Hotel 45 The main religious holidays are Christmas the day of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary August 15 All Saints Day November 1 and the feast of St Bartholomew patron saint of the island on August 24 Politics and government EditUntil 2007 the whole island of St Barthelemy was a French commune commune de Saint Barthelemy forming part of Guadeloupe which is an overseas region and overseas departement of France In 2003 the population voted through a referendum in favour of secession from Guadeloupe to form a separate overseas collectivity collectivite d outre mer or COM of France 46 On 7 February 2007 47 the French Parliament passed a bill granting COM status to both St Barthelemy and separately to the neighbouring Saint Martin The new status took effect on 15 July 2007 when the first territorial council was elected according to the law 48 The island has a president elected every five years a unicameral Territorial Council of nineteen members who are elected by popular vote and serve for five year terms and an executive council of seven members Elections to these councils were first held on 1 July 2007 with the most recent election in 2017 One senator represents the island in the Senate while a deputy jointly elected with Saint Martin represents it in the National Assembly St Barthelemy became an overseas territory of the European Union on 1 January 2012 49 but the island s inhabitants remain French citizens with EU status holding EU passports France is responsible for the defence of the island and as such has stationed a security force on the island comprising six policemen and thirteen gendarmes posted on a two year term 22 The French State is represented by a Prefect appointed by the President on the advice of the Minister of the Interior As a collectivity of France the island s national anthem is La Marseillaise though L Hymne a St Barthelemy is also used unofficially 7 Economy EditSee also Economy of France Sailboats and yachts in St Barts A proportional representation of Saint Barthelemy exports 2019 The economy of the island is based on tourism and duty free retail 50 The official currency of St Barthelemy is the euro 50 It is estimated that the nominal GDP of Saint Martin amounted to 367 million euros in 2014 US 487 million at 2014 exchanges rates US 411 million at Feb 2022 exchange rates 4 In that same year the nominal GDP per capita of Saint Barthelemy was 38 994 euros US 51 735 at 2014 exchanges rates US 43 626 at Feb 2022 exchange rates 4 which was one of the highest GDP per capita in the Caribbean more than double the GDP per capita of the nearby Collectivity of Saint Martin 51 as well as 85 higher than Guadeloupe and 19 higher than metropolitan France s GDP per capita in 2014 52 Tourism Edit International investment and the wealth generated by tourists explain the high standard of living on the island 50 Most of the food is imported from the United States or France 50 Tourism attracts about 200 000 visitors every year 50 As a result there is a boom in house building activity catering to the tourists and also to the permanent residents of the island citation needed St Barthelemy has about 25 hotels most with 15 rooms or fewer the largest has 58 rooms citation needed Hotels are classified in the traditional French manner 3 Star 4 Star and 4 Star Luxe Of particular note are Eden Rock and Cheval Blanc Hotel Le Toiny the most expensive hotel on the island has 12 rooms Most places of accommodation are in the form of private villas of which there are some 400 available to rent on the island 22 The island s tourism industry though expensive attracts 70 000 visitors every year to its hotels and villas another 130 000 people arrive by boat It also attracts a labour force from Portugal 50 A team of analysts have analysed Airbnb s Luxe offerings in 27 of their most popular luxury locations around the world and concluded that St Barths in the Caribbean is the top location for luxury Airbnb accommodation worldwide 53 The height of tourism is New Year s Eve with celebrities and the wealthy converging on the island in yachts up to 170 metres 550 feet in length for the occasion 54 Corossol is noted for its handicrafts weaving hats and bags from palm fronds is a low income economic activity of the indigenous people 55 Wildlife EditSee also Reserve naturelle nationale de Saint Barthelemy Flora Edit Vegetation at Baie de Saint Jean As the terrain is generally arid the hills have mostly poor soil and support only cacti and succulent plants