Get your banner in here!

             
Home Page              
  Banknotes of Leeward Islands
                 
             
Cat # Description Image
P-   00   [Obverse] [Reverse]
P-   00   [Obverse] [Reverse]
P-   00   [Obverse] [Reverse]
P-   00   [Obverse] [Reverse]
P-   00   [Obverse] [Reverse]
P-   00   [Obverse] [Reverse]
         
                 
                Leeward Islands
Encyclopædia Britannica Article

French Îles Sous Le Vent, Spanish Islas De Sotovento, an
arc of West Indian islands that constitute the most westerly
and northerly of the Lesser Antilles, at the northeastern end
of the Caribbean Sea, between latitudes 16° and 19° N and
longitudes 61° and 65° W. The major islands are, from
north to south, the Virgin Islands of the United States and
the United Kingdom (geologically a part of the Greater
Antilles); Anguilla, a British dependency; Saint-Martin (Sint
Martin), an island half French (a dependency of Guadeloupe)
and half Dutch (a part of the Netherlands Antilles and, with
nearby Saba and Sint Eustacius, the group called
administratively by the Dutch the “Windward Islands,”
though geographically they are part of the Leewards); Saint
Kitts and Nevis, an independent English-speaking nation;
Antigua and Barbuda, an independent English-speaking
nation; Montserrat, a British dependency; and Guadeloupe,
a département of France. Just south of this chain is
Dominica, sometimes classified as part of the Leewards but
usually designated as part of the Windward Islands (q.v.).

The Virgin Islands are part of a submerged mountain chain,
like the other islands of the Greater Antilles. Areas of
Antigua, Anguilla, Barbuda, and eastern Guadeloupe consist
of formations of coral limestone, whereas the small chain
from Saint Kitts to Montserrat and including western
Guadeloupe form a volcanic ridge; the volcano Soufrière on
Guadeloupe is the highest mountain in the Lesser Antilles
(at 4,813 feet [1,467 m]). The climate of the Leeward
Islands is drier than that farther south but does vary from
region to region and in different parts of a single island;
rainfall increases with elevation and in more southerly
latitudes. Tradewinds ameliorate the tropical heat.
Hurricanes occur occasionally from June to October.

The population of the Leewards is predominantly black,
though tourism, as a leading source of income, seasonally
brings in a large mixture of nationalities from mainland
North America and from Europe.
                 
                Country Info | Views of Leeward Islands | History of Leeward Islands