Roatan
is the largest of the Bay Islands and is located approx 35 miles
off the North Coast of Honduras.
Roatan is 32 miles long and varies in width from 1 to 3 miles
across. The island is surrounded by nearly 70 miles of diverse
living coral reef.
Roatan
Map Below.

The
inhabitants of Roatan speak Caribbean English and Spanish.
The
Lempira is the official currency of Honduras. Major credit cards
are accepted at larger businesses and cash advances can be made
with credit cards at most banks. American Express Traveler's
Checks are also accepted.
Roatan
is home to an International airport. American, Continental, Taca,
Iberia and Sol Air all fly to Roatan in conjunction with local
carriers.
Roatan
offers a wide range of activities including PADI diving courses,
snorkeling, kayaking, sailing, fishing, hiking, horseback riding,
and glass bottom boat rides. Places to visit include the Institute
of Marine Sciences, the Roatan Museum, and Carambola Gardens.
Of course some choose to just relax in a nearby hammock or on
the beach.
History of the Name Roatan
Roatan
Island was named for the ancient Indian town of Roa that was
located in the vicinity of what now is Port Royal on the island.
Apparently this is the pre Columbian name of this town as well.
The people of this primary village on the Island traded with
the Maya as well as various Chibchan-speaking groups, some of
which appear to have been the ancestors of the Bribri of Costa
Rica who may of traded all the way to the mouth of the Apalachacola
River on the gulf coast of Florida. Chibchan words have been
found as far North in the US and Canada in the language of the
Iroquois, and these Indians sent out annually trading parties
that went overland as far as the Apalachacola River and traded
with relative tribes and others along the route such as the
Cherokee. The suffix part of the name “tan” appears
elsewhere in the New World, in such places as Yucatan, and may
well have been of early Spanish derivation since one finds such
endings in other ex-Spanish colonies such as the Philippines
(Battan etc)
The village of Roa was the major village out of 4 Indian settlements
on the island and was totally destroyed by the Spanish under the
combined leadership of Villalva and Toledo from Havana and Guatemala
in the year 1650 because 17th century buccaneers were using it
as a base and Indians were providing them with food stuffs, instead
of supplying the colonial city of Trujillo as they have been doing
since the establishment of that Spanish port city. British Buccaneers
had used the island for raiding Spanish Shipping off and on from
1564 and the Spanish had simply had enough. To my knowledge no
archaeologist has yet looked for the remains of this ancient Indian
village near Port Royal, and indeed it would be difficult to isolate
out Inland remains from that of the late buccaneers, and still
later pirates in the same area.
The
Spanish simply took the name of the village and added and suffix
“tan”, producing the word in Spanish “Roatan”,
later corrupted by the English in the early 18th century to “Ratten”
and later still by Dutch map makers to “Ruatan”. There
have been several other names for the island as well as ”Rich”
island, given to it by the brief-lived Providence Company, organized
by the Puritian Party in London in the year 1630, and named after
Lord Rich who was their primary patron and financial backer, as
well as the “Isle de Lyne”, of French derivation during
their also short-lived attempt at colonization of this island.
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