During the rainy season the area turns green with vegetation and grass The eastern part of the island is greener as it receives more rainfall A 1994 survey has revealed several hundred indigenous species of plants including the naturalized varieties of flora some grow in irrigated areas while the dry areas are dominated by the cacti variety Sea grapes and palm trees are a common sight with mangroves and shrubs surviving in the saline coastal swamps Coconut palm was brought to the island from the Pacific islands Important plants noted on the island include flamboyant trees frangipanis sabal palms wild trumpet and Manchineel trees 56 Other trees of note include the royal palm sea grape trees in the form of shrubs on the beaches and as 5 to 7 metres 16 to 23 feet trees in the interior areas of the island aloe or aloe vera brought from the Mediterranean 57 the night blooming cereus mamillaria nivosa yellow prickly pear or barbary fig which was planted as barbed wire defences against invading British army in 1773 Mexican cactus stapelia gigantea golden trumpet or yellow bell which was originally from South America bougainvillea and others 22 58 59 Fauna Edit Marine mammals are many such as dolphins porpoises and whales are seen here during the migration period from December until May Turtles are a common sight along the coastline of the island They are a protected species and in the endangered list It is stated that it will take 15 50 years for this species to attain reproductive age Though they live in the sea the females come to the shore to lay eggs and are protected by private societies Three species of turtles are particularly notable These are The leatherback sea turtles which have leather skin instead of a shell and are the largest of the type found here sometimes measuring as much as 3 metres 10 feet average is about 1 5 m or 5 ft and weighing about 450 jellyfish is their favourite diet the hawksbill turtles which have hawk like beaks and found near reefs generally about 90 centimetres 35 inches in diameter and weigh about 60 and their diet consists of crabs and snails and the green turtles herbivores which have rounded heads generally about 90 centimetres 35 inches in diameter and live amidst tall sea grasses 22 60 Avifauna Edit Frigatebird Avifauna in the wild both native and migrating include brown pelican along the shoreline magnificent frigatebirds with long wingspans of up to 1 8 metres 6 green herons snowy egrets belted kingfishers bananaquits broad winged hawks two species of hummingbirds the green throated carib and Antillean crested hummingbird and zenaida doves 22 61 Aquafauna Edit Ghost crab The marine life found here consists of anemones urchins sea cucumbers and eels which all live on the reefs along with turtles conch and many varieties of marine fishes 62 The marine aquafauna is rich in conch which has pearly pink shells Its meat is a favourite food supplement item and their shells are a collector s item Other species of fish that are recorded close to the shoreline in shallow waters are sergeant majors the blue chromis brown chromis surgeon fish blue tangs and trumpet fish On the shore are ghost crabs which always live on the beach in small burrowed tunnels made of sand and the hermit crabs which live on land but lay eggs in water and which also eat garbage and sewerage They spend some months in the sea during and after the hatching season 63 Marine Reserve Edit Saint Barthelemy has a marine nature reserve known as the Reserve Naturelle 64 that covers 1200 ha 4 sq mi and is divided into 5 zones all around the island to form a network of protected areas The Reserve includes the bays of Grand Cul de Sac Colombier Marigot Petit Cul de Sac and Petite Anse as well as waters around offshore rocks such as Les Gross Islets Pain de Sucre Tortue and Forchue The Reserve is designed to protect the islands coral reefs seagrass and endangered marine species including sea turtles The Reserve has two levels of protection the yellow zones of protection where certain non extractive activities like snorkeling and boating are allowed and the red zones of high protection where most activities including SCUBA are restricted to protect or recover marine life Anchoring is prohibited in the Reserve and mooring buoys are in place in some of the protected bays like Colombier Landmarks and architecture EditAs well as Gustavia the capital of St Barthelemy there are many notable places and monuments on the island which testify to the island s colonial history