Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Collectivity of Saint Martin

Overseas collectivity of France

Collectivity of Saint Martin

Overseas collectivity of France

FieldValue
nameSaint Martin
native_namefr
settlement_typeOverseas collectivity of France and outermost region of the European Union
official_nameCollectivity of Saint Martin
Collectivité de Saint-Martin
image_sealCoat_of_arms_of_Saint_Martin.svg
seal_size90
seal_typeCoat of arms
seal_linkCoat of arms of the Collectivity of Saint Martin
anthemLa Marseillaise
("The Marseillaise")
song"O Sweet Saint Martin's Land"
song_typeTerritorial anthem
image_mapSaint Martin in France.svg
map_altLocation of Saint Martin in the Leeward Islands
map_captionLocation of Saint Martin in the Leeward Islands
mapsize250px
image_map2Saint Martin-CIA WFB Map.png
mapsize2250px
map_caption2Saint Martin is located on the northern half of
the island of Saint Martin.
subdivision_typeSovereign state
subdivision_nameFrance
established_titlePartition of island
established_date23 March 1648
established_title2Separated from Guadeloupe
established_date215 July 2007
official_languagesFrench
capitalMarigot
largest_citycapital
demonymSaint-Martinois
government_typeDevolved parliamentary dependency
leader_title1President of France
leader_name1Emmanuel Macron
leader_title2Prefect
leader_name2Cyrille Le Vély
leader_title3President of the Territorial Council
leader_name3Louis Mussington
legislatureTerritorial Council
national_representationFrench Parliament
national_representation_type1Senate
national_representation11 senator (of 377)
national_representation_type2National Assembly
national_representation21 seat shared with Saint Barthélemy (of 577)
area_km253.2
percent_waternegligible
population_census31,477
population_census_yearJan. 2021
population_density_km2592
population_density_sq_mi1,535
GDP_nominalUS$771.9 million (€581.8 million)
GDP_nominal_year2014
GDP_nominal_per_capitaUS$21,987 (€16,572)
HDI_change
HDI
currency
timezoneAST
utc_offset-4:00
drives_onright
calling_code+590
postal_code_typeINSEE code
postal_code978
iso_code
cctld
common_languagesSaint Martin's Englishimage_flag=Local flag of the Collectivity of Saint Martin.svg

Collectivité de Saint-Martin ("The Marseillaise")

the island of Saint Martin. The Collectivity of Saint Martin (), commonly known as simply Saint Martin (Saint-Martin, ), is an overseas collectivity of France in the West Indies in the Caribbean, on the northern half of the island of Saint Martin, as well as some smaller adjacent islands. Saint Martin is separated from the island of Anguilla by the Anguilla Channel. Its capital is Marigot.

With a population of 31,477 as of January 2021 on an area of 53.2 km2, it encompasses the northern 60% of the divided island of Saint Martin, and some neighbouring islets, the largest of which is Île Tintamarre. The southern 40% of the island of Saint Martin constitutes Sint Maarten, which has been a constituent country of the Kingdom of the Netherlands since 2010 following the dissolution of Netherlands Antilles. This marks the only place in the world where France borders the Netherlands.

Before 2007, the French part of Saint Martin was a commune belonging to the French overseas department and region of Guadeloupe. Despite seceding from Guadeloupe in 2007 and gaining more autonomy as an overseas collectivity of France, Saint Martin has remained an outermost region of the European Union and is part of the eurozone. For statistical purposes, it is still included in the NUTS 2 (FRY1) and NUTS 3 (FRY10) of Guadeloupe by Eurostat.

Etymology

Due to confusion on early maps, the island accidentally got the name intended for Nevis by Christopher Columbus in honour of St Martin of Tours because he first sighted it on the saint's feast day on 11 November 1493.

