Estimates of the size of the pre-Hispanic…
1492 CE to 1503 CE
Both Columbus and Father Bartolome de Las Casas (who will write the first history of the Spanish conquest and treatment of the natives) produce estimates that appear to defy credibility.
Las Casas thinks the population of the Caribbean might have been in the vicinity of several million, and by virtue of his having lived in both Hispaniola and Cuba where he held encomiendas, or the right to tribute from the natives, he is as close as we get to an eye-witness account.
Las Casas has a penchant for hyperbole, and it is doubtful that he could have produced reliable estimates for areas where he did not travel.
Nevertheless, some more recent scholars have tended to agree with Las Casas, estimating as many as four million inhabitants for the island of Hispaniola alone in 1492.
Although the dispute continues, a consensus seems to be developing for far lower figures than previously accepted.
An indigenous population of less than a million for all of the Caribbean would still be a relatively dense population, given the technology and resources of the region in the late fifteenth century.
Probably one-half of these inhabitants would have been on the large island of Hispaniola, about fifty thousand in Cuba, and far fewer than that in Jamaica.
Puerto Rico, Dominica, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, and Trinidad all have fairly concentrated, if not large, populations.
The pre-European populations of the territories that will later form the Commonwealth Caribbean belong to the groups designated as Caribs and Arawaks.
Both are tropical forest people, who probably originate n the vast expanse of forests of the northern regions of South America and are related linguistically and ethnically to such present-day tropical forest peoples as the Chibcha, the Warao, the Yanomamo, the Caracas, the Caquetfo, and the Jirajara—in short, the peoples found anywhere from Panama to Brazil.