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Cayenne |
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Cayenne (kīĕn`, kāĕn`), city and district (1990 pop. 41,659), capital of French Guiana French Guiana (gēăn`ə, –än`–), Fr. ..... Click the link for more information. , on Cayenne island at the mouth of the Cayenne River. The city has a shallow harbor, and deep-draft ships must anchor some distance out. Timber, rum, essence of rosewood, and gold are exported. Cayenne was founded by the French in 1643, but it was wiped out by a Native American massacre and was not resettled until 1664. Throughout the 17th cent. the city and its surrounding region were sharply contested by Great Britain, France, and the Netherlands. It was occupied (1808–16) by both the British and the Portuguese. From 1851 to 1946 the city was the center of French penal settlements in Guiana, and part of its population is made up of prisoners' descendants. Cayenne's development has long been hindered by internal strife, a hot, wet climate, and the prevalence of disease. In the city are the Pasteur Institute, which specializes in the study of tropical diseases, and several buildings from the colonial period; there is an international airport. The city gives its name to cayenne pepper, a very sharp condiment found on the island in abundance. CayenneSeaport (pop., 1999: 50,594), capital of French Guiana. The city was founded by the French in 1643 on northwestern Cayenne Island, which is formed by the estuaries of the Cayenne and Mahury rivers. In the mid-19th century it became a centre of French penal settlements in Guiana and was known as the “city of the condemned” (see Devils Island). The prisons were closed in 1945. Cayenne the capital of French Guiana, on an island at the mouth of the Cayenne River: French penal settlement from 1854 to 1938. Pop.: 50 594 (1999) How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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1)French National Institute of Public Health Surveillance, Saint-Maurice, France' ; (2)Laboratory of Ecophysiologie et Ecotoxicologie des Systemes Aquatiques, Arcachon, France; (3)INSERM, Paris, France; (4)Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement, Laboratoire d'Hydrobiologie, Cayenne, French Guiana Born in Cayenne, French Guiana, Tamango (as he was called in childhood) grew up around the Yoruban vodoun religion of Guiana--his grandmother was a vodoun herbalist and healer. They're really putting that marriage to the test - spending three months in Cayenne, French Guiana, where, he tells us, they're coping with humidity, temperatures of 110 degrees or so, and ''jungle-y conditions. |
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