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  1. Under the British. From the 1500s to the early 1600s, Spanish Town, renamed such by the British, was the only settled town in Jamaica. It remained the capital under the British until 1872 when the young city of Kingston assumed that honour. In 1670, after years of war with Spain, Jamaica was officially given to Britain by the Treaty of Madrid.

  2. Spanish Town ist eine Großstadt im Südosten Jamaikas. Sie befindet sich im County Middlesex und ist die Hauptstadt des Parish Saint Catherine. 2010 betrug die Einwohnerzahl 162.359 Menschen. ... In den Old Imperial Barracks wurde das erste Ausbildungszentrum der Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) eingerichtet.

  3. In 1611, the population of Spanish Jamaica was 1,510, including 696 Spaniards, 107 free people of color, 74 Tainos, 558 black slaves, and 75 "foreigners". That census, however, did not include those Taino who had fled to the mountainous interior, where they mingled with freed and run-away African slaves, and became the ancestors to the Jamaican Maroons of Nanny Town .

  4. We take the hassle out of shipping to Jamaica, with free deliveries for Kingston & St. Andrew, Portmore and Spanish Town, all other parishes are subject to a local delivery charge. ... Portmore and Spanish Town, all other parishes are subject to a local delivery charge. Get in Touch worldconnectja@gmail.com 876 567-2568 876 567-2568.

  5. Progressive Grocers of Jamaica Ltd, Spanish Town, Jamaica. 7,882 likes · 20 talking about this · 33 were here. A Jamaican retail corporation that operates a chain of grocery stores.

  6. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › Spanish_TownSpanish Town - Wikipedia

    Spanish Town è l'ex capitale spagnola (col nome di Santiago de la Vega) e britannica della Giamaica spagnola, dal 1534 al 1872. La città ospita alcune memorie della Giamaica, come gli archivi nazionali, una piccola popolazione e la più antica Chiesa anglicana esistente al di fuori dell'Inghilterra.

  7. Robertson • Late Seventeenth-Century Spanish Town, Jamaica | 347 their ignominious repulse from Santo Domingo the previous month. It was occupied the day after the army landed and before any negotiations had begun with the island's Spanish settlers.1 There were no casualties, apart from the town itself, sacked by an army hungry for loot.