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  1. Only showing results from www.everyculture.com

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  2. everyculture.com

    Culture of Suriname - history, people, traditions, women, beliefs, food, customs, family, social Sa-Th. ... Suriname is in South America but is considered a Caribbean country. The total area is 63,250 square miles (163,820 square kilometers). ... women's, and social welfare organizations has grown. Suriname is a member of several major global ...
  3. everyculture.com

    Suriname became a British colony in 1650 and a Dutch colony in 1667. The Dutch made what has been called the worst land-swap deal in history. They took Suriname in exchange for Nieuw Amsterdam—or New York, as the British called it. The Dutch imported west African slaves to Suriname to work on sugarcane and coffee plantations.
  4. everyculture.com

    During the late 1980s a civil war between Maroons and the military government of Suriname caused considerable hardship to the Saramaka and other Maroons; by mid1989 approximately 3,000 Saramaka and 8,000 Djuka were living as temporary refugees in French Guiana, and access to the outside world had become severely restricted for many Saramaka in ...
  5. everyculture.com

    The Republic of Suriname, formerly Dutch and Guiana 6° N and 1975, since independent 54° and 58° is located between live in the W. and The Saramaka 1o northern extension of the Amazonian forest along the upper Suriname River and its tributaries, the Gaánlío and the Pikílío, and—since the 1960s—along the lower Suriname River in ...
  6. everyculture.com

    Guyana is on the northeastern shoulder of South America, bounded on the north by the Atlantic Ocean, on the east by Suriname, on the northwest by Venezuela, and on the south and southwest by Brazil. ... In an outdoor society, children are allowed to roam. In rural communities, discipline is a communal responsibility. ... its culture & history ...
  7. everyculture.com

    Rather than having a common culture, Colombia is a country with many distinct regional cultures. Ethnic Relations. Past relations with other regional cultures were based on the hierarchical society imposed by Spain, in which the upper echelon of "white" Spaniards enjoyed wealth, power, and prestige while blacks and Indians were at the bottom of ...
  8. everyculture.com

    History and cultural relations - Trio South America. Archaeological evidence indicates that this region was inhabited over many centuries, but it seems likely that the modern population is mainly descended from various groups who took refuge in this watershed region from the seventeenth century onward.
  9. everyculture.com

    Saramaka Social Structure: Analysis of a Maroon Society in Surinam. Río Piedras, P.R.: Institute of Caribbean Studies. Price, Richard (1983). First-Time: The Historical Vision of an Afro-American People. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press. Price, Sally (1984). Co-Wives and Calabashes. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  10. everyculture.com

    South America Ache. Identification. The Ache are a South American native population of hunter-gatherers that has lived in eastern Paraguay since at least the first Jesuit missionary reports in the 1600s. Afro-Bolivians. Identification. Afro-Bolivians typically refer to themselves as "Negros" (Blacks). Afro-Brazilians. Afro-Colombians
  11. everyculture.com

    History and cultural relations - Boruca, Bribri, and Cabécar Middle America / Caribbean. ... During the seventeenth century, Boruca was the only village in the south Pacific region to become organized for colonial functions. ... who conducted war and foreign relations. The last king died in 1910. In the early 1990s the aboriginal culture is ...
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