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HISTORY: TENERIFE
It
is estimated that about 25 million years ago, parts of the continent
broke off from the mainland forming the Canary islands. Reference
to the islands were said to be made by Plato but no evidence exists
in this regard. The earliest known settlement in the islands was
around 200 BC, by people called the Guanches who lived by the
Teide volcano and lived by means of hunting and farming. It is
also thought that Berber immigrants from nearby Saharan Africa
inhabited some of the eastern islands. Europeans first landed
on the islands in the 13th century and the Normans conquered most
of the islands by defeating the Guanches in the 14th century.
In 1494, the Spaniards invaded Tenerife. The
Spaniards were defeated by the Guanches, but mounted another campaign
in 1496, and that time were successful, aided by an epidemic disease
that swept through the Guanches, killing large numbers of them.
The Guanches were enslaved, the islands deforested, and the traders
and settlers flocked there. In 1504, The Inquisition came to the
Canaries to enforce the new faith and hunt Guanches still practicing
their pagan faith in secret, and any Jewish settlers who thought
they could escape the long arm of Spain. As a culture, the Guanches
were extinct by 1600, but genetically their remnants were absorbed
into the colonial settler populations, which can still be seen
in Canary Islanders today.
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