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Gilbert Islands

The Gilbert Islands (Gilbertese: Tungaru;[2] formerly Kingsmill or King's-Mill Islands[3]) are a chain of sixteen atolls and coral islands in the Pacific Ocean, about halfway between Papua New Guinea and Hawaii. They constitute the main part of the nation of Kiribati (the name of which is a rendering of “Gilberts” in the phonology of the indigenous Gilbertese).[2]

Colony of Gilbert Islands
1976–1979
Flag
Coat of arms
Anthem: "God Save the Queen"
CapitalSouth Tarawa
Common languagesEnglish, Gilbertese
GovernmentColony of the United Kingdom
Monarch 
• 1976–1979
Elizabeth II
Governor 
• 1976–1978
John Hilary Smith
• 1978–1979
Reginald James Wallace
History 
• Colony
1 January[1] 1976
• Disestablished
12 July 1979
Population
• 1978
56,213
CurrencyAustralian dollar
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofKiribati

Geography

The atolls and islands of the Gilbert Islands are arranged in an approximate north-to-south line. The northernmost island in the group, Makin, it is approximately 420 nautical miles (780 km) from southernmost, Arorae, as the crow flies. Geographically, the equator is the dividing line between the northern and southern Gilbert Islands. However, the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) considers the entire Gilbert islands group to be in the South Pacific Ocean.[4]

Another way to group the Gilbert Islands is according to their former administrative districts, which were known as the Northern, Central, and Southern Gilberts. (Tarawa was once a separate district as well).

At one time, a subset of the northern Gilbert islands was known as Scarborough Islands and a subset of the southern Gilberts as the Kingsmill Group; in some 19th century texts, this last name of Kingsmills was applied to the entire Gilberts group.[3]

Geologically, the Gilberts and the Ratak chain of the Marshall Islands to their north together form a continuous chain of seamounts.

Islands of the Gilberts

In official north–south order (grouped by former administrative district), the islands and atolls are:

 
Atoll / Island Main
village
Land area Lagoon area Pop.
c. 2005
Min.
number
of islets
Villages Location
km2 sq mi km2 sq mi
Former district of the Northern Gilberts
Makin Makin 7.89 3.0 0.3 0.1 2,385 6 2 3°23′N 173°00′E / 3.383°N 173.000°E / 3.383; 173.000 (Makin)
Butaritari Temanokunuea 13.49 5.2 191.7 74.0 3,280 11 11 3°09′N 172°50′E / 3.150°N 172.833°E / 3.150; 172.833 (Butaritari)
Marakei Rawannawi 14.13 5.5 19.6 7.6 2,741 1 8 2°00′N 173°17′E / 2.000°N 173.283°E / 2.000; 173.283 (Marakei)
Abaiang Tuarabu 17.48 6.7 232.5 89.8 5,502 4-20 18 1°50′N 172°57′E / 1.833°N 172.950°E / 1.833; 172.950 (Abaiang)
Tarawa Betio 31.02 12.0 343.6 132.7 45,989 9+ 30 1°26′N 173°00′E / 1.433°N 173.000°E / 1.433; 173.000 (Tarawa)
Former district of the Central Gilberts
Maiana Tebwangetua 16.72 6.5 98.4 38.0 1,908 9 12 0°55′N 173°00′E / 0.917°N 173.000°E / 0.917; 173.000 (Maiana)
Abemama Kariatebike 27.37 10.6 132.4 51.1 3,404 8 12 0°24′N 173°50′E / 0.400°N 173.833°E / 0.400; 173.833 (Abemama)
Kuria Tabontebike 15.48 6.0 1,082 2 6 0°13′N 173°24′E / 0.217°N 173.400°E / 0.217; 173.400 (Kuria)
Aranuka Takaeang 11.61 4.5 19.4 7.5 1,158 4 3 0°09′N 173°35′E / 0.150°N 173.583°E / 0.150; 173.583 (Aranuka)
Nonouti 1) Teuabu 19.85 7.7 370.4 143.0 3,179 12 9 0°40′S 174°20′E / 0.667°S 174.333°E / -0.667; 174.333 (Nonouti)
Former district of the Southern Gilberts
Tabiteuea 1) Buariki 37.63 14.5 365.2 141.0 4,898 2+ 18 1°20′S 174°50′E / 1.333°S 174.833°E / -1.333; 174.833 (Tabiteuea)
Beru 1) Taubukinberu 17.65 6.8 38.9 15.0 2,169 1 9 1°20′S 175°59′E / 1.333°S 175.983°E / -1.333; 175.983 (Beru)
Nikunau 1) Rungata 19.08 7.4 1,912 1 6 1°21′S 176°28′E / 1.350°S 176.467°E / -1.350; 176.467 (Nikunau)
Onotoa 1) Buariki 15.62 6.0 54.4 21.0 1,644 30 7 1°52′S 175°33′E / 1.867°S 175.550°E / -1.867; 175.550 (Onotoa)
Tamana Bakaka 4.73 1.8 875 1 3 2°30′S 175°58′E / 2.500°S 175.967°E / -2.500; 175.967 (Tamana)
Arorae Roreti 9.48 3.7 1,256 1 2 2°38′S 176°49′E / 2.633°S 176.817°E / -2.633; 176.817 (Arorae)
Gilbert Islands South Tarawa 281.10 108.5 1,866.5 720.7 83,382 117+ 156 3°23'N to 2°38S
172°50' to 176°49'E
1) part of Kingsmill Group proper

