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Answer:

The Taíno culture impressed both the Spanish (who observed it) and modern sociologists. The Arawakan achievements included construction of ceremonial ball parks whose boundaries were marked by upright stone dolmens, development of a universal language, and creation of a complicated religious cosmology.

Spanish colonists force the Native Taíno people, In pain of death, to perform almost all labor on the island. ... During the next four decades, slavery contributes to the deaths of 7 million Taíno. By 1535, the Taíno culture on Hispaniola is gone.

They Did Their Best To Resist

Columbus demanded that the Taínos give him certain amounts of gold and cotton. Those who refused were punished. In response, the Taínos attacked Spanish forts and killed Spanish soldiers. They hid food from the Spaniards.

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