Hofman, Corinne L.Corinne L.HofmanUlloa Hung, JorgeJorgeUlloa HungHerrera Malatesta, EduardoEduardoHerrera MalatestaJean, Joseph SonyJoseph SonyJeanHoogland, Menno L.Menno L.HooglandSonnemann, TillTillSonnemann0000-0003-2632-72822019-09-192018-02-2020180003-598Xhttps://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/43265The role of pre-contact indigenous peoples in shaping contemporary multi-ethnic society in Hispaniola (Haiti and the Dominican Republic), and elsewhere in the Caribbean, has been downplayed by traditional narratives of colonialism. Archaeological surveys in the northern Dominican Republic and open-area excavations at three (pre-)Contact era Amerindian settlements, combined with historical sources and ethnographic surveys, show that this view needs revising. Indigenous knowledge of the landscape was key to the success of early Europeans in gaining control of the area, but also survives quite clearly in many aspects of contemporary culture and daily life that have, until now,been largely overlooked.engArchäologieKaribikIndigenous Caribbean perspectives: archaeologies and legacies of the first colonised region in the New Worldarticle10.15184/aqy.2017.247https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2017.247