under the Spanish Swedish British and French and now a French territory 28 Gustavia Edit Gustavia Harbour Gustavia is in a U shaped cove facing the harbour on the west The coastal arm of this cove is in a peninsula while the dockyard is on the east side When the British invaded the harbour town in 1744 verification needed the town s architectural buildings were destroyed verification needed Subsequently new structures were built in the town around the harbour area verification needed and the Swedes had also further added to the architectural beauty of the town in 1785 with more buildings when they had occupied the town Earlier to their occupation the port was known as Carenage The Swedes renamed it as Gustavia in honour of their king Gustav III It was then their prime trading center The port maintained a neutral stance since the Caribbean war was on in the 18th century They used it as a trading post of contraband and the city of Gustavia prospered but this prosperity was short lived 23 These buildings also underwent further destruction during the hurricanes and also by gutting in 1852 However some monuments are still intact such as the residence of the then Swedish governor now the town hall verification needed The oldest colonial structure in the town is stated to be the bell tower now without a bell built in 1799 as part of a church destroyed in the past in the southeast end of the town on Rue Du Presbytere Now a large clock is installed in place of the bell 28 The road that runs parallel to the harbour face of the sea is called the Rue de la Republique and two other roads connect to the two arms of the U shaped bay The city has a network of roads inherited from the Swedish period that are laid in a grid pattern which are either parallel or perpendicular to the three main roads that encompass the bay 65 Eglise anglicane de Gustavia Edit Eglise anglicane de Gustavia the Saint Bartholomew Anglican Church is an important religious building in the town built in 1855 with stones brought from St Eustatius It is on one of the town s most elegant roads called the Rue du Centenaire It has a bell tower A rock wall encircles the church 28 Ancien presbytere de l eglise catholique de Gustavia Edit Ancien presbytere de l eglise catholique de Gustavia is the Catholic Church built in 1822 and is a replacement of the oldest church of the same name in Lorient verification needed This church also has a bell tower which is separated from the main church and which rings loud and clear 28 Musee Territorial de St Barthelemy Edit Musee Territorial de St Barthelemy is a historical museum known as the St Barts Municipal Museum also called the Wall House musee bibliotheque in Gustavia which is located on the far end of La Pointe The museum is housed in an old stone house a two story building that has been refurbished The island s history relating to the French Swedish and British periods of occupation is well presented in the museum with photographs maps and paintings Also on display are ancestral costumes antique tools models of Creole houses and ancient fishing boats It also houses a library 28 66 Gustavia Lighthouse Edit Gustavia Lighthouse The 9 metres 30 ft white tower of the Gustavia Lighthouse was built in 1961 Situated on the crest of a hill north of the town its focal plane is 64 metres 210 ft above the level of the sea It flashes every 12 seconds white green or red depending on direction The round conical tower has a single red band at the top 67 Forts Edit Among the notable structures in the town are the three forts built by the Swedes for defense purposes One of these forts known as Fort Oscar formerly Gustav Adolph which overlooks the sea is located on the far side of La Pointe However the ruins have been replaced by a modern military building which now houses the local gendarmerie The other fort known as Fort Karl now presents very few ruins The third fort built by the Swedes is Fort Gustav which is also seen in ruins strewn around the weather station and the Light House The fort built in 1787 over a hill slope has ruins of ramparts a guardhouse a munitions depot a wood burning oven and so forth 28 66 Savaku Edit A statue Savaku representing the Arawak peoples is present at Saint Jean 68 Education EditThe island s public preschools and primary schools under the authority of the Academie de la Guadeloupe fr are 69 Ecole primaire Gustavia Ecole maternelle GustaviaPrivate primary schools 69 Ecole primaire privee Saint Joseph Ecole primaire privee Sainte MarieCulture