
Last modified: 2007-10-20 by ivan sache
Keywords: saint-barthelemy | ouanalao | fleur-de-lis: 3 (yellow) | maltese cross (white) | crowns: 3 (yellow) | pelicans: 2 |
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Flag of France - Image by Željko Heimer, 22 September 2001
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Saint-Barthélemy (6,852 inhabitants in 1999; 2,500 ha), locally known as Saint-Barth, is an overseas community (collectivité d'outre-mer), as prescribed by Law of 21 February 2007, published in the French official gazette on 22 February 2007. This new status was approved by local referendum (95.5% yes) on 7 December 2003. Beforehand, Saint-Barthélemy was a municipality forming, together with the municipality of Saint-Martin, the third arrondissement (northern islands) of the overseas department of Guadeloupe.
The island was discovered in 1493 by Colombus during his second travel;
Colombus named the island after his brother Bartolomeo and took
possession of it in the name of the King of Spain. The island was
occupied by the French in 1648 and ran by the Knights of the Order of
Malta from 1651 to 1656. Saint-Barthélemy became a French colony in
1659; however, the poor soil and the dry climate of the island
prevented its economical development, and its inhabitants mostly lived
from buccaneering.
In 1785, King Louis XVI swapped the island for trade rights in
Gothenburg with King of Sweden Gustav III. The king suppressed tax from the island (and there is still no tax perceived on the island, which
was contrary to the French law and the main reason of the modification of the
status of the island); the capital was renamed Gustavia and the former
French careenage became a free port. On 16 March 1878, the Sweded sold
back the island to France. The successive rulers of the island are
symbolized on its coat of arms.
In 1957, David Rockefeller purchased a 27-ha estate on the island and
launched the transformation of the poor island into a safe place for
upmarket tourism. There is no airport on the island but a small runway,
which has prevented mass tourism to reach the island until now.
After the Second World War, several St-Barths (natives of the islands)
emigrated to the neighbouring US Virgin Islands, where they set up
their own communities, the most important of them being Frenchtown,
located west of the port of St. Thomas. They lived from fishing and
trade and significantly contributed to the economic development of the
Virgin Islands. Some of them became American citizens while others came
back to Saint-Barthélemy and helped to develop the island.
Ivan Sache, 6 March 2007
Local flag of Saint-Barthélemy - Image by Pascal Gross, 30 September 1998
A photography taken by Christian Lange in June 2006 shows the town hall of Gustavia, the capital of Saint-Barthélemy, with a row of four flags, from left to right, the national flag of Sweden (recalling that the island was once a Swedish possession), the local flag of Saint-Barthélemy, the French national flag and the flag of European Union. The local flag is white with the coat of arms of Saint-Barthélemy.
As shown on an heraldic postcard by Mireille Louis (c. 1970) introducing the coat of arms, the three fleurs-de-lis recall the fact that the island was French from 1648 to 1785 and has been so since 1878.
The Maltese Cross recalls that the island belonged to the Order of Malta (1651-1665).
The three crowns are for the Swedish rule on the island from 1785 to
1878.
The mural crown is the ancient symbol of the Greek gods
protecting the cities; it was granted to the French towns during the First
Empire.
The two pelicans represent the island fauna.
Ouanalao is the local name of the island.
Ivan Sache & Pascal Vagnat, 6 March 2007
Burgee of SBYC - Image by Ivan Sache, 19 May 2001
The burgee of the Saint-Barthélemy Yacht Club is quartered blue-red-red-blue with the initials S B Y C in white in the respective quarters.
Source: SBYC website
Ivan Sache, 19 May 2001
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