
- Named for: Sunday, the day Columbus sailed by.
- Long/Lat: 15.2 N/61.2 W, 4000 miles or 8 hours east of Castro Valley
- Population: 72,000, 1.1 CVs
- Size: 290 sq mi, 10 CVs (less dense)
- Avg temp in April: 87 F/23 C phew!
- Median household income: ~$4,000
- Ethnicity: 85% Afro-Dominican, 4% Kalinago/Caribe, <1% European
- Main industries: Small agriculture, growing financial services (offshore banking/tax havens)
Dominica, fortunately, stopped practicing cannibalism. If they ever did, which is doubtful. Even so, historians as late as the 1960s were still tossing off lines like, “By the middle of the sixteenth century, however, the Caribs had almost ceased eating Christian Europeans, for on one occasion all who had dined on a Spanish friar had fallen deathly ill or died.”
Dominica is the fourth small country in my A-Z series, another island and definitely not the last. It was named by Columbus on his second journey to the New World, the first island he sailed by on Sunday, November 3, 1493. Not a very enterprising name, since Dominica means Sunday. The naming conventions here seem particularly uninspired. Columbus also named islands Ferdinanda, Isabela, Juana (their daughter), and San Salvador (Holy Savior). I suppose we should be lucky he didn’t just number them, or Jamaica would be Dieciocho.
Continue reading “D is for Dominica”



