Were the Carib Indians, after whom the Caribbean takes its name. The Caribbean includes all of the bordering islands (to the north and east) as well as the Central and South American countries who as a group, outline and define what we now call the Caribbean. There is little disagreement on just which countries are indeed "Caribbean", except for the amazing tete a tete I once had with the Bassitor of Rum: check out this link for enterainment value:
http://rumproject.com/caribbean.html
It seems obvious that the "Caribbean" was named after its earlier inhabitants, the somtimes cannibalistic "Carib" Indians, and the countries to which they migrated. But the question is:
So where did the Caribs come from?
Until now, nobody really knew, but with the help of a miniscule grant a team of researchers used DNA testing to find out this: the Carib descendants on Trinidad have evidence of origination from both Africa and - to a larger degree - from the American Indian DNA. Now that is something! So far the study remains young (first 25 samples) but the local community is excited and most of these people - about 600 - are due to be tested for further information.
(Source: Caribbean 360)"The history books have always indicated that the first inhabitants of the Caribbean were the Arawaks and Caribs. But what those books have not indicated is that the indigenous people may have had strong ancestral links to Africa and to Native American Indians.
Recent work by the North American-based National Geographic Genographic Project on the Carib community in Trinidad, utilising Deoxyribo Nucleic Acid (DNA), has confirmed that members of the community in Arima have very strong ancestral links to Africa and to Native American Indians."
The original ancestor: Chief Rumming Bear. a distant relative of our Bear Brothers (with appropriate apologies to Tento and his Cano Sabe, Lance - The Lone Caner)...