History

Main article: History of Saint Martin, French West Indies

Pre-colonial

Archaeological evidence indicates that Saint Martin was inhabited by Amerindian peoples as early as 2000 BC. The earliest known settlers were Archaic Age hunter-gatherers, followed by the Saladoid culture, who arrived around 550 BC from the Orinoco River basin, introducing agriculture and pottery.TY  - JOUR

AU  - Nathalie, Serrand

AU  - Dominique, Bonnissent

PY  - 2018/03/20

SP  - 1

EP  - 16

T1  - Interacting Pre-Columbian Amerindian Societies and Environments: Insights from Five Millennia of Archaeological Invertebrate Record on the Saint-Martin Island (French Lesser Antilles)

VL  - 26

DO  - 10.1080/14614103.2018.1450463

JO  - Environmental Archaeology

ER  - These communities established villages, such as the one at Hope Estate, which remained occupied until approximately 650 AD. Around 1300–1400 AD, the island saw the arrival of the Kalinago (Carib) people, who began to displace the earlier Arawak inhabitants.

Arrival of Europeans

The 1633 Spanish capture of Saint Martin, as painted by Juan de la Corte

It is commonly believed that Christopher Columbus named the island in honor of Saint Martin of Tours when he encountered it on his second voyage of discovery. However, he actually applied the name to the island now called Nevis when he anchored offshore on 11 November 1493, the feast day of Saint Martin. The confusion of numerous poorly charted small islands in the Leeward Islands meant that this name was accidentally transferred to the island now known as Saint-Martin.

Nominally a Spanish territory, the island became the focus of the competing interest of the European powers, notably France and the United Provinces. Meanwhile, the Amerindian population began to decline precipitously, dying from diseases brought by the Europeans.

In 1631, the Dutch built Fort Amsterdam on Saint Martin and the Dutch West India Company began mining salt there. Tensions between the Netherlands and Spain were already high due to the ongoing Eighty Years' War, and in 1633 the Spanish captured St Martin and drove off the Dutch colonists. The Dutch, under Peter Stuyvesant, attempted to regain control in 1644 but were unsuccessful. However, in 1648 the Eighty Years' War ended and the island lost its strategic and economic value to Spain. The Spanish abandoned it and the Dutch returned. The French also began settling, and rather than fight for control of the entire island the two powers agreed to divide it in two with the Treaty of Concordia.{{citation|page=13 |title=Concordia Treaty, 23rd March 1648|journal=Heritage |volume=6 |date=15 March 2010

18th–19th centuries

During the 18th century, the French and Dutch developed cotton, tobacco, and sugar plantations on the island, leading to the importation of a significant number of African slaves, who eventually outnumbered the European settlers. This led to immediate repercussions on the Dutch side; for instance, the entire enslaved population of the Diamond Estate Plantation fled to the French side, where they were recognized as free individuals. The Dutch abolished slavery later, on 1 July 1863. Meanwhile, In 1763, Saint Martin was administratively merged into France's Guadeloupe colony.

20th–21st centuries

By the first decades of the 20th century Saint Martin's economy was in a poor state, prompting many to emigrate. Things improved during the Second World War as the Americans built an airstrip on the Dutch side of the island.

In 1946 Saint Martin (along with Saint Barthélemy) was formally subsumed as an arrondissement into the Guadeloupe département. Tourism started expanding from the 1960s–70s onward, eventually becoming the dominant sector of Saint Martin's economy.

Hurricane Luis hit the island in 1995, causing immense destruction and resulting in 12 deaths.

In 2007 Saint Martin was detached from Guadeloupe and became a territorial collectivity with its own Prefect and Territorial Council.

In 2017, Saint Martin was again devastated by a hurricane, Irma, causing widespread destruction across the entire island.

Geography

Topographic map of the island of Saint Martin

The Collectivity of Saint Martin occupies the northern half of the island of Saint Martin in the Leeward Islands; the southern half forms the Dutch territory of Sint Maarten. To the north across the Anguilla Channel lies the British Overseas Territory of Anguilla, to the south-east of the island lies the French island of Saint Barthélemy and further south are the Dutch islands of Saba and Sint Eustatius.

