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Tortuga (Haiti)

Tortuga Island[1][2] (French: Île de la Tortue, IPA: [il də la tɔʁty]; Haitian Creole: Latòti; Spanish: Isla Tortuga, IPA: [ˈisla torˈtuɣa], Turtle Island) is a Caribbean island that forms part of Haiti, off the northwest coast of Hispaniola. It constitutes the commune of Île de la Tortue in the Port-de-Paix arrondissement of the Nord-Ouest department of Haiti.

Tortuga
Île de la Tortue
Turtle Island
Island
Tortuga seen from space
Tortuga
A map of Haiti with Île de la Tortue to the north.
Coordinates: 20°02′23″N 72°47′24″W / 20.03972°N 72.79000°W / 20.03972; -72.79000Coordinates: 20°02′23″N 72°47′24″W / 20.03972°N 72.79000°W / 20.03972; -72.79000
CountryHaiti
DepartmentNord-Ouest
ArrondissementPort-de-Paix
Settled1625
Area
 • Total180 km2 (69 sq mi)
Elevation
459 m (1,506 ft)
Population
 (2003)
 • Total25,936
 • Density144/km2 (376/sq mi)
Time zone−5
 • Summer (DST)−4
ClimateAf

Tortuga is 180 square kilometres (69 square miles)[3] in size and had a population of 25,936 at the 2003 Census. In the 17th century, Tortuga was a major center and haven of Caribbean piracy. Its tourist industry and references in many works have made it one of the most recognized regions of Haiti.

History

The first Europeans to land on Tortuga were the Spanish in 1492 during the first voyage of Christopher Columbus into the New World. On December 6, 1492, three Spanish ships entered the Windward Passage that separates Cuba and Haiti. At sunrise, Columbus noticed an island whose contours emerged from the morning mist. Because the shape reminded him of a turtle's shell, he chose the name of Tortuga.[4][5][6]

Tortuga was originally settled by a few Spanish colonists under the Captaincy General of Santo Domingo. In 1625, French and English colonists from Saint Kitts arrived on the island of Tortuga after initially planning to settle on mainland Hispaniola.[7] The French and English settlers were attacked in 1629 by the Spanish commanded by Don Fadrique de Toledo, who fortified the island, and expelled the French and English. As most of the Spanish Army left for Hispaniola to root out French colonists there, the French returned in 1630 to occupy the fort and expanded the Spanish-built fortifications.

From 1630 onward, the island of Tortuga was divided into French and English colonies, allowing buccaneers to use the island as their main base of operations. In 1633, the first slaves were imported from Africa to aid in the plantations. However, by 1635 the use of slaves had ended. The slaves were said to be out of control on the island, while at the same time there had been continuous disagreements and fighting between French and English colonies.

In 1635, Spain recaptured Tortuga from the English and French, expelled them and left. As they soon returned, Spain conquered the English and French colonies for a second time, only to leave again because the island was too small to be of major importance. This allowed the return of both French and English pirates. In 1638, the Spanish returned for a third time to take the island and rid it of all French and the newly settled Dutch. They occupied the island, but were expelled by the French and Dutch colonists in 1640, at which time the French built Fort de Rocher in a natural harbour; the fort enabled the French to defeat a Spanish invasion force the following year.

 
A drawing of Tortuga island from the 17th century.

By 1640, the buccaneers of Tortuga were calling themselves the Brethren of the Coast. The pirate population was mostly made up of French and Englishmen, along with a small number of Dutchmen. In 1654, the Spanish captured the island for the fourth and last time.[8]

In 1655, Tortuga was reoccupied by English and French interlopers under Elias Watts, who secured a commission from Col. William Brayne, acting as military Governor on Jamaica, to serve as "Governor" of Tortuga. In 1660, England appointed a Frenchman Jeremie Dechamps as Governor who proclaimed suzerainty to the King of France, set up French colours, and defeated several English attempts to reclaim the island.[9] In 1664, a French governor brought 400 French colonists for the island from his home province of Anjou, who established Hispaniola's first sugar plantations since the first wave of European colonization. This group of colonists spread to the coast of the mainland and became the nexus of the French colony of Saint-Domingue.[7]

By 1670, the buccaneer era was in decline, and many of the pirates turned to log cutting and wood trading as a new income source. At this time, a Welsh privateer named Henry Morgan started to promote himself and invited the pirates on the island of Tortuga to set sail under him. They were hired by the French as a striking force that allowed France to have a much stronger hold on the Caribbean region. Consequently, the pirates never really controlled the island and kept Tortuga as a neutral hideout for pirate booty.