EditFestivals and holidays Edit Some of the festivals held each year in St Barthelemy are The St Barts Music Festival is held every January usually during the 2nd and 3rd weeks A French Carnival in February March held for two weeks before Ash Wednesday and concluding with Ash Wednesday on Ash Wednesday a black and white parade held at Shell Beach is the occasion of a notional burning of the image of Vaval the Carnival King St Barth Film Festival held annually at the end of April was established in 1996 and hosts Caribbean films for five days 70 Armistice Day on 8 May Abolition of Slavery Day on 27 May and 9 October Bastille Day on 14 July Victor Schoelcher Day on 21 July honouring Schoelcher a French parliamentarian for his noble humanitarian act of abolishing slavery in French territory on 27 April 1848 Assumption Day on 15 August Fete de Saint Barthelemy feast day of Saint Barthelemy on 24 August in honour of the island s patron saint Church bells are rung boats are blessed and a regatta is held followed by fireworks and a public ball Festival of Gustavia held in August an occasion of dragnet fishing and partying All Saints Day on 1 November Remembrance Day Armistice Day Christmas Day on 25 December and New Year s Eve on 31 December 71 Some other festivals held are the Festival Gastronomique April and Yacht Festival May 72 The national holidays observed are the Bastille Day and St Barthelemy Day day of adoption of French Constitution 7 Feast of St Louis verification needed is held on 1 November when thousands of candles are lit in the evening hours which is a public holiday All Souls Day is observed on 2 November and it is a public holiday 73 Music Edit The Caribbean the birthplace of the calypso meringue soca zouk and reggae music influence the culture tremendously 74 The St Barthelemy Music Festival 75 is a major international performing arts event held every year Cinema Edit Film director Dylan Verrechia is originally from St Barthelemy Cuisine Edit French cuisine West Indian cuisine Creole cuisine Italian cuisine and Asian cuisine are common in St Barthelemy The island has over 70 restaurants serving many dishes and others are a significant number of gourmet restaurants many of the finest restaurants are located in the hotels 76 There are also several snack restaurants which the French call les snacks or les petits creux which include sandwiches pizzas and salads 77 In West Indian cuisine steamed vegetables with fresh fish is common Creole dishes tend to be spicier 77 The island hosts gastronomic events throughout the year with dishes such as spring roll of shrimp and bacon fresh grilled lobster Chinese noodle salad with coconut milk and grilled beef fillet etc 78 Restaurants such as Maya s which serves Creole dishes and L Isola which serves Italian are some of the most popular restaurants on the island Maya s also has a to go store where you can take out food on the beach or just take it home 79 In the early 1990s the island had two cooking schools the Saint Barts Cooking School which emphasizes classical French cuisine and Cooking in Paradise which emphasizes creole cuisine 80 Fashion Edit The traditional costume which is seen only among older women consists of starched white bonnets called kichnottes 55 Legend Edit A popular legend related to St Barthelemy is of a seafarer hooligan looking to loot Spanish ships French pirate Daniel Montbars who was given the epithet Montbars the Exterminator took shelter in St Barthelemy during his pirate operations and hid the loot in the sandy coves at Anse du Gouverneur 81 Sports EditFurther information Rugby union in Saint Barthelemy Kitesurfing at Baie de Saint Jean Rugby is a popular sport on the island One of the major teams on the island is Les Barracudas named after the ferocious fish of the Caribbean They often play teams from Anguilla and other surrounding islands 82 Gustavia is also known as a haven for yachting with many events being held there each year These include the St Barths Bucket Regatta the Saint Barth s Cup and Les Voiles de St Barth in April and the International Regatta in May 83 Deep sea fishing is also undertaken from the waterfront of Lorient Flamands and Corossol to fish for tuna marlin bonito barracuda and wahoo 84 St Barth Open Fishing tournament is held in July 73 The Transat AG2R Race held every alternate year is an event that originates in Concarneau in Brittany France reaching St Barthelemy It is a boat race with boats of 10 metre 33 foot length with a single hull and with