, which was constructed in 1616 Essequibo was founded by colonists from the first
Zeelandic colony, or trading post,
Pomeroon founded in 1581, which had been destroyed by Spaniards and local warriors around 1596. Led by Joost van der Hooge, the Zeelanders founded
Fort Kyk-Over-Al in the Essequibo river (actually a side-river called the
Mazaruni). This location was chosen because of its strategic location and the trade with the local population. Van der Hooge encountered an older ruined Portuguese fort there (the Portuguese arms had been hewn into the rock above the gate). Using funds of the
West Indian Company (WIC), van der Hooge built a new fort called "Fort Ter Hoogen" from 1616 to 1621, though the fort quickly became known amongst the inhabitants as
Fort Kyk-Over-Al (English: Fort See-everywhere). The administration of the West Indian Company as well as the governor of the entire colony settled here in 1621. Initially, the colony was named
Nova Zeelandia (New Zeeland), but the usage of the name Essequibo soon became common. On the southern shore of the river the hamlet
Cartabo was built, containing 12 to 15 houses. Around the river, plantations were created where slaves cultivated
cotton,
indigo and
cacao. Somewhat further downstream, on
Forteiland or "Great Flag Island",
Fort Zeelandia was built. From 1624 the area was permanently inhabited and from 1632, together with Pomeroon, it was put under the jurisdiction of the Zeelandic Chamber of the WIC (West Indian Company). In 1657 the region was transferred by the Chamber to the cities of
Middelburg,
Veere and
Vlissingen, who established the "Direction of the New Colony on Isekepe" there. From then on Pomeroon was called 'Nova Zeelandia'. In 1658, cartographer
Cornelis Goliath created a map of the colony, planned to build a new city, and built a fortress there called "New Middelburg", but the
Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665 – 67) put an end to these plans. Essequibo was occupied by the British in 1665 (along with all other Dutch colonies in
the Guianas), and then plundered by the French. The following years the Zeelanders sent a squadron of ships to retake the area. In 1667
Surinam (English colony) to the east was captured from the English by
Abraham Crijnssen, and by then abandoned Essequibo was occupied by Matthys Bergenaar. In 1670 the Chamber of the WIC in Zeeland took over control of the colonies again. The Dutch colonies in the region endured much suffering as a result of the
Nine Years' War (1688 – 97) and the
Spanish Succession War (1701 – 14), which brought
pirates into the region. In 1689 Pomeroon was destroyed by French pirates, and abandoned. The Chamber of the WIC in Zeeland kept control over the colonies, which sometimes led to criticism from The Chamber of the WIC in Amsterdam, who also wanted to start plantation there. The Zeelanders however, had established the colony by themselves, and after they retook possession of Essequibo under command of the commander of Fort Nassau Bergen in 1666, they considered themselves as rightful rulers of the region. Under governor
Laurens Storm van 's Gravesande, English planters started coming to the colony after 1740. After 1745, the number of plantations along the Demerara and her side-rivers rapidly increased. Particularly, British colonists from
Barbados began settling here. After 1750 a commander of the British population was assigned, giving them their own representation. Around 1780 a small central settlement was established at the mouth of the Demerara, which received the name
Stabroek in 1784, named after one of the directors of the West Indian Company. In 1771, Prince
William V revoked the rights of the Zeelanders who traded on Essequibo,
Demerary and
Berbice. In response, 185 Middelburg merchants invested 320,000 guilders in the newly established
Society for Navigation on Essequibo and adjacent Rivers. Partly due to the damage inflicted during the
Fourth Anglo-Dutch War (1780-1784), this trading company was already liquidated in 1788. A group of British privateers
captured Essequibo and Demerara on 24 February 1781, but did not stay. In March, two sloops of a
Royal Navy squadron under
Admiral Lord Rodney accepted the surrender of "Colony of Demarary and the River Essequebo". From 27 February 1782 to February 1783 the
French occupied the colony after compelling Governor Robert Kinston to surrender. The peace of Paris, which occurred in 1783 restored these territories to the Dutch. In 1796 it was permanently occupied by the British and by 1800, Essequibo and Demerara collectively held around 380
sugarcane plantations.
