Close
Cart (0)
Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Conceptually similar
AR9641813
AR9641805
AR9641802
AR9641804
AR9641807
AR9641808
AR9641809
AR9641811
AR9640368
AR9641806
AR9641812
AR9640370
AR9640369
AR9641978
AR9641810
AR9641976
AR9641817
AR9641818
AR9641819
AR9641821
Boca de Nigua or Nigua sugar mill, 17th century, at San Gregorio de Nigua, near Santo Domingo, in the Dominican Republic, Caribbean. The mill was founded by Marquee De Aranda and later owned by Juan Bautista Ollarazaba, and was an important site for the sugar industry, with a mill, furnaces, boiling room, warehouse, guardhouse, distillery and Spanish colonial buildings. The mill is built in the style of the great Cuban and Haitian mills erected late 18th century. It was the site of the first slave rebellion 1796. Restoration began here in 1978 under Baez Lopez-Penha. Picture by Manuel Cohen
Unique Identifier
AR9641803
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
7087px × 4005px
Photo Credit
Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Tags
17th century
AMERICAS
Architecture
building
CARIBBEAN
COLONIAL
COLONY
COLOR IMAGE
colour image
DAY
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Exterior
Greater Antilles
HERITAGE
HISPANIOLA
History
HORIZONTAL
INDUSTRIAL
Industry
Island
Mill
NEW SPAIN
New World
north america
NORTH AMERICAN
Outdoors
OUTSIDE
SANTO DOMINGO
SANTO DOMINGO DE GUZMAN
Slavery
Spanish
Sugar Cane
SUGAR MILL
Tower