Saint Martin's land area is 53.2 km2

Numerous small islands lie off the coast, including Rock of the Cove Marcel, Creole Rock, Little Key, Pinel Island, Green Cay Grand Islet (within the Simpson Bay Lagoon) and the largest Tintamarre Island.

Hurricane Irma

Hurricane Irma hit Saint Martin on 6 September 2017; 95% of the structures on the French side were damaged or destroyed. Looting or "pillaging" was a problem initially; France subsequently sent 240 gendarmes to help control the situation.

On 11 September President Emmanuel Macron visited St Martin to view the damage and to assure residents of support for relief efforts. At that time, only tourists and visitors from France (mainlanders) had been evacuated from St. Martin, leading to complaints by black and mixed-race residents that whites were being given priority. Macron pledged 50 million euros of aid for the French islands and said the rebuilding will be done quickly but very well. By March 2018 much of the territory's infrastructure was back up and running.

Politics and government

Main article: Politics of the Collectivity of Saint Martin

Fort St. Louis

Saint Martin was for many years a French commune, forming part of Guadeloupe, which is an overseas région and département of France. In 2003 the population of the French part of the island voted in favour of secession from Guadeloupe in order to form a separate overseas collectivity (COM) of France. On 9 February 2007, the French Parliament passed a bill granting COM status to both the French part of Saint Martin and (separately) the neighbouring Saint Barthélemy. The new status took effect on 15 July 2007, once the local assemblies were elected, with the second round of the vote ultimately occurring on 15 July 2007. Saint Martin remains part of the European Union.

The new governance structure befitting an overseas collectivity took effect on 15 July 2007 with the first session of the Territorial Council (). This is a unicameral body of 23 members, with elections held every five years. On 7 August, Frantz Gumbs was elected as President of the Territorial Council. However, his election was declared invalid on 10 April 2009 and Daniel Gibbs appointed as Acting President of the Territorial Council on 14 April 2009. Gumbs was re-elected on 5 May 2009.

The Chief of State is the President of France (currently Emmanuel Macron), who is represented locally by a Prefect appointed on the advice of the Minister of the Interior (France). Saint Martin elects one member to the French Senate, and one to the French National Assembly (note that the latter post is shared with Saint Barthélemy).

Before 2007, Saint Martin was coded as GP (Guadeloupe) in ISO 3166-1. In October 2007, it received the ISO 3166-1 code MF (alpha-2 code), MAF (alpha-3 code), and 663 (numeric code).

There currently exists a movement in Saint Martin aiming for the unification of the island of Saint Martin, which has its own flag.

Demographics

Saint Martin had a population of 31,477 according to the January 2021 census, (up from only 8,072 inhabitants at the 1982 census). The population decrease between 2017 and 2021 is largely due to the impact of Hurricane Irma which hit the island in early September 2017 and destroyed most of its infrastructure.

Most residents live on the coastal region in the towns of Marigot (the capital), Grand-Case and Quartier-d'Orleans. Most residents are of black or mixed Creole ancestry, with smaller numbers of Europeans and Indians.

French is the official language of the territory. The sizable Haitian community (7,000 in 2000) also uses Haitian Creole.

Despite the status of French as the official language, English is the predominant language in the collectivity, described by the Prefect as being "essentially anglophone", due to the dominance of English in that part of the Caribbean. In 2025 only 12% of Saint-Martinois students had a sufficient mastery of French when they started high school, a situation which is said to explain the particularly high drop-out rate.

ReligionThe main religions are Roman Catholicism, Jehovah's Witnesses, various Protestant denominations, Hinduism and Islam.

| graph-pos = bottom | 1885 |3400 | 1954.49863 |3366 | 1961.77260274 |4502 | 1967.791780822 |5061 | 1974.791780822 |6191 | 1982.18630137 |8072 | 1990.202739726 |28518 | 1999.183561644 |29078 | 2007 |35925 | 2012 |35742 | 2017 |35334 | 2021 |31477

