Pre-colonial Archaeological evidence indicates that
Saint Martin was inhabited by
Amerindian peoples as early as 2000 BC. The earliest known settlers were
Archaic Age hunter-gatherers, followed by the
Saladoid culture, who arrived around 550 BC from the
Orinoco River basin, introducing agriculture and pottery. These communities established villages, such as the one at Hope Estate, which remained occupied until approximately 650 AD. Around 1300–1400 AD, the island saw the arrival of the
Kalinago (
Carib) people, who began to displace the earlier
Arawak inhabitants. The confusion of numerous poorly charted small islands in the
Leeward Islands meant that this name was accidentally transferred to the island now known as
Saint-Martin. Nominally a Spanish territory, the island became the focus of the competing interest of the European powers, notably
France and the
United Provinces. Meanwhile, the Amerindian population began to decline precipitously, dying from diseases brought by the Europeans. In 1631, the Dutch built
Fort Amsterdam on Saint Martin and the
Dutch West India Company began mining
salt there. Tensions between the Netherlands and Spain were already high due to the ongoing
Eighty Years' War, and in 1633 the Spanish
captured St Martin and drove off the Dutch colonists. The Dutch, under
Peter Stuyvesant, attempted to
regain control in 1644 but were unsuccessful. However, in 1648 the Eighty Years' War ended and the island lost its strategic and economic value to Spain. The Spanish abandoned it and the Dutch returned. The first governor of French Saint Martin was
Robert de Longvilliers. Various adjustments to the precise alignment of the border occurred, with the boundary settling at its current position by 1817.
18th–19th centuries During the 18th century, the French and Dutch developed cotton, tobacco, and sugar plantations on the island, leading to the importation of a significant number of African slaves, who eventually outnumbered the European settlers. This led to immediate repercussions on the Dutch side; for instance, the entire enslaved population of the Diamond Estate Plantation fled to the French side, where they were recognized as free individuals. The Dutch abolished slavery later, on 1 July 1863. Meanwhile, In 1763, Saint Martin was administratively merged into France's Guadeloupe colony. == Geography ==