Border disputes At the
Peace of Amiens (1802), the Netherlands received the Essequibo colony for a short time, from 1802 to 1803, but after that the British again occupied it during the
Napoleonic Wars. In 1812
Stabroek was renamed by the British as
Georgetown. Essequibo became official British territory on 13 August 1814 as part of the
Treaty of London and was merged with the colony of
Demerara. , including the Essequibo border. But it also became involved in one of Latin America's most persistent border disputes because the new colony had the Essequibo river as its west border with the Spanish
Captaincy General of Venezuela. Although Spain still claimed the region, the Spanish did not contest the treaty because they were preoccupied with their own colonies' struggles for independence. On 21 July 1831,
Demerara-Essequibo was united with
Berbice to create
British Guiana with the Essequibo River as its west border, although many British settlers lived west of the Essequibo. In 1835 the British government asked German explorer
Robert Hermann Schomburgk to map British Guiana and mark its boundaries. As ordered by the British authorities, Schomburgk began British Guiana's western boundary with the new
Republic of Venezuela at the mouths of the
Orinoco River, although all the Venezuelan maps showed the Essequibo river as the east border of the country. A map of the British colony was published in 1840. Venezuela did not accept the
Schomburgk Line, which placed the entire
Cuyuni River basin within the colony. Venezuela protested, claiming the entire area west of the Essequibo River. Negotiations between Britain and Venezuela over the boundary began, but the two nations could reach no compromise. In 1838, Essequibo was made one of the three counties of Guiana, the other two being Berbice and Demerara. In 1850 both countries agreed not to occupy the disputed zone. The discovery of gold in the contested area in the late 1850s reignited the dispute. British settlers moved into the region and the
British Guiana Mining Company was formed to mine the deposits. Over the years, Venezuela made repeated protests and proposed arbitration, but the British government was uninterested. Venezuela finally broke diplomatic relations with Britain in 1887 and appealed to the United States for help. The British prime minister
Lord Salisbury at first rebuffed the United States government's suggestion of arbitration, but when President
Grover Cleveland threatened to intervene according to the
Monroe Doctrine, Britain agreed to let an international tribunal arbitrate the boundary in 1897. For two years, the tribunal consisting of two Britons, two Americans, and a Russian studied the case in Paris (France). Their unanimous decision, handed down in 1899, awarded 94 percent of the disputed territory to British Guiana. Venezuela received only the mouths of the Orinoco River and a short stretch of the
Atlantic coastline just to the east. Although Venezuela was unhappy with the decision, a commission surveyed a new border in accordance with the award, and both sides accepted the boundary in 1905. The issue was considered settled for the next half-century. In 1958, the county of Essequibo was abolished when Guiana was subdivided into districts. Historical Essequibo was divided in 1958, and is part of a number of
Guyanese administrative regions and the name is preserved in the regions of
Essequibo Islands-West Demerara and
Upper Takutu-Upper Essequibo. and said that the Russian chair of the panel,
Friedrich Martens, had visited Britain with the two British arbitrators in the summer of 1899, and subsequently had offered the two American judges a choice between accepting a unanimous award along the lines ultimately agreed, or a 3 to 2 majority opinion even more favourable to the British. The alternative would have followed the Schomburgk Line entirely, and given the mouth of the Orinoco to the British. Mallet-Prevost said that the American judges and Venezuelan counsel were disgusted at the situation and considered the 3 to 2 option with a strongly worded minority opinion, but ultimately went along with Martens to avoid depriving Venezuela of even more territory. The British Government rejected this claim, asserting the validity of the 1899 award. The British Guiana Government, then under the leadership of the PPP, also strongly rejected this claim. Efforts by all the parties to resolve the matter on the eve of Guyana's independence in 1966 failed. As of today the dispute remains unresolved. ==Governors==