Structure of the population

Age groupMaleFemaleTotal%Age groupMaleFemaleTotalPercent
Total14 19116 09530 286100
0–49939791 9726.51
5–91 0621 0752 1377.06
10–141 1541 1322 2867.55
15–191 1521 1202 2727.50
20–248768821 7585.80
25–297228571 5795.21
30–347619571 7185.67
35–397661 0021 7685.84
40–447859901 7755.86
45–499071 1062 0136.65
50–541 0061 1802 1867.22
55–591 0461 1592 2057.28
60–648919821 8736.18
65–697328231 5555.13
70–745396411 1803.90
75–793584608182.70
80–842373515881.94
85–891332233561.18
90–94531191720.57
95–991644600.20
100+213150.05
0–143 2093 1866 39521.12
15–648 91210 23519 14763.22
65+2 0702 6744 74415.66

Education

The collectivity has the following public preschool, primary, and elementary schools:--

  • Preschools: Jean Anselme, Jérôme Beaupère, Elaine Clarke, Evelina Halley, Ghyslaine Rogers, Trott Simeone
  • Primary schools: Omer Arrondell, Émile Choisy, Nina Duverly, Elie Gibs, Aline Hanson, Émile Larmonnie, Marie-Amélie Ledee, Clair Saint-Maximin, Hervé Williams
  • École élémentaire M-Antoinette Richard

There are three junior high schools (collège) and one senior high school:

  • Junior highs: #1 Mont Des Accords, #2 Soualiga, #3 Quartier d'Orleans
  • Lycée Professionnel des Îles Nord (senior high/sixth-form)
  • Cité Scolaire Robert Weinum is a joint public junior-senior high school in Saint Martin

Religion

The majority of the inhabitants of the island of St. Martin profess Christianity, and in the French part the Catholic Church is the faith of the majority. There are also other Christian groups and religions represented on the island.

Grand-Case

The French territory of St. Martin is part of the Diocese of Basse-Terre and Pointe-à-Pitre (in Latin, Dioecesis Imae Telluris and in French, Diocèse de Basse-Terre et Pointe-à-Pitre), attached to the organization of the Catholic Church in France. The diocese includes the territories of Guadeloupe, St. Barthélemy and St. Martin. This diocese is part of the ecclesiastical province of Fort-de-France, in the ecclesiastical region of the Antilles, and has as neighbors to the northwest, the diocese of Saint John-Basseterre and to the southeast, the Diocese of Roseau.

About sixty priests are active in the diocese and serve several churches, among them the Church of Saint Martin de Tours (Saint-Martin-de-Tours) in Marigot, the Church of Mary Star of the Sea (Église de Marie Etoile de la Mer) in Grand Case and the Church of Saint Martin in Quartier d'Orléans (Église de Saint-Martin).

The episcopal see is located in Basse-Terre, city of Guadeloupe, with the cathedral of Our Lady of Guadeloupe as the main or mother church, (cathédrale Notre-Dame-de-Guadeloupe).

Economy

Main article: Economy of Saint Martin

Marigot in 2017 after Hurricane Irma, which severely impacted the tourism-dependent economy

As a part of France, the official currency of Saint Martin is the euro, though the US dollar is also widely accepted. Tourism is the main economic activity – with over one million visitors annually some 85% of the population is employed in this sector. The other major sector is the financial services industry. Though limited, agriculture and fishing are also practiced, though these sectors are very small and most food is imported.

INSEE estimated that the nominal GDP of Saint Martin amounted to 581.8 million euros in 2014 (US$771.9 million at 2014 exchanges rates; US$660.3 million at Feb. 2022 exchange rates). In that same year the nominal GDP per capita of Saint Martin was 16,572 euros (US$21,987 at 2014 exchanges rates; US$18,806 at Feb. 2022 exchange rates), which was only half the GDP per capita of metropolitan France in 2014, and 79% of Guadeloupe's GDP per capita. In comparison, the nominal GDP per capita on the Dutch side of the island, Sint Maarten, was US$33,536 in 2014.