Source for land areas: Kiribati 2005 Census Report

Northern Gilberts

The Northern Gilberts (meang or mweang) geographically and traditionally encompass Butaritari, Makin, Marakei, Abaiang (literally northland) and Tarawa. They have unique tonal accents with differences particularly noted amongst Butaritari and Makin inhabitants. Traditionally, Butaritari and Makin were ruled by a chief who lived on Butaritari (called Makin or Great Makin). This chief had all the powers and authority to make and impose decisions on the Islanders, a system very different from the Southern Gilbert Islands where power was wielded collectively by the unimwane or old men of the island.[5]

The northern Gilberts have a greater mean rainfall in comparison to the southern and central Gilberts allowing cultivation of a wider crop range. Butaritari and Makin supply most of the bananas sold in Kiribati. The cultivation of taro or babai (Cyrtosperma merkusii) has been historically easier in the northern Gilberts due to a higher water table and regular rainfall.

Central Gilberts

The Central Gilberts or nuka have traditionally included Maiana, Abemama, Kuria and Aranuka. However, the latter three are considered the main islands that have unique historical and cultural characteristics which distinguish the Central Gilberts from the north and south.[6]

Tembinok', the last king of Abemama, Kuria and Aranuka died in the early part of the 20th century.[5]

Southern Gilberts

The Southern Gilberts include the atolls of Nonouti, South and North Tabiteuea, Beru, Nikunau, Onotoa, Tamana and the most southerly island of Arorae.

History

Prehistory

The islands had been inhabited by Oceanians for several millennia (at least 2,000 years, probably 3,000).

Contact with Europeans

 
Portrait of a native of the Makin islands, drawn by Alfred Thomas Agate (1841)

In 1606, Portuguese navigator Pedro Fernandes de Queirós sighted Butaritari and Makin, which he named the Buen Viaje Islands.[7][8]

 
1852 map by J. G. Barbié du Bocage. Includes regions of Polynesia, Micronesia, Melanesia and Malesia. "Scarborough Islands" are the Northern Gilberts, "Gilbert Island" probably Tarawa, Bishop's Island Tabiteuea, Kingsmill Islands the Southern Gilberts just above "île Saint-Augustin", Nanumea.

The British explorer Vice-Admiral John Byron passed through the islands in 1765 during his circumnavigation of the globe as captain of HMS Dolphin.[9][10]

In 1788 Captain Thomas Gilbert on Charlotte and Captain John Marshall on Scarborough crossed through Kuria, Aranuka, Tarawa, Abaiang, Butaritari, and Makin without attempting to land on the atolls.[11][12]

In 1820, the islands were named the Gilbert Islands or îles Gilbert (in French) by Adam Johann von Krusenstern, a Baltic German Admiral of the Russian Czar after the British Captain Thomas Gilbert, who crossed the archipelago in 1788. French captain Louis Duperrey was the first to map the whole Gilbert Islands archipelago. He commanded La Coquille on its circumnavigation of the earth (1822–1825).[13]

 
Map of Abaiang and Tarawa, from US Ex Ex

US exploration

Many whaling ships called at the islands in the 19th century. The first recorded visit was by the Ann and Hope, which called at Nikunau in December 1799.[14]

Two ships of the United States Exploring Expedition (1838–1842), USS Peacock and Flying Fish, under the command of Captain William L. Hudson, visited many of the Gilbert Islands (then called the Kingsmill Islands or Kingsmill Group in English). While in the Gilberts, they devoted considerable time to mapping and charting reefs and anchorages.[15]

Colonial rule

In 1886, an Anglo-German agreement partitioned the “unclaimed” central Pacific, leaving Nauru in the German sphere of influence, while Ocean Island and the future GEIC wound up in the British sphere of influence. A British protectorate was first proclaimed over the Gilberts by Captain Edward H.M. Davis of HMS Royalist on 27 May 1892.[16] British official Arthur Mahaffy visited the Islands in 1909. He noted that the "villages are kept in admirable order and the roads are scrupulously clean." A hospital was on each island, as well.[17] The conduct of William Telfer Campbell, the second resident commissioner of the Gilberts, was criticised as to his legislative, judicial and administrative management (including allegations of forced labour exacted from islanders) and became the subject of the 1909 report by Arthur Mahaffy.[18] In 1913 an anonymous correspondent to The New Age journal described the mis-administration of W. Telfer Campbell and questioned the partiality of Arthur Mahaffy as he was a former colonial official in the Gilberts.[19]

