
Last modified: 2023-05-09 by olivier touzeau
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Flag of Terre-de-Bas - Image by Olivier Touzeau, 17 March 2023
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Terre-de-Bas is a commune in Guadeloupe, in the group of Les Saintes islands, to the southwest of Guadeloupe's mainland. The archipelago of Les Saintes is divided into two communes: Terre-de-Haut and Terre-de-Bas. Terre-de-Bas is made up of Terre-de-Bas Island and several uninhabited islands and islets. The commune of Terre-de-Bas has 950 inhabitants on 6.8 km².
Olivier Touzeau, 17 March 2023
Les Saintes (Terre-de-Haut and Terre-de-Bas) is mostly populated by the descendants of colonists from Brittany and Normandy, Poitou, Saintonge and Anjou, from the first French families that lived on Saint Christopher and Nevis when it was a French colony. The population has the peculiarity of being primarily of European origin and speaks a variety of popular American French, with some terms of Old French.
Although uninhabited due to the lack of spring water, the islands were, 
  before the European conquest, regularly visited by  Kalinagos people living 
  on the neighbourhood islands of Guadeloupe and Dominica.
  During his second expedition, Christopher Columbus discovered the small 
  archipelago on 4 November 1493 and named it "Los Santos", in reference to 
  All Saints' Day which had just been celebrated.
  On 18 October 1648, a French expedition annexed Les Saintes, already under 
  English influence, at the request of the governor of Guadeloupe, Charles 
  Houël. From 1649, the islands became a colony exploited by the French West 
  India Company which tried to establish agriculture.
  In 1653, the Kalinagos slaughtered the French troops in neighbouring island 
  of Marie-Galante. The French sent a punitive expedition against the tribes 
  in Dominica and then the Kalinagos invaded Les Saintes to take revenge. They 
  were definitively chased away in 1658. The French West India Company was 
  dissolved in 1664 and the archipelago was then acquired in the French royal 
  domain by Jean-Baptiste Colbert
  In 1666, the English attacked the archipelago; they surrendered on 15 August 
  1666, the day of the Assumption of Mary. Our-Lady-of-Assumption became the 
  patron saint of the parish of the archipelago.
From 1759 to 1763, the British took possession of Les Saintes and a part of 
  Guadeloupe. Les Saintes were restored to the Kingdom of France after the 
  signature of the Treaty of Paris on 10 February 1763. To prevent further 
  British ambitions, King Louis XVI ordered the construction of fortifications 
  on Les Saintes. Thus began the construction of "Fort Louis" on the Mire Hill 
  on Terre de Haut island.
  On 12 April 1782, the French fleet of Comte de Grasse, which aimed to annex 
  British Jamaica, left Martinique and headed towards Les Saintes. The French fleet was caught in the Dominica Passage by the British 
  and 2,000 French were killed, and 5,000 men and 5 boats captured. The defeat 
  put Les Saintes under British control for twenty years. In 1802, the 
  Bonapartists succeeded in obtaining the archipelago from the British, under 
  the pressure of their military assaults. In 1805, Fort-Louis was renamed 
  Fort Napoléon.
  The archipelago was reconquered by the British in April 1809, and Guadeloupe 
  in 1810. The British destroyed Fort Napoléon in 1809.
  Guadeloupe was offered to king of Sweden Karl XIV Johan in 1813. Under the Treaty of Paris signed on 30 May 1814, the United Kingdom accepted to give 
  Guadeloupe back to France. King Karl XIV Johan of Sweden retroceded 
  Guadeloupe to France. The French took possession of Les Saintes in December 
  1814.
  The new governor of Guadeloupe and dependencies, the Comte de Linois, was 
  sent by Louis XVIII to repossess the colony. With the return of Napoleon I 
  in April 1815, a conflict broke out between Bonapartists and monarchists. On 
  19 June 1815, Comte de Linois rejoined the Bonapartists.
  The governor of Windward Islands in Martinique, the Comte de Vaugiraud, sent 
  a British frigate to bring back the monarchical order of Louis XVIII.
  Les Saintes were annexed again by the crown of Great Britain on 6 July 1815, 
  Marie-Galante on 18 July and Guadeloupe on 10 August.
  The British troops left the colony to the French only on 22 July 1816.
  In 1844, during Louis Philippe I's reign, the construction of a fort began 
  on the ruins of the old Fort Louis. The fortification was built to the 
  technique of Vauban to protect the archipelago against a possible British 
  reconquest. The fort was finished in 1867 in the reign of Napoleon III.
  On 9 August 1882, following the church's requirements asking for the 
  creation of Saint-Nicholas's parish, the municipality of Terre-de-Bas was 
  created, separating from Terre-de-Haut which also became a municipality. 
  The patron saint's day of Terre-de-Bas was then established on 6 December, 
  St Nicholas'Day.
  In 1903, the military and disciplinary garrisons were definitively given up.
During World War II, until July 1943 when the French Antilles joined the 
  Free French Forces and the allies, Fort Napoléén had become a political jail 
  where the dissidents were locked.
  In 1957, in the municipal elections, the mysterious death of the mayor of 
  Terre-de-Haut, Théodore Samson, while he was in the office of the National 
  Gendarmerie, provoked an uprising of the population against the institution 
  which was attacked with conches and stones. The revolt lasted two days 
  before being quelled by the military and police reinforcements from 
  Guadeloupe whom dissipated the crowd and arrested the insurgents. A frigate 
  of the navy stayed a few weeks in the harbour of Les Saintes to restore the 
  peace.
  Touristic cruises to Les Saintes began in 1958; in 1963, the archipelago 
  welcomed SS France during its first transatlantic voyage, and in 1969, the 
  first hotel of the island opened its doors. In 1972, Les Saintes was 
  equipped with a desalination plant, replaced in 1993 by a submarine supply 
  piped from Guadeloupe.
  In 1974, Fort Napoléon was restored and accommodated a museum dedicated to 
  Les Saintes' history, culture, and environment. It also contains the Jardin 
  exotique du Fort Napoléon, a botanical garden dedicated to local succulent 
  plants and iguanas.
  In May 2001, les Saintes joined the Club of the Most Beautiful Bays of the 
  World.
Olivier Touzeau, 8 March 2019
The flag of Terre-de-Bas (photo from this page) is white with the coat of arms and the name of the commune above:
Olivier Touzeau, 17 March 2023