Spanish Point (Barbuda)
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![]() | This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (September 2021) |
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Spanish Point is, along with nearby Coco Point, one of the two southernmost points on the Caribbean island of Barbuda. It lies in the island's extreme southeast, at the eastern end of Gravenor Bay.
The area around the point is believed by archaeologists to have been the site of a major pre-Columbian Arawak settlement.
The point apparently took its name from the wreck of a Spanish merchantman, Santiago de Cullerin, lost off the point in 1695.[1]
References
- ^ Nicholson, Desmond V. (2019). The Place Names of Antigua and Barbuda. Museum of Antigua and Barbuda. pp. 53–54.
Further reading
- Miller, D. (ed.) (2005) Caribbean Islands. (4th edition). Footscray, VIC: Lonely Planet.
- Scott, C. R. (ed.) (2005) Insight guide: Caribbean (5th edition). London: Apa Publications.
17°32′42″N 61°44′02″W / 17.545°N 61.734°W
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