Retaliation for the Spanish taking St. Maarten away from the Dutch was why the Dutch took Aruba away from the Spaniards. Holland and Spain were fighting the Eighty Years' War [1568-1648]. Spain besieged and took St. Maarten in 1633.
In 1634 and 1636 Holland through the Dutch West India Company conquered the strategically placed ABC Islands of Aruba, Bonaire, and Curacao. In 1634 the Company took Curacao, which was only 40 miles [64 kilometers; 35 nautical miles] from the coast of Spanish held Venezuela. Then in 1636 the Company took Bonaire [50 miles; 80 kilometers; 43 nautical miles off the coast] and Aruba [17 miles; 27 kilometers; 14.7 nautical miles off the coast].
The queen of the Dutch Kingdom which Aruba is part of is: Queen Beatrix
No, Aruba is togetter with Bonaire and Curacao part of the Dutch kingdom. some of them have a separated status, but they speak Dutch there.
Aruba is the name of one Dutch speaking island. Specifically, Dutch is the Caribbean island's official language. That's because Aruba is an autonomous part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao.
Aruna is owned by the dutch and is in the carribean
No, Aruba isn't in Europe. Europe is a continent that's to the northeast of Aruba. Aruba is an island in the Caribbean Sea. The continent to which it's nearest is South America. But Aruba's culture shows European influences. The official language of the island is Dutch. That's because it's a former Dutch colony.
Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao.
The Spanish and then the Dutch were Aruba's colonizers.Specifically, Aruba's European settlers came from the modern-day countries of Spain and the Netherlands. Spain's colonial role began shortly after 1499 and lasted about a century. The Dutch role dates back to 1636. It is for this reason that Dutch is one of the island's official languages. It is also the reason why Aruba's strongest economic and political ties still are to the Netherlands.
Aruba, Curaçao, and Sint Maarten are Caribbean countries that speak Dutch as one of their official languages. They are part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
The Dutch speaking Caribbean countries are Aruba, Curaçao, Sint Maarten, Bonaire, Saba, and Sint Eustatius. These islands are special municipalities within the Kingdom of the Netherlands and have Dutch as one of their official languages.
Aruba is considered to be in the Caribbean region. It's in the southern part of the Caribbean Sea. Because of its longstanding ties with the Netherlands, Aruba is one of the Dutch speaking islands in the Caribbean.
Indonesia called Nederlands-Indië back then and Aruba, Bonaire and Curaçao.