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Database: Port-au-Prince: Difference between revisions

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imported>Bovkaffe
Created page with "Today, Port-au-Prince is known as the capital and largest city in Haiti, but it took a long time to get there, changing hands as interests shifted and power changed ha..."
 
imported>Evandrus Primæ
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Today, [[Port-au-Prince]] is known as the capital and largest city in [[Haiti]], but it took a long time to get there, changing hands as interests shifted and power changed hands.
Today, [[Port-au-Prince]] is known as the capital and largest city in [[Haiti]], but it took a long time to get there, changing hands as interests shifted and power changed hands.


A bustling centre of commerce, in the 1730s, the current Port-au-Prince area was part of the grand scheme of Saint-Domingue, which was then home to over 140 sugar plantations. The [[United Kingdom|English]] did not trouble the area during this decade, and various nobles sought land grants in Port-au-Prince from the [[France|French]] [[monarchy]]. [[Africa]]n [[Slavery|slaves]] outnumbered the rest of the population by a large margin.
A bustling centre of commerce, in the 1730s, the current Port-au-Prince area was part of the grand scheme of Saint-Domingue, which was then home to over 140 sugar plantations. The [[England|English]] did not trouble the area during this decade, and various nobles sought land grants in Port-au-Prince from the [[France|French]] [[monarchy]]. [[Africa]]n [[Slavery|slaves]] outnumbered the rest of the population by a large margin.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Port-au-Prince}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Port-au-Prince}}
[[Category:Database: Locations]]
[[Category:Database: Locations]]
[[Category:Animus Omega database entries]]
[[Category:Animus Omega database entries]]

Revision as of 12:19, 13 July 2017

Today, Port-au-Prince is known as the capital and largest city in Haiti, but it took a long time to get there, changing hands as interests shifted and power changed hands.

A bustling centre of commerce, in the 1730s, the current Port-au-Prince area was part of the grand scheme of Saint-Domingue, which was then home to over 140 sugar plantations. The English did not trouble the area during this decade, and various nobles sought land grants in Port-au-Prince from the French monarchy. African slaves outnumbered the rest of the population by a large margin.