he origin of the name Belize is unclear,
but one idea is that the name is
from the Maya word belix,
meaning "muddy water", applied
to the
Belize River.
Before the arrival of Europeans,
Belize was part of the territory
of the Maya. The
Mopan Maya were the original
inhabitants of Belize. The
Maya civilization spread
itself over Belize beginning
around 1500 BC and flourished
until about AD 900. In the late
classic period of Maya
civilization (before A.D. 1000),
as many as 400,000 people may
have lived in the area that is
now Belize. Some lowland Maya
still occupied the area when
Europeans arrived in the 1500s.
Spanish colonists tried to
settle the inland areas of
Belize, but they abandoned these
efforts following Maya rebellion
against Spanish authority.
English and Scottish buccaneers
known as the
Baymen first settled on the
coast of Belize in 1638, seeking
a sheltered region from which
they could attack Spanish ships
The settlers turned to cutting
logwood during the 1700s.
The wood yielded a fixing agent
for clothing dyes that was vital
to the European woolen industry.
The Spanish granted the British
settlers the right to occupy the
area and cut logwood in exchange
for an end to piracy. Historical
accounts from the early 1700s
note that Africans were brought
to the settlement from Jamaica
to work as slaves and cut
timber. As early as 1800
Africans outnumbered Europeans
by about four to one. By then
the settlement's primary export
had shifted from logwood to
mahogany.
For fear of provoking Spanish
attack, the British government
did not initially recognize the
settlement in Belize as a
colony. It allowed the settlers
to establish their own laws and
forms of government. During this
time a few wealthy settlers
gained control of the local
legislature, known as the Public
Meeting, as well as of most of
the settlement's land and
timber. The British first
appointed a superintendent over
the area in 1786.
The Spanish, who claimed
sovereignty over the whole of
Central America, tried often to
gain control by force over
Belize, but they were not
successful. Spain's last attack
ended on 10 September, 1798,
when the people of Belize
decisively defeated a Spanish
fleet at the
Battle of St. George's Caye.
The anniversary of the battle is
now a national holiday in
Belize.
In the early 1800s the British
sought greater control over the
settlers, threatening to suspend
the Public Meeting unless it
observed the government's
instructions to abolish slavery.
Slavery was abolished in the
British Empire in 1838, but
this did little to change
working conditions for laborers
in the Belize settlement.
Slaves of the
colony were valued for their
potentially superior abilities
in the work of mahogany
extraction. As a result, former
slave owners in British Honduras
earned £53.6.9 on average per
slave, the highest amount paid
in any British territory.[4]
Soon after, a series of
institutions were put in place
to ensure the continued presence
of a viable labor force. Some of
these included greatly
restricting the ability of
individuals to obtain land, a
debt-peonage system to organize
the newly "free". The position
of being "extra special"
mahogany and logwood cutters
undergirded the early
ascriptions of the capacities
(and consequently limitations)
of people of African descent in
the colony. Because a small
elite controlled the
settlement's land and commerce,
former slaves had no choice but
to continue to work in timber
cutting.[5]
In 1836, after the emancipation
of Central America from Spanish
rule, the British claimed the
right to administer the region.
In 1862 Great Britain formally
declared it a
British Crown Colony,
subordinate to Jamaica, and
named it
British Honduras. As a
colony Belize began to attract
British investors. Among the
British firms that dominated the
colony in the late 1800s was the
Belize Estate and Produce
Company, which eventually
acquired half of all the
privately held land in the
colony. Belize Estate's
influence accounts in part for
the colony's reliance on the
mahogany trade throughout the
rest of the 19th century and the
first half of the 20th century.