Newspapers

The following newspapers are published in Saint Martin:

  • Le Pelican
  • Faxinfo
  • SXMInfo.fr
  • Soualiga Post
  • St. Martin's Week
  • St. Martin News Network (also covers Sint Maarten)

Transport

Passengers disembarking at Grand Case-Espérance Airport

Saint Martin has one airport, Grand Case-Espérance Airport, which provides flights to Guadeloupe, Martinique and Saint Barthélemy. For international tourists, Saint Martin relies on Princess Juliana International Airport on the Dutch side of the island.

Sport

Saint Martin has a national football team, and competes in CONCACAF competitions.

References

References

  1. "Préfet".
  2. (3 April 2022). "Louis Mussington becomes the 6th president of French Saint Martin on Sunday". SMX Island Time.
  3. "Mise à jour du plan de prévention des risques naturels de la collectivité territoriale de Saint-Martin". [[Cabinet of France.
  4. "Décret n° 2023-1256 du 26 décembre 2023 authentifiant les chiffres des populations de métropole, des départements d'outre-mer de la Guadeloupe, de la Guyane, de la Martinique et de La Réunion, et des collectivités de Saint-Barthélemy, de Saint-Martin, et de Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon". [[Cabinet of France.
  5. (May 2018). "Estimation of per capita GDP in Saint-Martin". [[INSEE]].
  6. "CIA World Factbook – Saint Martin".
  7. "Encyclopedia Britannica – Saint Martin".
  8. "History of Saint Martin".
  9. "Pre-Colombian history of Sint Maarten - Saint Maarten {{!}} Caribbean".
  10. "Saint Martin, Caribbean, Maritime History and World Seaports during the 1800s. The Maritime Heritage Project. Sea Captains, Ships, Merchants, Merchandise, Immigration and Passengers.".
  11. (2002). "A History of St Kitts". MacMillan Caribbean.
  12. (1974). "The European Discovery of America, The Southern Voyages". Oxford University Press.
  13. ''Caribbean: The Lesser Antilles'' Karl Luntta
  14. "Where Saint-Martin Ends and Sint Maarten Begins".
  15. "UNESCO".
  16. "UNESCO MEMORY WORLD".
  17. "St. Martin News Network - Abolition of Slavery in Saint-Martin: a 28th of May…".
  18. Dutch officials: Irma damaged or destroyed 70 percent of St. Maarten homes, leaving island vulnerable to Jose's approach. ''The Washington Post'' 9 September 2017. [https://web.archive.org/web/20170909223210/https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/dutch-officials-irma-damaged-or-destroyed-70-percent-of-st-maarten-homes-leaving-island-vulnerable-to-joses-approach/2017/09/09/666eb640-957e-11e7-8482-8dc9a7af29f9_story.html] Accessed 9 September 2017
  19. (2017). "An Ecoregion-Based Approach to Protecting Half the Terrestrial Realm". BioScience.
  20. Hurricane Irma destroys '95%' of French part of St. Martin—official, Agence France-Presse 7 September 2017. [http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/928557/hurricane-irma-destroys-95-of-french-part-of-st-martin-official] Accessed 9 September 2017
  21. (9 September 2017). "Looting Reported on Caribbean Island Struck by Hurricane Irma". The Wall Street Journal.
  22. "Irma shatters Caribbean, drives toward Florida with Hurricane Jose in wake – the Globe and Mail".
  23. "International News: Latest Headlines, Video and Photographs from Around the World -- People, Places, Crisis, Conflict, Culture, Change, Analysis and Trends". ABC News.
  24. (11 September 2017). "European leaders step up Irma relief effort in Caribbean". CNN.
  25. (11 September 2017). "In Irma's aftermath, Black residents of St. Martin complain France is evacuating white tourists first – The Star".
  26. Staff and agencies. (12 September 2017). "Emmanuel Macron pledges €50m to help Irma-ravaged Caribbean territories".
  27. "Updated: Mapping what's open and closed in the Caribbean: Travel Weekly".
