Grenada (gre-NAI-duh), republic (1991 pop. 90,691), in the Windward Isls., West Indies; 12°07'N 61°40'W. The state includes the isl. of Grenada (133 sq mi/344 sq km) and the S 1/3 of the archipelago known as the Grenadines (gren-nuh-DEENZ). The is St. Georges, also main port, and commercial center. Grenada is a volcanic, mountainous isl. with crater lakes. Its economy is primarily agr., and cocoa, bananas, nutmeg, mace, and fruit are exported. Tourism is a developing industry, although it suffered during the political unrest of the late 1970s and early 1980s. The Grenadines are a group of small isls. and islets N of Grenada in the Windward Isls. They are largely uninhabitable. From its sighting by Christopher Columbus in 1498 until Fr. settlement began in 1650, the Caribs prevented European colonization on Grenada. A point of dispute bet. England and France, the isl. became permanently Br. in 1783. The Br. imported Afr. slaves and established sugar plantations. In 1967, Grenada became an associated state of Britain with full internal self-government. When complete independence was achieved in Feb. 1974, Grenada became a full member of the Commonwealth of Nations. In 1979 a successful, bloodless coup established the Peoples Revolutionary Govt. (PRG) under Prime Minister Maurice Bishop. Its favorable stance toward Cuba and the Soviet Union strained relations with the U.S. and other nations in the region in the early 1980s. An internal coup in Oct. 1983 resulted in the execution of Bishop and the assumption of power by the army. That same month, the U.S. invaded and occupied Grenada under the rationale of protecting U.S. students studying at the St. Georges Univ. School of Medicine. A general election held in Dec. 1984 reestablished democratic govt. Since then, financial aid from the U.S. and Europe has helped boost tourism; 2 world-class resorts, La Source and Rex Grenadian, opened in 1994.
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