A Quick History of Vanuatu
The first settlers to arrive in Vanuatu are believed to have
arrived approximately 3,500 years ago from New Guinea and the
Solomon Islands by canoe.
1606, the Portuguese explorer, Pedro Fernández de
Quirós, discovered the island of Espiritu Santo, which he thought
was a great southern continent. Europeans did not return until
1768, when Louis Antoine de Bougainville rediscovered the
islands. In 1774, Captain Cook named the islands
the New Hebrides, a name that lasted until independence.
During the 1860s, planters in Australia, Fiji, New Caledonia, and
the Samoan Islands, in need of labourers, began a slave trade
called "blackbirding". At the height of the blackbirding, more than
one-half the adult male population of several of the Islands were
kidnapped and worked overseas.
During the time of blackbirding, foreign settlers and missionaries
started arriving. Initially, most of the settlers were British
subjects from Australia, but by the turn of the century, the French
outnumbered the British two to one. Attempts to halt the decimation
of the native population met success in 1887, when the islands were
placed under an Anglo-French naval commission, governed in the
current capital Port-Vila, which at the time was known as
Franceville.
In 1906, France and the United Kingdom agreed to administer the
islands jointly. They replaced the naval commission with the
British-French Condominium. It was a unique form of government,
with separate governmental systems in the same country that came
together only in a joint court. Many called the condominium the
"Pandemonium" because of the duplication of laws, police forces,
prisons, currencies, education and health systems. Overseas
visitors could choose between British law, that was considered
stricter but with more humane prisons, or French law and French
prisons, which were somewhat uncomfortable but with better
food.
Diseases brought by missionaries, sandalwood traders, and settlers
were one of the main reasons the native population was reduced from
approximately 1 million in 1800 to 45,000 in 1935. During World War
II the islands served as bases for Allied forces in the Pacific
theater. Today tourists can still buy old original coke bottles
that divers have retrieved from the bottom of the harbor, that were
thrown overboard from the American battleships and aircraft
carriers that sheltered in the harbour.
On 30 July 1980, amidst the brief Coconut War, the Republic of
Vanuatu was created. Since independence, only kastom owners and the
government can own land; foreigners and other islanders who are not
kastom owners can lease land only for the productive life of a
coconut palm - 75 years. The two major settlements remain Port Vila
on the island of Efate, and Luganville on the island of Espiritu
Santo.
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