If there is no machine required to remove these items from the ground, the only option is a very difficult manual operation. Shortly thereafter, Spain continued its advancing west and found land in Mexico and Central America. There are also plenty of gold and there are unique slave labor. This has resulted in other industries in the Dominican Republic, for example afforestation, mainly sugar increase. A problem occurred when Portugal and other countries participated in the colonization competition and succeeded more than the Spaniards.
I came from the conflict between the Dominican Republic and Haiti, so I chose to talk about the Dominican Republic and Haiti. What is the interpretation of these cultural differences between the two counties that share the same island? How is Taino's Island called Hayo divided into two countries, and there are two different cultures living? I saw the colonial history of Haiti and the Dominican Republic. And it contains answers to these questions. Both countries have a colonial background and it looks like today. I have read and analyzed four different studies that discuss and explain some of the reasons the two countries are very different in education, culture and health.
The relationship between the Dominican Republic and Haiti has been long and complicated by the large cultural differences between the two countries. And they occupy a small part of Hispaniola Island in the Antilles of the Caribbean. The living standard of the Dominican Republic is much higher than the living standard of Haiti. A deep difference in culture leads to long-term conflict. Although the population and culture were very different from the colonial era, residents of the modern Dominican Republic and Haiti are sometimes allies and enemies, and are constantly fighting control of Hispaniola. The conflict began in the colonial era and developed into a military and political conflict between the two governments. Hispaniola's political split is due to the struggle that Europe tried to dominate the new world in the 17th century when France and Spain began to compete over the island's control.