1492 - Christopher Columbus accidentally lands on present day Haiti and Dominican Republic and conquers the island for Spain,naming the island Hispaniola.
1697 - Spain gives the western part of Hispaniola to France, and the French name it Ayiti.
1801 - Toussaint Louverture (a former slave) becomes the self- proclaimed leader of Haiti and ends slavery
1804 - Haiti becomes independent from France and Jean-Jacques Dessalines declares himself emperor.
1806 - Dessalines is murdered and Haiti is split into a black north and mulatto south
1818-43 - Pierre Boyer unifies the north and south of Haiti, but excludes blacks from power.
1915 - US invades and "monitors" Haiti
1934 - US removes troops, but holds fiscal control for 13 more years
1956 -Francois Duvalier seizes power and is elected president a year later.
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1991 - Aristide is kicked out of office in a coup led by Raoul Cedras, and sanctions by the US are put on Haiti
1995 - Rene Preval, from Aristide's Lavalas party, is elected for president and replaces Aristide.
1999 - Preval claims that parliament's term has become old and begins ruling by decree, much like a dictatorship
2000 November - Aristide is elected president, again, despite rumors of irregularities in the polls.
2002 July - Haiti becomes a full member of the Caribbean Community (Caricom) trade bloc.
2003 April - Voodoo is recognized as an official religion
2004 January-February - A celebration for the 200 years of independence becomes an uprising against Aristide forcing him into
In the 19th century, Enlightenment ideas were spreading all over Europe and Latin American which influents the white elites in Haiti to want a capitalist market and control of it own resources. Latin America’s elite class became anti-imperialist and favored exportation based on capitalism. Also, the white elites in Haiti saw that France was fully engaged in the Napoleonic Wars and seized the
Haiti had lots of challenges in running in their own government and remained unstable until today. Haiti was no longer protected by the French and were taken advantage of by other powerful countries. They were essentially trading one exploitive world power for another such as Germany who began to trade at unfair rates with the Haitian Republic. “But if the cost of maintaining power and continuing to enjoy the spoils of the state was the spoil of the nation, they were quite willing to sacrifice the nation.” (Trouillot, 1990). Merchants were fine with the financial, military and political instability of the Saint Domingue state, and had an interest in the succession politically because it meant that their jobs of exploiting the state would be more or less
By 1792, the French had sent troops in to try and restore order. These battles differed from the battles in the United States because they centered on ideas of racial equality. Poorly treated slaves and angry mixed race citizens fought not only for their right to have an independent nation, but for a literal freedom and equality for themselves. When Toussaint L’Overture, a former slave, took over the Haitian armies in 1793, he was fighting both the British and the French, two armies fighting to possess an island rich in resources, including the slaves who were fighting against them. He was a powerful leader and an intelligent military strategist, and his capacity to control the rebelling slaves greatly improved their organization. Battles with the French dragged on until 1803, when Napoleon no longer had the resources to sustain the warfare and withdrew his troops. By 1804, Haiti was an independent republic governed by Jean-Jacques Dessalines, who in a final expression of racial tension had the remaining white citizens massacred. Both the United States and Haiti helped secure their independence through successful military campaigns, but Haiti’s independence had race as a focal point in a way colonists of the United States did not
During this time of seizure, the U.S was looking to create a more politically stable Haiti and also wanting to create a more secure control over the country. They also wanted to establish themselves in the Caribbean. There also was a need to integrate Haiti into the international Capitalist economy. But during this control over 3,000 Haitians were killed. The Marines installed a puppet president, denied the people of Haiti the freedom of speech, forced a new constitution upon them, and
In 1791 the slaves started to rebel against the soldiers. Obviously Christopher Columbus was dead by then. But the slaves started to fight against the soldiers and the people there. Eventually the slaves won! But sadly most of the local people were wiped out then. There have been bad times in Haiti. There have been some bad natural disasters too. But things are supposed to be getting better.