  28. (9 December 2003). "French Caribbean voters reject change". Caribbean Net News.
  29. (9 February 2007). "Saint-Barth To Become An Overseas Collectivity". St. Barth Weekly.
  30. NewMedia. "Les élections du futur conseil territorial font débat – Politique – Ixprim News – NewMedia – Newmedia". newmedia-fr.info.
  31. See J. P. Thiellay, ''Droit des outre-mers'', Paris:Dalloz, 2007.
  32. (7 June 2016). "Consolidated version of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, Article 355". [[Official Journal of the European Union]].
  33. (28 July 2008). "Louis-Constant Fleming démissionné par le conseil d'Etat". fxgpariscaraibe.
  34. (8 August 2008). "Frantz Gumbs elected new president of Collectivité". The Daily Herald.
  35. "The Daily Herald – New Domain Redirect". thedailyherald.com.
  36. "May 2009". rulers.org.
  37. ISO 3166-1 Newsletter. [http://www.iso.org/iso/newsletter_vi-1.pdf Assignment of code elements for Saint Barthélemy and Saint Martin and update of France and other French Territories]
  38. Badejo, Fabian Adekunle. (25 December 2004). "The reunification of St. Martin: A pipe dream or an inevitable choice?". House of Nehesi Publishers.
  39. (29 August 2002). "12th anniversary of St. Martin's "Unity Flag" observed Saturday on Conscious Lyrics; students raise money for unity bumper stickers". House of Nehesi Publishers.
  40. "Populations légales 2017 des départements et collectivités d'outre-mer". [[Cabinet of France.
  41. Klomp, Ank. "Saint Martin: Communal Identities on a Divided Caribbean Island." In: Niedermüller, Peter and Bjarne Stoklund (editors). ''[[Journal of European Ethnology]]'' Volume 30:2, 2000: ''Borders and Borderlands: An Anthropological Perspective''. [[Museum Tusculanum Press]], 2000. {{ISBN
  42. ''A Saint-Martin, l’aggravation de la criminalité suscite l’inquiétude'' [https://www.lemonde.fr/politique/article/2025/02/02/a-saint-martin-l-aggravation-de-la-criminalite-suscite-l-inquietude_6528261_823448.html], Le Monde, 3 February 2025.
  43. "UNSD — Demographic and Social Statistics".
  44. "[http://www.ac-guadeloupe.fr/sites/default/files/liste_des_ecoles_publiques_et_privees_sous_contrat.pdf LISTE DES ÉCOLES PUBLIQUES ET PRIVÉES SOUS CONTRAT]." {{ill. Académie de la Guadeloupe. fr. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  45. "[http://www.com-saint-martin.fr/JeunesseEducation/Pages/Collegesetlyceepublic.aspx Collèges et lycée public ]." Collectivity of Saint Martin. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
  46. "[http://www.ac-guadeloupe.fr/sites/default/files/documents/www_etablissements_du_2nd_degre_public_2017-2018.pdf Établissements du 2nd degré PUBLIC 2017-2018] {{Webarchive. link. (7 March 2018 ." {{ill). Académie de la Guadeloupe. fr. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  47. "Basse-Terre".
  48. "Église de Saint Martin de Tours".
  49. "Église de Marie Étoile de la Mer".
  50. "Église de Saint-Martin".
  51. "Diocèse de Guadeloupe".
  52. "Produits intérieurs bruts régionaux et valeurs ajoutées régionales de 2000 à 2020".
  53. "GDP 2018 – Press Release". Department of Statistics, Sint Maarten.
  54. "Qui sommes nous?".
  55. "Contact".
  56. (2010-06-02). "Contacter la rédaction de SXMINFO".
  57. "Mentions Légales".
  58. "Politique Editoriale retenue".
  59. "St. Martin News Network – Contact Us".
  60. "St. Martin Tourist Office – Coming to SXM by air or sea".
  61. "StBarthCommuter.com – L'Espérance Airport, Grand Case (SFG)".
  62. (2023-11-22). "Saint Martin down Bonaire to clinch first-place, promotion".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Collectivity of Saint Martin — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report