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Historical movements linked Guianas and Lesser Antilles Caribs

An overhead view of multiple ceramic pottery vessels and fragments of varying sizes and colors (brown, gray, cream, blue-tinted) arranged on sandy ground at an archaeological excavation site, with hands of workers visible examining and documenting the artifacts.
Research area:ArchaeologyAnthropologyHistorical Studies in Central America

What the study found

The study argues that the Caribs encountered by Columbus were not the same as the Caribs met by Europeans in the seventeenth century. It also suggests a historical movement of the Galibi from the Guianas toward the Lesser Antilles, where they overcame the local population.

Why the authors say this matters

The authors say this addresses the long-standing "Island Carib Problem," a question about the relationship between Carib groups in the mainland Guianas and the Lesser Antilles. The findings indicate that recent excavations and comparison of material remains may help clarify this historical issue.

What the researchers tested

The article compares recent excavations in French Guiana with the insular Cayo complex of the Lesser Antilles. It focuses on the continental complex of Malmanoury and uses these findings alongside a Callinago myth and regional historical context.

What worked and what didn't

The comparison suggests that Malmanoury in present-day French Guiana has a material counterpart of the Lesser Antilles from the seventeenth century. The authors interpret this as evidence for a movement of the Galibi toward the Antilles, possibly tied to wider sixteenth-century turmoil in the Guianas, Trinidad, and the Antilles and perhaps an amplification of the late prehistoric Koriabo expansion.

What to keep in mind

The abstract does not provide detailed limitations, methods, or uncertainty levels beyond the interpretations stated here. The conclusions are presented as suggestions based on archaeological comparison and historical interpretation.

Key points

  • The authors argue that the Caribs known to Columbus were different from those encountered in the seventeenth century.
  • The study suggests a movement of the Galibi from the Guianas to the Lesser Antilles.
  • The comparison centers on archaeological material from Malmanoury in French Guiana and the Cayo complex in the Lesser Antilles.
  • The authors connect the movement to sixteenth-century turmoil in the Guianas, Trinidad, and the Antilles.
  • They also suggest this may have amplified the late prehistoric Koriabo expansion.

Disclosure

Research title:
Historical movements linked Guianas and Lesser Antilles Caribs
Authors:
Martijn van den Bel
Institutions:
Institut National de Recherches Archéologiques Préventives
Publication date:
2026-03-31
OpenAlex record:
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AI provenance: This post was generated by OpenAI. The original authors did not write or review this post.