- Guyana - Wikipedia
It was governed as British Guiana with a mostly plantation-style economy until the 1950s, forming part of the British West Indies It gained independence in 1966 and officially became a republic within the Commonwealth of Nations in 1970
- Guyana | Language, People, Oil Discovery | Britannica
Indigenous peoples inhabited Guyana prior to European settlement, and their name for the land, guiana (“land of water”), gave the country its name Present-day Guyana reflects its British and Dutch colonial past and its reactions to that past
- Guyana Maps Facts - World Atlas
Physical map of Guyana showing major cities, terrain, national parks, rivers, and surrounding countries with international borders and outline maps Key facts about Guyana
- The Five Guianas - Vivid Maps
If you trace the northern edge of South America, you reach a long, river-carved coastline that Europeans once divided five different ways: Spanish Guiana, British Guiana, Dutch Guiana, French Guiana, and Portuguese Guiana (now Amapá in Brazil)
- Guyana - Country Profile - Nations Online Project
Nations Online Project - About Guyana, the country, the culture, the people Images, links and background information
- Home - Guyana Tourism
Instagram Facebook Youtube X-twitter Tiktok Whatsapp Linkedin Explore Guyana, Where Adventure Meets Untamed Beauty and Nature's Heart Beat Meets Untouched Nature From towering waterfalls and untouched jungle to vibrant Indigenous cultures and rare species, Guyana is nature in its rawest, most breathtaking form Book Now Active Adventure Birding Culture Conservation Nature and Wildlife Active
- The Guianas | WWF
The region includes the Guianas (Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana), along with southern Venezuela, southeastern Colombia, and northeastern Brazil, thus encompassing six different governments, five official languages, plus many more indigenous and other languages
- The Guianas: Unveiling Caribbean South America | LAC Geo
The Guianas, located on the Caribbean coast of South America, consist of French Guiana, Guyana, and Suriname and boast a diverse blend of cultures
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