essential safety equipment Each boat is navigated by two sailors Kitesurfing and other water sports have also become popular on the island in recent years especially at Grand Cul de Sac beach Baie de Grand Cul de Sac for windy sports as kitesurfing and Saint Jean Beach Baie de Saint Jean Lorient Toiny and Anse des Cayes for surfing Tennis is also popular on the island and it has several tennis clubs Tennis Clube de Flamboyant in Grand Cul de Sac AJOE Tennis Club in Orient and ASCO in Colombier 85 The Swedish Marathon Race also called the Gustavialoppet is held in December Races of 2 kilometres 1 2 mi and 12 kilometres 7 5 mi are conducted when children women and men participate in the races 73 Transport Edit Private boat docked in St Barts St Barthelemy has a small airport Gustaf III Airport with a runway length of 646 meter 2 119 ft Airport codes SBH IATA TFFJ ICAO The airport is served by small regional commercial aircraft and charters of up to 19 passengers as well as helicopters Passengers for destination St Barth arrive on international commercial airlines jet airliners and large private jets mainly via the neighboring island Sint Maarten s Princess Juliana International Airport which is a hub to connect with the regional carriers Several international airlines and regional Caribbean airlines operate from this hub St Barth has its own airline St Barth Commuter which in addition to the scheduled and charter flight services provides medical transport services Many inter island ferry services operate regularly between St Martin and St Barts 86 There are three ferry services active at the moment one is operated by Voyager which leaves from Marigot one day trip ferry by the Edge Leaving from Simpsons Bay and one regular ferry service by the Great Bay Ferry from Philipsburg The narrow and congested roads and difficulty in parking have been an impetus for driving Smart cars 87 verification needed Media EditA weekly journal entitled Journal de St Barth is published in the French language Its English language abridged version St Barth Weekly is published only during the winter for Anglophone tourists Reflecting the island s popularity with the rich and famous the high fashion magazine L Officiel publishes a seasonal local edition Other tourist related information is available at the airport and in the offices of the Tourist Authority 22 There are two local TV broadcasters and five FM radio channels 2021 The island has a fully integrated access telephone system with capability for the direct dialing on fixed and wireless systems There is a 4G LTE mobile service since 2019 88 Health facilities EditThe island has a small hospital the Hopital de Bruyn in Gustavia with an adjacent diagnostic laboratory There is also at least one private diagnostic facility 89 Specialists in cardiology general medicine dentists ENT OB GYN paediatrics and rheumatology are also available There are many pharmacies dispensing medicines For more advanced facilities patients go to Guadeloupe United States San Juan or France 22 Notable people EditEugenie Blanchard was the world s oldest living person 114 years 261 days at the time of her death on 4 November 2010 She was born on St Barthelemy and spent most of her life on Curacao and St Barthelemy as a Catholic nun 90 Johnny Hallyday chose to be buried on St Barthelemy in the Eglise de Lorient parish cemetery See also Edit Caribbean portal North America portal France portal Geography portalOutline of Saint Barthelemy Index of Saint Barthelemy related articlesNotes Edit 25 km including the outlying uninhabited islets 21 km without the outlying islets Last population census in January 2017 The next population census in Saint Barthelemy will take place in January 2023 25 km including the outlying uninhabited islets 21 km without the outlying islets There currently is not enough archeological evidence to give a more detailed description about the pre Columbian presence 11 Last population census in January 2017 The next population census in Saint Barthelemy will take place in January 2023 1 References Edit Government of the French Republic 18 June 2018 Decret du 18 juin 2018 portant nomination de la prefete deleguee aupres du representant de l Etat dans les collectivites de Saint Barthelemy et de Saint Martin Mme DANIELO FEUCHER Sylvie legifrance gouv fr in French Retrieved 24 April 2020 a b INSEE 2008 An 1 de la collectivitede Saint Barthelemy PDF in French p 7 Retrieved 29 January 2021 a b c d INSEE Populations legales 2017 des departements et