image for article on Essequibo settlement

Dutch traders establish a foothold on the Essequibo River in Guyana

A small wooden trading post on the Essequibo River — 25 kilometres from the sea, surrounded by forest and flowing water — marked the beginning of a new chapter in the history of what would become Guyana. It was modest in scale. In consequence, it was anything but.

What the evidence shows

  • Essequibo settlement: In 1616 C.E., Dutch traders established the first European settlement in the territory of modern-day Guyana, a trading post positioned upstream from the mouth of the Essequibo River to facilitate commerce with Indigenous communities.
  • Dutch commercial expansion: The Netherlands, having secured independence from Spain in the late 16th century C.E., had emerged as a dominant maritime and commercial power by the early 1600s C.E., actively building trade networks across the Caribbean and South America.
  • Indigenous presence before contact: Long before Europeans arrived, Guyana was home to the Lokono people along the coast and the Kalina in the interior — societies whose word for the region, “Guiana,” meaning “land of waters,” survives to this day in the names of three nations.

A crossroads already ancient

By 1616 C.E., the land Europeans called Guiana had been inhabited for perhaps 20,000 years. The first peoples arrived from Siberia, gradually moving south through Central and South America. By the time of Christopher Columbus’s voyages, distinct and complex societies had formed — the Lokono cultivating coastal lands, the Kalina maintaining the interior.

Historians trace the Arawak and Carib peoples — the broader linguistic and cultural groups to which the Lokono and Kalina belonged — to South American origins, migrating north into the Guianas and eventually the Caribbean islands. Their long habitation of the region had produced deep knowledge of its rivers, forests, and seasons. That knowledge would prove both useful and exploitable to the Europeans who arrived seeking trade.

The Spanish had reached the Essequibo River as early as 1499 C.E., when Alonso de Ojeda led an expedition along the northern coast of South America. Spain nominally claimed the territory but never consolidated its authority there. The Carib’s fierce resistance, combined with the absence of gold in the region, shifted Spanish attention to the Greater Antilles and the mainland. That neglect opened a door for the Dutch.

Why the Dutch came — and what trade meant

The Netherlands in the early 17th century C.E. was a small nation doing extraordinary things. Having won independence from Spain after decades of revolt, it had built one of the world’s most sophisticated financial and shipping systems. Dutch merchants were trading across the Atlantic, the Indian Ocean, and into the Pacific — often outpacing the Spanish and Portuguese empires that had led the first wave of European expansion.

The Essequibo trading post was, at first, exactly what it sounds like: a point of exchange. Dutch traders sought goods from Indigenous communities — dyes, timber, tobacco — in return for European manufactured items. The relationship was unequal from the start, but in its earliest phase it was transactional rather than overtly territorial.

By 1623 C.E., just seven years after the post’s founding, Essequibo was already exporting 15,000 kilograms of tobacco. The commercial logic quickly shifted from trade to production — and production required land, and land required labor. This pivot would define everything that followed.

Lasting impact

The 1616 C.E. settlement on the Essequibo was the seed from which the colony of Guyana grew. In 1621 C.E., the Dutch government transferred control of the trading post to the newly formed Dutch West India Company, which administered the Essequibo colony for more than 170 years. Additional colonies followed: Berbice in 1627 C.E. and Demerara in 1741 C.E. Dutch sovereignty over the region was formally recognized in the Treaty of Münster in 1648 C.E.

The colony eventually passed through French and then British hands, becoming British Guiana — and on May 26, 1966 C.E., the independent nation of Guyana. That nation carries the name the Lokono gave their homeland, spoken in a language that predates Dutch arrival by thousands of years.

Guyana’s story also resonates beyond its borders. The Essequibo settlement was part of a broader Dutch commercial push into the Americas that shaped Caribbean history, contributed to the development of early modern capitalism, and helped establish patterns of plantation agriculture that would echo for centuries. Today, Guyana is one of the world’s fastest-growing oil producers, a fact that gives fresh urgency to questions about who benefits from its resources — questions that have their roots in 1616 C.E.

Blindspots and limits

The 1616 C.E. trading post was the beginning of what the historical record describes as a “catastrophic effect” on Indigenous communities — driven by disease, violent displacement, the Indian slave trade, and forced migration. Between 1400 and 1860 C.E., an estimated 500,000 enslaved Africans were brought to Guyana and Suriname as part of the transatlantic slave trade, producing crops for European markets under brutal conditions. The Berbice Slave Uprising of 1763 C.E. stands as one of the most significant early acts of resistance in the Americas, a chapter that receives far less global attention than it deserves. The founding moment cannot be separated from what it made possible — and what it cost.

Read more

For more on this story, see: History of Guyana — Wikipedia

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