Caribbean Region - place

The Caribbean region was a crossroads of African, European, and indigenous cultures during the colonial era. The movement of enslaved people and colonizers between islands created musical and dance traditions that spread across the region and deeply influenced Cuban culture.

Caribbean Influence on Cuba

Haiti

The most direct Caribbean influence on Cuba came from Haiti. After the Haitian Revolution (1791–1804), thousands of French colonists and Afro-Haitian workers fled to eastern Cuba — particularly santiago de cuba"> Santiago de Cuba and Guantánamo. They brought:

  • Tumba Francesa — a drum ensemble and dance derived from French colonial ballroom tradition mixed with African rhythms, still practiced in Santiago and Guantánamo
  • Franco-Haitiano dances — a family of Afro-Haitian ritual dances that survived in eastern Cuban communities
  • Coffee and sugar plantation culture that shaped the Oriente region's social character

The Plantation Economy

The Caribbean plantation system, driven by sugar, was the engine that brought millions of enslaved Africans to the region. Cuba received large numbers of enslaved people in the 18th and 19th centuries — later than many other Caribbean islands — which meant African cultural memory was fresher and more intact in Cuba than elsewhere.