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Cayo Coco, used as a hideout by buccaneers in the early colonial period, was home to a small settlement of fishermen and charcoal producers until 1955, when the freshwater supply was exhausted and the market for charcoal ended with the spread of electrification after the Cuban Revolution. A causeway connecting the island to the Cuban mainland opened on 26 July 1988, and resort construction began.
Cayo Coco, used as a hideout by buccaneers in the early colonial period, was home to a small settlement of fishermen and charcoal producers until 1955, when the freshwater supply was exhausted and the market for charcoal ended with the spread of electrification after the Cuban Revolution. A causeway connecting the island to the Cuban mainland opened on 26 July 1988, and resort construction began.
Cayo Coco, used as a hideout by buccaneers in the early colonial period, was home to a small settlement of fishermen and charcoal producers until 1955, when the freshwater supply was exhausted and the market for charcoal ended with the spread of electrification after the Cuban Revolution. A causeway connecting the island to the Cuban mainland opened on 26 July 1988, and resort construction began.
Cayo Coco, used as a hideout by buccaneers in the early colonial period, was home to a small settlement of fishermen and charcoal producers until 1955, when the freshwater supply was exhausted and the market for charcoal ended with the spread of electrification after the Cuban Revolution. A causeway connecting the island to the Cuban mainland opened on 26 July 1988, and resort construction began.
Cayo Santa María is an island off Cuba's north central coast in the Jardines del Rey archipelago. The island is linked to the mainland near Caibarién by a 48 km causeway constructed between 1989 and 1999.
Cayo Santa María is an island off Cuba's north central coast in the Jardines del Rey archipelago. The island is linked to the mainland near Caibarién by a 48 km causeway constructed between 1989 and 1999.
Cayo Santa María is an island off Cuba's north central coast in the Jardines del Rey archipelago. The island is linked to the mainland near Caibarién by a 48 km causeway constructed between 1989 and 1999.
Cayo Santa María is an island off Cuba's north central coast in the Jardines del Rey archipelago. The island is linked to the mainland near Caibarién by a 48 km causeway constructed between 1989 and 1999.
Cayo Santa María is an island off Cuba's north central coast in the Jardines del Rey archipelago. The island is linked to the mainland near Caibarién by a 48 km causeway constructed between 1989 and 1999.
Cayo Santa María is an island off Cuba's north central coast in the Jardines del Rey archipelago. The island is linked to the mainland near Caibarién by a 48 km causeway constructed between 1989 and 1999.
Cayo Santa María is an island off Cuba's north central coast in the Jardines del Rey archipelago. The island is linked to the mainland near Caibarién by a 48 km causeway constructed between 1989 and 1999.
Dating from the late Khwārazm-Shāh Dynasty (1077–1231), the centre of the tray depicts a Persian - presumably Khwarezmid - ruler with two female attendants.<br/><br/>

Around the rim a Silk Road caravan marches, comprising two-humped Bactrian camels and Persian merchants in pointed, Sogdian-style hats. Rey, Ray or sometimes Rayy was an important town on the Persian section of the Silk Road.