Most of the Caribbean, before the arrival…
1492 CE to 1503 CE
Most of the Caribbean, before the arrival of Christopher Columbus in 1492, is peopled by three groups of inhabitants: the Ciboney (or Guanahuatebey), the Arawaks (or Tainos), and the Caribs.
The cultural distinctions among the three groups are not great; the single greatest differentiating factor appears to be their respective dates of arrival in the region.
The Ciboney seem to have arrived first and are found in parts of Cuba and the Bahamas.
They also seem to have had the most elementary forms of social organization.
The most numerous groups are the Arawaks, who reside in most of the Greater Antilles—Cuba, Jamaica, Hispaniola (the island containing Haiti and the Dominican Republic), and Puerto Rico.
The Lesser Antilles is the home of the Caribs.
Barbados and a number of smaller islands are not permanently inhabited.