In 1680, new Acts of Parliament forbade sailing under foreign flags (in opposition to former practice). This was a major legal blow to the Caribbean pirates. Settlements were made in the Treaty of Ratisbon of 1684, signed by the European powers, that put an end to piracy. Most of the pirates after this time were hired out into the Royal services to suppress their former buccaneer allies. The capital of Saint-Domingue was moved from Tortuga to Port-de-Paix on the mainland of Hispaniola in 1676.

Geography

Tortuga Lighthouse (east point)
 
LocationTortuga, Haiti  
Coordinates19°59′49″N 72°37′17″W / 19.9969°N 72.6214°W / 19.9969; -72.6214
Tower
Constructed1924  
Constructionconcrete tower
Height14 m (46 ft)  
Shapetapered cylindrical tower with light[10][11]
Markingswhite and red horizontal band tower
Light
Focal height23.5 m (77 ft)  
Range14 nmi (26 km; 16 mi)  
CharacteristicFl(2) W 6s  

The island of Tortuga stands off the northern coast of Haiti. It is very mountainous and rocky; the rocks are especially abundant on the northern part of the island. At the beginning of the 17th century, the population lived on the southern coast of the island, where there was a port for ships to enter. The northern shore was described as inaccessible via both land and sea.

The inhabited area was divided into four parts; the first of these was called "Low Land" or "Low Country". This region contained the island's port and was therefore considered the most important. The town was called Cayona, and the richest planters of the island lived there. The second region was called the "Middle Plantation"; the farmers of this region were unfamiliar with the soil and it was only used to grow tobacco. The third part was named "La Ringot", and was positioned on the western portion of the island. The fourth region was called the "La Montagne" (the Mountain); it is there that the first cultivated plantations were established upon the island.

This 17th century geography is known largely from Alexandre-Olivier Exquemelin's detailed description in his book Zeerovers,[12] where he describes a 1666 journey to the island.

In popular culture

Tortuga has been portrayed in many works depicting piracy in the Caribbean in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Films

Tortuga has been featured in numerous films, including

Literature

Books featuring the island include:

Music

Tortuga is mentioned in multiple songs, including:

Rafael Sabatini's works

Captain Blood

Tortuga is featured in Rafael Sabatini's Captain Blood series and the movies based on it; the most famous is Captain Blood (1935) starring Errol Flynn. It is the place where Blood and his crew find refuge after their escape from Barbados in 1685. Blood receives a Letter of Marque from Tortuga's governor, D'Ogeron, and the island becomes his main base for the next four years. He starts his raids from Cayona, and several events in the books take place on Tortuga itself or on ships anchoring in the harbour of Cayona.

Sabatini used Exquemelin's History of the Bouccaneers of America as a main source for his description of Tortuga, and therefore the island is portrayed as a place where many buccaneers, prostitutes, and other dubious professions operate, but the French West India Company, which rules Tortuga, makes profit off of those affairs.

The Black Swan

Tortuga also features in Sabatini's novel The Black Swan and the 1942 movie based on it.[13]