collectivites d outre mer in French Retrieved 29 January 2021 a b c d Estimation du Produit Interieur Brut de Saint Barthelemy en 2014 PDF IEDOM June 2018 Retrieved 27 February 2022 Territorial Collectivity of Saint Barthelemy R P Raymond BRETON Dictionnaire caraibe francois Auxerre Chez Gilles Bouquet 1665 a b c d e The World Fact Book Government CIA Retrieved 8 July 2019 Larsen Peter A Genoways Hugh H Pedersen Scott C 1 March 2006 New records of bats from Saint Barthelemy French West Indies Nouvelles captures de chauve Souris de Saint Barthelemy Antilles francaises Mammalia 70 3 4 321 325 doi 10 1515 MAMM 2006 056 ISSN 1864 1547 S2CID 56341953 a b Saint Barthelemy People and Society The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency 13 September 2012 Retrieved 19 November 2012 a b c d e f g h i History of St Barths Island Retrieved 8 July 2019 Sebastiaan Knippenberg Much To Choose From The Use and Distribution of Siliceous Stone in the Lesser Antilles in Corinne L Hofman Anne van Duijvenbode eds Communities in Contact Essays in Archaeology Ethnohistory amp Ethnography of the Amerindian Circum Caribbean Sidestone Press Leiden 2011 p 175 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Saint Barthelemy History Retrieved 8 July 2019 Julianne Maher Fishermen Farmers Traders Language and Economic History on St Barthelemy French West Indies in Language in Society Vol 25 No 3 Sep 1996 pp 374 406 a b Reinhard H Luthin St Bartholomew Sweden s Colonial and Diplomatic Adventure in the Caribbean in The Hispanic American Historical Review Vol 14 No 3 Aug 1934 pp 307 324 a b Saint Barthelemy France October 1877 Integration into France Direct Democracy in German Sullivan pp 22 23 Ordinance concerning the Police of Slaves and free Coloured People Source Memoire St Barth Saint Barthelemy Memoirestbarth com Francine M Mayer and Carolyn E Fick Before and After Emancipation Slaves and Free Coloreds of Saint Barthelemy French West Indies in The 19th Century Scandinavian Journal of History 1993 18 4 251 273 9 octobre 1847 Source Memoire St Barth Saint Barthelemy Memoirestbarth com in French Sullivan p 24 Sullivan pp 157 159 Burleigh Nina 2 March 2022 Billionaires Clash Over the Future in a Caribbean Eden The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 6 March 2022 a b c d e f g h i j Nash KC 2008 St Barts Travel Adventures Hunter Publishing Inc p 14 ISBN 978 1 58843 704 4 a b The World Fact Book Introduction CIA Fact Book Retrieved 8 January 2011 a b c Barnett Edward Great Britain Hydrographic Office 1876 The West India pilot The Caribbean Sea from Barbados to Cuba with the Bahama and Bermuda islands and Florida Strait Published by order of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty for the Hydrographic Office and sold by J D Potter pp 109 112 Speight Martin R Henderson P A 2010 Marine Ecology Concepts and Applications John Wiley and Sons p 227 ISBN 978 1 4443 3545 3 Sullivan p 3 a b c Sullivan pp 177 178 a b c d e f g h Sullivan pp 170 173 Sullivan p 4 Quase metade dos habitantes de uma ilha paradisiaca sao portugueses www jn pt Calvet Louis Jean Brown Andrew 2006 Towards an ecology of world languages Polity p 239 ISBN 978 0 7456 2956 8 Valdman Albert 1997 French and Creole in Louisiana Springer pp 247 ISBN 978 0 306 45464 6 Wittmann Henri Grammaire comparee des varietes coloniales du francais populaire de Paris du 17e siecle et origines du francais quebecois Le francais des Ameriques ed Robert Fournier amp Henri Wittmann 281 334 Trois Rivieres Presses universitaires de Trois Rivieres 1995 CALVET Louis Jean et Robert Chaudenson Saint Barthelemy une enigme linguistique Paris CIRELFA Agence de la Francophonie 1998 165 p Les recensements de la population de Saint Barthelemy 1671 a nos jours Memoire St Barth in French Retrieved 13 March 2021 INSEE Populations legales 2007 Recensement de la population Population des departements et collectivites d outre mer in French Retrieved 13 March 2021 INSEE Populations legales 2012 Recensement de la population Population des departements et collectivites d outre mer in French Retrieved 13 March 2021 a b Morse Kimberly J 31 August 2022 The Americas An Encyclopedia of Culture and Society 2 volumes ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 4408 5239 8 Ancien presbytere de Gustavia www pop culture gouv fr Retrieved 16 August 2022 Eglise de Notre Dame de l Assomption GCatholic Retrieved 16 August 2022 Eglise de Notre Dame de l Assomption GCatholic Retrieved 16 August 2022 Chapelle de Sainte Catherine