Isle de Sir Charles Saunder,../ Isle Osnabrug,../ Isle Boscawen,../ Isle de l’Amiral Keppel,../ Isle de Wallis,..

  • Translation

Article ID OZ0465

Title

Isle de Sir Charles Saunder,../ Isle Osnabrug,../ Isle Boscawen,../ Isle de l’Amiral Keppel,../ Isle de Wallis,..

Description

Coastal profiles of five islands in or adjacent to the Tonga archipelago that Wallis explored with the Dolphin. 1. Mehetia or Meetia is an uninhabited volcanic island in the southern Pacific Ocean, geographically part of the Society Islands. 2. Mehetia or Meetia in the southern Pacific Ocean, which is geographically part of the Society Islands. 3. Tafahi, which belongs to the Kingdom of Tonga.4. Niuatoputapu, an island belonging to the Kingdom of Tonga. 5. Wallis in the southern Pacific Ocean.

Year

ca. 1774

Artist

Bernard

Historical Description

The archipelago was also called Friendship Islands in the past, today -Kingdom of Tonga-. There are archaeological opinions that the first settlers from the Santa Cruz Islands came to Tonga from Southeast Asia via Micronesia in the course of a migration that began around 3000 BC. By the 12th century, the Tongans and their chief, the Tuʻi Tonga, were known throughout the Pacific region from Niue to Tikopia. Some historians speak of a Tongan empire, but the description as a network of sailors, chiefs, and adventurers probably better fits the condition. In the 15th century and then in the 17th century, tribal feuds broke out again and again. At this time, the first contacts with Europeans occurred: in 1616 with the Dutch explorers Willem Schouten and Jakob Le Maire, who shot a Tongan off Niuatoputapu during their first contact, in 1643 with Abel Tasman (who did a little trading with the natives), and later around 1773 especially with James Cook. In 1781, Francisco Maurelle reached Vavaʻu. The first missionaries followed twenty years later, and an important role was to be played by the Methodist Walter Lawry, who, however, did not arrive in Tonga until 1822. In the Samoa Treaty of 1899, the German Empire renounced all rights to Tonga, and on May 18, 1900, the islands became a British protectorate. In 1970 it received its independence. Tonga is an independent member of the Commonwealth and since 1999 also a member of the United Nations. It is still the only (parliamentary) hereditary monarchy in the entire Polynesian Pacific region.

Place of Publication London
Dimensions (cm)19 x 24 cm
ConditionPerfect condition
Coloringoriginal colored
TechniqueCopper print

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