Notable people

See also

References

  1. ^ United States, Hydrographic Office (1891). "Catalogue of Charts, Plans, Sailing Directions, and Other Publications of the Office, July 1, 1891". p. 34. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  2. ^ Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain); Shaw, Norton; Greenfield, Hume; Bates, Henry Walter (1834). "The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society". p. 130. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  3. ^ Schutt-Ainé, Patricia (1994). Haiti: A Basic Reference Book. Miami, Florida: Librairie Au Service de la Culture. p. 20. ISBN 0-9638599-0-0.
  4. ^ . Villa Camp Mandingue. Haiti. Archived from the original on 28 October 2012. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
  5. ^ "Cristóbal Colón en La Española". Amautacuna de Historia. 2010-10-24.
  6. ^ "Diario de a bordo del primer viaje de Cristóbal Colón: texto completo. 6 de Diciembre". Wikisource. 1492. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
  7. ^ a b Dubois, Laurent (2005). Avengers of the New World: The Story of the Haitian Revolution. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. pp. 15–17. ISBN 978-0-674-03436-5. OCLC 663393691.
  8. ^ The Buccaneers In The West Indies In The XVII Century – Chapter IV
  9. ^ The Buccaneers In The West Indies In The XVII Century – Chapter IV
  10. ^ Rowlett, Russ. "Lighthouses of Haiti". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved 2017-01-20.
  11. ^ List of Lights, Pub. 110: Greenland, The East Coasts of North and South America (Excluding Continental U.S.A. Except the East Coast of Florida) and the West Indies (PDF). List of Lights. United States National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. 2016.
  12. ^ Exquemelin, Alexander (2003). Zeerovers. 's-Hertogenbosch: Voltaire B.V. pp. 18–20. ISBN 90-5848-044-5.
  13. ^ "Movie Review -- At the Roxy - NYTimes.com". The New York Times. Retrieved 2017-10-27.
  • (2003) Pancorbo, Luis: "El Canal de la Tortuga" en "Río de América". pp. 321–333. Laertes, Barcelona. ISBN 84-7584-506-1

External links

  • (In English and Spanish) "Method of Securing the Ports and Populations of All the Coasts of the Indies", from 1694, discusses Tortuga's history with piracy.

