Celebrate your wedding in fabulous Bahamas. To Wed in Bahamas is to choose one of the world's most unforgettable marriage destinations. Our professional wedding photographers will capture the best moments of your fabulous big day. We take a creative approach to all of our work and rise above the rest with our 10 plus years in photo editing to deliver unique photographs that are sure to leave anyone in awe.
Bahamas offers many resorts and retreats and getting married here is truly an experience to remember. Imagine showing your friends amazing photographs of your destination wedding in Bahamas, under the sun, far away from home in paradise.
Hiring Maverick Photography to be your photographer is your best choice to get high quality, photojournalistic style, candid pictures. We will be there to capture all of those special moments and more.
The Bahamas, officially the Commonwealth of The Bahamas, is an English-speaking country consisting of 29 islands, 661 cays, and 2,387 rocks. It is located in the Atlantic Ocean southeast of the United States of America, north of Cuba, Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti) and the Caribbean Sea, and northwest of the Turks and Caicos Islands. Its size is almost 14,000 km2 with an estimated population of 330,000. Its capital is Nassau. It remains a Commonwealth realm.
Taino people moved into the uninhabited southern Bahamas from Hispaniola and Cuba around the 7th century AD. These people came to be known as the Lucayans. There were an estimated 30,000+ Lucayans at the time of Columbus' arrival in 1492. Christopher Columbus' first landfall in the New World was on an island named San Salvador (known to the Lucayans as Guanahani), which is generally accepted to be present-day San Salvador Island, (also known as Watling's Island) in the southeastern Bahamas. An alternative theory is that Columbus landed to the southeast on Samana Cay, according to calculations made in 1986 by National Geographic writer and editor Joseph Judge based on Columbus' log; this remains inconclusive. On the island, Columbus made first contact with the Lucayans and exchanged goods with them.
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