de Sienne GCatholic Retrieved 16 August 2022 Diocese de Guadeloupe in French Retrieved 16 August 2022 Eglise Anglicane Monuments St Barth www saintbarth tourisme com Retrieved 16 August 2022 Churches on St Barts SBHonline www sbhonline com Retrieved 16 August 2022 Staff reporter 9 December 2003 French Caribbean voters reject change Caribbean Net News Archived from the original on 18 March 2009 Retrieved 9 February 2007 However voters on the two tiny French dependencies of Saint Barthelemy and Saint Martin which have been administratively attached to Guadeloupe approved the referendum and are set to acquire the new status of overseas collectivity Magras Bruno 16 February 2007 Letter of Information from the Mayor to the residents and non residents to the French and the foreigners of Saint Barthelemy PDF St Barth Weekly p 2 Retrieved 18 February 2007 On 7 February of this year the French Parliament adopted the law granting Saint Barthelemy the Statute of an Overseas Collectivity in French Legifrance gouv fr detail d un texte EU relations with Overseas Countries and Territories Ec europa eu Retrieved 23 September 2013 a b c d e f The World Fact Book Economy CIA Fact Book Retrieved 8 July 2019 Estimation of per capita GDP in Saint Martin PDF CEROM INSEE May 2018 Retrieved 27 February 2022 Produits interieurs bruts regionaux et valeurs ajoutees regionales de 2000 a 2020 INSEE Retrieved 27 February 2022 Study reveals St Barth s is best Luxury Airbnb destination worldwide Sunshine Slate 27 October 2022 Retrieved 30 October 2022 jkw 12 January 2011 New Years St Barths Mogul Superyacht Fest Models amp Moguls Modelsandmoguls com Retrieved 23 September 2013 a b Cameron Sarah 2007 Footprint Caribbean Islands Footprint Travel Guides p 590 ISBN 978 1 904777 97 7 Sullivan p 7 Sullivan p 8 Sullivan p 9 Sullivan p 10 Sullivan pp 11 12 Sullivan pp 12 13 Sullivan p 181 Sullivan pp 13 14 Homepage St Barts Marine Park reservenaturellestbarth com Retrieved 21 September 2015 Sullivan p 170 a b St Barts Island St Barths Online St barths com Retrieved 13 January 2011 Rowlett Russ Lighthouses of Saint Barthelemy The Lighthouse Directory University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Retrieved 4 December 2010 Cecile Lucot 20 September 2007 Inauguration de la statue en bronze placee au centre du rond point du col de la Tourmente St Barths Online Retrieved 4 January 2011 a b LISTE DES ECOLES PUBLIQUES ET PRIVEES SOUS CONTRAT Academie de la Guadeloupe fr Retrieved on 10 March 2018 Flippin Alexis Lipsitz 23 October 2012 Frommer s Portable St Maarten St Martin Anguilla and St Barts John Wiley amp Sons p 142 ISBN 978 1 118 51813 7 Sullivan p 173 Henderson James 2005 Caribbean amp the Bahamas New Holland Publishers pp 323 324 ISBN 978 1 86011 212 6 a b c Cameron pp 588 Sullivan p 18 St Barts Music Festival St Barts Music Festival Retrieved 23 September 2013 Cameron pp 586 587 a b Sullivan p 206 Restaurants St Barths Online Retrieved 8 January 2011 Maya s Restaurant Travel Leisure Retrieved 14 November 2021 Harris Jessica B 1991 Sky juice and flying fish traditional Caribbean cooking Simon and Schuster pp 41 42 ISBN 978 0 671 68165 4 Sullivan p 22 Anguillan times anguillaguide com Retrieved 8 January 2011 Fabrice Thomazeau Les Voiles de St Barth Preparing to rock Saint Barthelemy waters 11 April 2014 Sail World Sullivan p 180 Sullivan p 183 Sullivan p 160 Kohn Michael Landon Robert Kohnstamm Thomas 2006 Colombia Lonely Planet p 145 ISBN 978 1 74104 284 9 The World Fact Book Communications CIA Fact Book Retrieved 30 November 2022 Laboratoire Saint Barthelemy Eugenie Blanchard dies at 114 nun was considered the world s oldest person Los Angeles Times 5 November 2010 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Barthelemy Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Saint Barthelemy Memoire St BarthGovernmentCollectivity of Saint Barthelemy official government website in French Comite Territorial du Tourisme tourism board website in French Historical and botanical informationMemoire St Barth Saint Barthelemy s history slave trade slavery abolitions Histoire et amenagement linguistique a Saint Barthelemy in French Saint Barth Fauna amp FloraGeneral informationSaint Barthelemy The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency A comprehensive visitor s guide Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint Barthelemy amp oldid 1142734351, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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