tortuga, haiti, other, islands, with, similar, names, tortuga, island, tortuga, island, french, Île, tortue, tɔʁty, haitian, creole, latòti, spanish, isla, tortuga, ˈisla, torˈtuɣa, turtle, island, caribbean, island, that, forms, part, haiti, northwest, coast,. For other islands with similar names see Tortuga Island Tortuga Island 1 2 French Ile de la Tortue IPA il de la tɔʁty Haitian Creole Latoti Spanish Isla Tortuga IPA ˈisla torˈtuɣa Turtle Island is a Caribbean island that forms part of Haiti off the northwest coast of Hispaniola It constitutes the commune of Ile de la Tortue in the Port de Paix arrondissement of the Nord Ouest department of Haiti Tortuga Ile de la TortueTurtle IslandIslandTortuga seen from spaceTortugaA map of Haiti with Ile de la Tortue to the north Coordinates 20 02 23 N 72 47 24 W 20 03972 N 72 79000 W 20 03972 72 79000 Coordinates 20 02 23 N 72 47 24 W 20 03972 N 72 79000 W 20 03972 72 79000CountryHaitiDepartmentNord OuestArrondissementPort de PaixSettled1625Area Total180 km2 69 sq mi Elevation459 m 1 506 ft Population 2003 Total25 936 Density144 km2 376 sq mi Time zone 5 Summer DST 4ClimateAfTortuga is 180 square kilometres 69 square miles 3 in size and had a population of 25 936 at the 2003 Census In the 17th century Tortuga was a major center and haven of Caribbean piracy Its tourist industry and references in many works have made it one of the most recognized regions of Haiti Contents 1 History 2 Geography 3 In popular culture 3 1 Films 3 2 Literature 3 3 Music 3 4 Rafael Sabatini s works 3 4 1 Captain Blood 3 4 2 The Black Swan 4 Notable people 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditThe first Europeans to land on Tortuga were the Spanish in 1492 during the first voyage of Christopher Columbus into the New World On December 6 1492 three Spanish ships entered the Windward Passage that separates Cuba and Haiti At sunrise Columbus noticed an island whose contours emerged from the morning mist Because the shape reminded him of a turtle s shell he chose the name of Tortuga 4 5 6 Tortuga was originally settled by a few Spanish colonists under the Captaincy General of Santo Domingo In 1625 French and English colonists from Saint Kitts arrived on the island of Tortuga after initially planning to settle on mainland Hispaniola 7 The French and English settlers were attacked in 1629 by the Spanish commanded by Don Fadrique de Toledo who fortified the island and expelled the French and English As most of the Spanish Army left for Hispaniola to root out French colonists there the French returned in 1630 to occupy the fort and expanded the Spanish built fortifications From 1630 onward the island of Tortuga was divided into French and English colonies allowing buccaneers to use the island as their main base of operations In 1633 the first slaves were imported from Africa to aid in the plantations However by 1635 the use of slaves had ended The slaves were said to be out of control on the island while at the same time there had been continuous disagreements and fighting between French and English colonies In 1635 Spain recaptured Tortuga from the English and French expelled them and left As they soon returned Spain conquered the English and French colonies for a second time only to leave again because the island was too small to be of major importance This allowed the return of both French and English pirates In 1638 the Spanish returned for a third time to take the island and rid it of all French and the newly settled Dutch They occupied the island but were expelled by the French and Dutch colonists in 1640 at which time the French built Fort de Rocher in a natural harbour the fort enabled the French to defeat a Spanish invasion force the following year A drawing of Tortuga island from the 17th century By 1640 the buccaneers of Tortuga were calling themselves the Brethren of the Coast The pirate population was mostly made up of French and Englishmen along with a small number of Dutchmen In 1654 the Spanish captured the island for the fourth and last time 8 In 1655 Tortuga was reoccupied by English and French interlopers under Elias Watts who secured a commission from Col William Brayne acting as military Governor on Jamaica to serve as Governor of Tortuga In 1660 England appointed a Frenchman Jeremie Dechamps as Governor who proclaimed suzerainty to the King of France set up French colours and defeated several English attempts to reclaim the island 9 In 1664 a French governor brought 400 French colonists for the island from his home province of Anjou who established Hispaniola s first sugar plantations since the first wave of European colonization This group of colonists spread to the coast of the mainland and became the nexus of the French colony of Saint Domingue 7 By 1670 the buccaneer era was in decline and many of the pirates turned to log cutting and wood trading as a new income source At this time a Welsh privateer named Henry Morgan started to promote himself and invited the pirates on the island of Tortuga to set sail under him They were hired by the French as a striking force that allowed France to have a much stronger hold on the Caribbean region Consequently the pirates never really controlled the island and kept Tortuga as a neutral hideout for pirate booty In 1680 new Acts of Parliament forbade sailing under foreign flags in opposition to former practice This was a major legal blow to the Caribbean pirates Settlements were made in the Treaty of Ratisbon of 1684 signed by the European powers that put an end to piracy Most of the pirates after this time were hired out into the Royal services to suppress their former buccaneer allies The capital of Saint Domingue was moved from Tortuga to Port de Paix on the mainland of Hispaniola in 1676 Geography EditTortuga Lighthouse east point LocationTortuga Haiti Coordinates19 59 49 N 72 37 17 W 19 9969 N 72 6214 W 19 9969 72 6214TowerConstructed1924 Constructionconcrete towerHeight14 m 46 ft Shapetapered cylindrical tower with light 10 11 Markingswhite and red horizontal band towerLightFocal height23 5 m 77 ft Range14 nmi 26 km 16 mi CharacteristicFl 2 W 6s The island of Tortuga