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Parishes of Barbados

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Summary

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The country of Barbados is divided into sub-regions known as parishes.

Terminology

They are legally styled as the "Parish of (parish name)" as opposed to the American naming convention with "Parish" coming after the name. The use of the term "parish" derives from the island's religious Anglican history under the Church of England.

History

The system of parish churches was originally based on the system of the Church of England and was the visible expression forming the basis of the parliamentary representation in Barbados. The differing size and shape of each parish were primarily influenced by the large plantation estates of cotton, sugar cane and tobacco that existed during the colonial years of Barbados. As various chapels of ease were created during the 17th century across the island, some local churches were elevated to parish church status, leading to the formation of new parishes surrounding those freshly created vestries.

By 1629, the English settlers after landing at James Town formed six original parishes on the island which were:

  • The Parish of Christ Church,
  • The Parish of St. James,
  • The Parish of St. Lucy,
  • The Parish of St. Michael,
  • The Parish of St. Peter, and
  • The Parish of St. Thomas

By 1645, the land holding of Barbados increased and the shape of the original six was reconfigured giving way to an additional five parishes. Some prior churches of the state within the existing parishes were elevated to the level of parish church and as a consequence they formed new parishes around those new vestries:

  • The Parish of St. Andrew,
  • The Parish of St. George,
  • The Parish of St. John,
  • The Parish of St. Joseph, and
  • The Parish of St. Philip.

Thus Barbados was converted into the current eleven parishes of today corresponding to the earlier church parishes. As was common under the British system, each parish had a single main parishional church (or cathedral in the case of Bridgetown having been elevated to city status), which acted as a sort of capital for each parish. The parishes each held their own local government councils until these were abolished in 1959, following a brief administrative districting experiment within Barbados until 1967.

List

Within the country, travel is unrestricted to everyone in moving about from parish to parish. With increasing urban sprawl and new construction projects across the country many neighbourhoods and even parishional border-lines today are ill-defined.

The eleven parishes are:

Short nameLong nameLand areaPopulation
(census 2010)DensityHistoric vestryChrist ChurchSt. AndrewSt. GeorgeSt. JamesSt. JohnSt. JosephSt. LucySt. MichaelSt. PeterSt. PhilipSt. Thomas
The Parish of Christ Church57 km254,336[[File:Christchurchparishchurch.jpgcenterthumb200pxLead church of the parish]]
The Parish of Saint Andrew36 km25,139[[File:Saint Andrew, Barbados 011.jpgcenterthumb200pxLead church of the parish]]
The Parish of Saint George44 km219,767
The Parish of Saint James31 km228,498
The Parish of Saint John34 km28,963[[File:St John's Church Barbados.JPGcenterthumb200pxLead church of the parish]]
The Parish of Saint Joseph26 km26,620[[File:Saint Joseph, Barbados 001.jpgcenterthumb200pxLead church of the parish]]
The Parish of Saint Lucy36 km29,758
The Parish of Saint Michael39 km288,529
The Parish of Saint Peter34 km211,300[[File:Speightstown 015.jpgcenterthumb200pxLead church of the parish]]
The Parish of Saint Philip60 km230,662
The Parish of Saint Thomas34 km214,249

References

References

  1. ''Laws of Barbados'', Volume 2, p.573, 286.
  2. U-Ming, Mike. "Fear and panic as Barbados regularisation deadline loom.".
  3. "The Barbados Parliament – Parliament History". Barbados Parliament website.
  4. (2007). "A~Z of Barbados Heritage". Macmillan Caribbean - Macmillan Publishers Limited Press.
  5. Alleyne, Warren. (1978). "Historic Bridgetown". [[Barbados National Trust]].
  6. ''Laws of Barbados'', Volume 2, p.573
  7. ''Laws of Barbados'', Volume 2, p.586
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