The wealth of the indigenous Caribbean people…
1492 CE to 1503 CE
While Columbus and his successors seek gold and other trading commodities of value on the European market, the native Antilleans are not interested in trade and use gold only ornamentally.
Their personal possessions consist of wooden stools with four legs and carved backs, hammocks made of cotton cloth or string for sleeping, clay and wooden bowls for mixing and serving food, calabashes or gourds for drinking water and bailing out boats, and their most prized possessions, large dugout canoes for transportation, fishing, and water sports.
One such canoe found in Jamaica could transport about seventy-five persons.
The natives paint their bodies in bright colors, and some wear small ornaments of gold and shells in their noses, around their necks, or hanging from their ears.
Body painting is also employed to intimidate opponents in warfare.