Haiti is located between the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. It occupies one third of the Hispaniola Island, the other two thirds belong to its neighbor: the Dominican Republic. It measures 27, 750 sq km, just a little smaller than the state of Maryland. It is unfortunately located in a highly active hurricane area prone to storms and flooding between the months of June to October. Haiti is the poorest country of the western hemisphere. Political turmoil is part of the country’s history. Currently it counts with a democratically elected president, Michael Martelly, as Chief of State and a Prime Minister, Laurent Latmothe, as head of the government. A new president is elected every five years and the president cannot serve consecutive periods. The Prime Minister is appointed by the president and ratified by the National Assembly. The National Assembly is made up of 30 senators, elected by popular vote for six years terms and 99 deputies, also elected by popular vote, for four years terms; a little bit complex
Purpose: To understand how Haiti became what it is and all the trials it has endured
St. Domingue, what is now Haiti, was a place of sugar rich plantations owned by the french. A collection of rebel slaves started the Haitian Revolution in 1791,they were inspired by the French revolution. The successful revolts lead by general Toussaint L’Ouverture earned the slaves control over a third of St. Domingue. While the rebels maintained control of the place, they kept an alliance with France. Two years after Napoléon’s ambition came into power, he decides to send 30,000 soldiers to take St. Domingue back. Early in the continuing year, french forces dropped to less than 10,000 troops. Relations with Britain were dwindling fast, war was imminent, Napoléon’s decided to cut St. Domingue out of his plans. In 1803, the nation of Haiti gave Napoléon Bonaparte his first defeat. Part of Bonaparte’s plan
In Paris, the Americans discovered an altered situation. A revolution led by Toussaint L’Ouverture had driven the french from their caribbean colony in haiti. Without Haiti as a base the french would have
This minority was mostly bound by race, although class was important to a lesser extent. This created a society where it was favorable to be lighter skinned since it opened the doors for better social status in the colony. Although, because of the unique inheritance laws of the colony which allowed for blacks the opportunity to inherit the large estates of their white fathers there were a large amount of wealthy mulattos. Still, rich blacks and mulattos had nearly the same rights in the colony as their slaving counterparts. Knowing this it is clear that the social structure of the colony had a great impact on the development of the Haitian revolution.
A Roman Catholic priest by the name of Jean-Bertrand Aristide was elected president of Haiti in late 1990. Political prisoners were set free and Duvailer's Tontons were disbanded. There was much hope for the government under the new presidency, but due to the lack of confidence from the military, Aristide was overthrown in 1991.
In the late eighteenth century, Haiti was in a state of turmoil among the African slaves and French plantation masters, and as the conflict rose, a black man known as Toussaint Louverture rose to the occasion to free his people from the shackles of slavery. A former slave once referenced to as nothing more than a simple black man was deemed by many as “one of the black chiefs of Hayti’ after his death and won international renown. Toussaint Louverture, born a slave on the islands of Saint Domingo, turned a band of runaway slaves with nothing more than the clothes on their back into a fighting force that outsmarted Napoleon Bonaparte in the first and only successful slave revolt. As Louverture became a growing figure of the movement to abolish slavery in Haiti, both the Americas and Europe recognized him as the most influential ‘hero’ to inspire the possibility of freedom from slavery could one day be achieved. Louverture’s stand against slavery in 1801 left a lasting impact in Haiti by delivering the country to emancipation with Louverture’s and Dessalines’ constitution
Haiti is the second largest Caribbean Island. It occupies a third of the western part of the island it shares with the Dominican Republic. Haiti is also made up of several islands that surround the main territory. The capital is Port-au-Prince. It rains between November and March in the North of the island and between May and October in the South. “Once covered by forest, the country has been heavily logged for wood and fuel and to clear land for farming, and is now largely deforested.” Haiti is divided into “nine administrative departments.” Besides the capital, other important cities are Cap-Haitien and Gonaives. “Haiti is the most densely populated country in Latin America and has the lowest per
For the most part, the interaction between the colonizers of Haiti—the Spanish and the French—was negative, and lastingly so. Haiti has remained a turbulent and impoverished landscape. Social and economic indicators remain doggedly low, year after year. Haiti, although technically independent as of 1804, has never been able to support itself. There is a lot of heartfelt sympathy for Haiti, and the hope is that the legacy of colonization is not unending fate. But it will take a lot of work to get Haiti to a place of true freedom and independence, and sometimes outside help, however well intentioned, only unwittingly fuels the legacy.
In this article the author claims that the fact that the European and the USA refused to recognized Haitian governments after the declaration of its independence, strengthened the political regime of President Jean-Pierre Boyer, which provoked the rise of a whole nation. During the Haitian Revolution, Haiti became a place of destination for many West Indian slaves that were trying to escape. By guaranteeing to these fugitive a certain protection President Boyer was indirectly punishing the British for not formally recognizing the Republic’s