Guadeloupe's Colonial Heritage

Guadeloupe's Colonial Heritage 

Guadeloupe preserves exceptional colonial heritage that testifies to its eventful history. Creole estates, windmills, and historic buildings tell the colonial epic of the island. Sugar plantations, true autonomous villages of the 19th century, are the jewels of this heritage. These agricultural estates combined sugar production, distilleries, and housing for workers. Some, like the Clément estate, are still in operation. Windmills, which punctuate the Guadeloupean landscape, recall the importance of the sugar industry. These imposing structures, often restored, offer exceptional panoramic views of the island. Military forts, vestiges of the colonial era, dominate the coasts. Fort Saint-Louis, in Basse-Terre, is the most emblematic. These fortifications tell the strategic history of Guadeloupe in the Caribbean.