stands off the northern coast of Haiti It is very mountainous and rocky the rocks are especially abundant on the northern part of the island At the beginning of the 17th century the population lived on the southern coast of the island where there was a port for ships to enter The northern shore was described as inaccessible via both land and sea The inhabited area was divided into four parts the first of these was called Low Land or Low Country This region contained the island s port and was therefore considered the most important The town was called Cayona and the richest planters of the island lived there The second region was called the Middle Plantation the farmers of this region were unfamiliar with the soil and it was only used to grow tobacco The third part was named La Ringot and was positioned on the western portion of the island The fourth region was called the La Montagne the Mountain it is there that the first cultivated plantations were established upon the island This 17th century geography is known largely from Alexandre Olivier Exquemelin s detailed description in his book Zeerovers 12 where he describes a 1666 journey to the island In popular culture EditTortuga has been portrayed in many works depicting piracy in the Caribbean in the 17th and 18th centuries Films Edit Tortuga has been featured in numerous films including Safe in Hell 1931 Captain Blood 1935 The Black Swan 1942 The Spanish Main 1945 Double Crossbones 1950 Abbott and Costello Meet Captain Kidd 1952 Pirates of Tortuga 1961 Pirates of the Caribbean filmsMain article List of locations in Pirates of the Caribbean TortugaLiterature Edit Books featuring the island include Deadmen Walking A Deadman s Cross Novel 2017 by Sherrilyn Kenyon Tortuga by Valerio Evangelisti Caribbean 1989 by James Michener The Black Swan 1932 by Rafael Sabatini The Black Corsair series of novels by Emilio Salgari 1898 1908 The Black Avenger of the Spanish Main 1847 by Ned Buntline The Dark Secret of Josephine 1955 by Dennis Wheatley 1637 No Peace Beyond the Line November 2020 by Eric Flint and Charles E GannonMusic Edit Tortuga is mentioned in multiple songs including Jonas Psalter 1973 by the rock band Styx Tortuga Bay 1989 by German heavy metal band Running Wild Tortuga 2006 by Italian Ska band Talco Jack Sparrow by The Lonely Island featuring Michael Bolton Tortuga 2011 by Welsh band Catfish and the Bottlemen Welcome to Tortuga 2012 by Swedish Pirate Folk band Ye Banished Privateers Tortuga 2014 by the space rock band Earthling Society Tortuga 2020 and Return to Tortuga 2022 by the Scottish Pirate Metal Band Alestorm Turtle Island 2002 by Mike OldfieldRafael Sabatini s works Edit Captain Blood Edit Tortuga is featured in Rafael Sabatini s Captain Blood series and the movies based on it the most famous is Captain Blood 1935 starring Errol Flynn It is the place where Blood and his crew find refuge after their escape from Barbados in 1685 Blood receives a Letter of Marque from Tortuga s governor D Ogeron and the island becomes his main base for the next four years He starts his raids from Cayona and several events in the books take place on Tortuga itself or on ships anchoring in the harbour of Cayona Sabatini used Exquemelin s History of the Bouccaneers of America as a main source for his description of Tortuga and therefore the island is portrayed as a place where many buccaneers prostitutes and other dubious professions operate but the French West India Company which rules Tortuga makes profit off of those affairs The Black Swan Edit Tortuga also features in Sabatini s novel The Black Swan and the 1942 movie based on it 13 Notable people EditGabard Fenelon professional football player Hugues Gentillon film director and founder of Yugy Pictures EntertainmentSee also Edit Haiti portal Engineering portal List of islands of Haiti List of lighthouses in Haiti Geography of Pirates of the Caribbean Port Royal Tortuga cocktail References Edit United States Hydrographic Office 1891 Catalogue of Charts Plans Sailing Directions and Other Publications of the Office July 1 1891 p 34 Retrieved 14 July 2015 Royal Geographical Society Great Britain Shaw Norton Greenfield Hume Bates Henry Walter 1834 The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society p 130 Retrieved 14 July 2015 Schutt Aine Patricia 1994 Haiti A Basic Reference Book Miami Florida Librairie Au Service de la Culture p 20 ISBN 0 9638599 0 0 Ile de la tortue Histoire Petite histoire de l ile de la tortue Villa Camp Mandingue Haiti Archived from the original on 28 October 2012 Retrieved 24 July 2012 Cristobal Colon en La Espanola Amautacuna de Historia 2010 10 24 Diario de a bordo del primer viaje de Cristobal Colon texto completo 6 de Diciembre Wikisource 1492 Retrieved 24 July 2012 a b Dubois Laurent 2005 Avengers of the New World The Story of the Haitian Revolution Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press pp 15 17 ISBN 978 0 674 03436 5 OCLC 663393691 The Buccaneers In The West Indies In The XVII Century Chapter IV The Buccaneers In The West Indies In The XVII Century Chapter IV Rowlett Russ Lighthouses of Haiti The Lighthouse Directory University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Retrieved 2017 01 20 List of Lights Pub 110 Greenland The East Coasts of North and South America Excluding Continental U S A Except the East Coast of Florida and the West Indies PDF List of Lights United States National Geospatial Intelligence Agency 2016 Exquemelin Alexander 2003 Zeerovers s Hertogenbosch Voltaire B V pp 18 20 ISBN 90 5848 044 5 Movie Review At the Roxy NYTimes com The New York Times Retrieved 2017 10 27 2003 Pancorbo Luis El Canal de la Tortuga en Rio de America pp 321 333 Laertes Barcelona ISBN 84 7584 506 1External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ile de la Tortue In English and Spanish Method of Securing the Ports and Populations of All the Coasts of the Indies from 1694 discusses Tortuga s history with piracy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tortuga Haiti amp oldid 1133245665, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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