In 1915, starting from 1916, the Gilbert and Ellice Islands were proclaimed a colony of the British Empire.[20]

Population

The natives of the Gilbert Islands are Austronesian peoples, similar in many respects to the natives of the Marshalls or the Carolines.[citation needed]

In Mahaffy's 1909 report to the British Government he described the missionaries or Protectorate staff then resident in the Gilbert Islands.[17]

At the outbreak of World War II, about 78% of the native population were said to be Christians. This group was divided mainly into two denominations: Congregationalists (43%) and Roman Catholics (35%), Catholics becoming quickly the majority at the end of the Colony. The rest of the population were then largely semi-pagan agnostics; they did not adhere to the Christian faith, nor did they retain much of their beliefs in their own ancient gods.

Native diet during this time consisted mainly of fish, coconuts, pandanus fruit, babai (swamp taro), chicken, and some pork.[17] Housing for Europeans employed in the island was simple: constructed of European and native materials and generally of the bungalow type. Mahaffy described the native clothing as being of "shocking shape" and "atrocious color," and that the style was changing into "kilt(s) of leaves or fine woven mats."[17]

Economy

In the early to mid 20th century the principal source of income for Gilbert islanders was from working on the production of phosphate from the deposits on Banaba (Ocean Island), an island to the west of the Gilbert Islands.[19] In addition, coconut palms were cultivated on some of the islands. All labor was supervised by the British and every effort was made to see that the wages and living conditions were fair and adequate. Sanitary inspections by the British did much to improve the general living conditions on most of the islands.

Mahaffy noted in 1909 that "extreme poverty is virtually unknown," and that most people on the island owned their own land. Residents paid taxes, with the majority of taxes going back into the community, and a small portion going to the Protectorate.[17]

Administration

Judged to be about 84% literate, the Gilbertese responded readily to the colony's educational efforts. All education in the islands came under the supervision of the Colonial Education Department whose aims were to educate native boys for employment in government and commercial work, and to standardize the level of education throughout the colony. The bulk of the education was provided by the missions, which maintained all the village schools and trained the native school teachers.

With the availability of European-style medical care life improved. The Phoenix Islands Settlement Scheme sought to provide an outlet through the development of three uninhabited atolls in the Phoenix Islands and was the last attempt at human colonization within the British Empire.

Religion

Hiram Bingham II (1831–1908) was the first to translate the Bible into Gilbertese, and also wrote hymns for the Gilbertese language. Joanna Gordon-Clark writes of their religious belief:

The Gilbert (and Ellice) Islanders had a strong set of beliefs of their own, pre the Christian missionaries; they had a strong foundation myth, involving trees and the two genders. Their ancestors, they said, had been white skinned and red haired and came from elsewhere, perhaps the West (possibly coinciding with the outward spread of Homo sapiens from Africa and elsewhere). As might be expected, they gave power to the natural forces and gave them names and godly characteristics (sun, moon, etc.) but believed in one spirit god, a bit similar to the god of Genesis, in that he/she seemed to have power over dark and light and so on, and was pretty much invisible. They had a strong belief in behaving properly to their ancestors, and especially their parents, and had well-developed community rules for courtesy to others. Read A Pattern of Islands, by Arthur Grimble, who worked in these islands and on Banaba, for the Colonial Administration, from just before the First World War to the mid thirties, or thereabouts. It is a remarkable, informative, funny and warm-hearted account of these people and their religion. Other religions on the islands figure slightly, and there are remarkable stories of adventures, bravery, political machinations, etc. Probably out of print, but second hand copies are available I think, I have two, and the illustrations are delightful.

World War II

On the same day as the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Japanese invaded the Gilbert Islands, occupying 3 of them by 9 December 1941.[21]

On 17 August 1942, 221 U.S. Marines of the 2nd Marine Raider Battalion raided Makin from two submarines. The raid was intended by the Americans to confuse the Japanese about US intentions in the Pacific, a feint to draw Japanese attention away from the planned invasion route through the Solomons. It is instead believed to have alerted the Japanese to the strategic importance of the Gilbert Islands and led to their reinforcement and fortification. Marines captured during this operation were subsequently summarily executed by the Japanese, in gross violation of the laws of war. The 19 Marines who died were left behind for the villagers to bury. In 1999, a Marine Honor guard was sent to recover the bodies and found them after a villager showed them where to dig. All were exhumed and were taken to the United States.

Tarawa and Abemama were occupied in force by the Japanese in September 1942 and during the next year garrisons were built up on Betio (Tarawa Atoll), and Butaritari (Makin Atoll). Only nominal forces were placed on other islands in the Gilberts.

On 20 November 1943, the U.S. Army and U.S. 2nd Marine Division landed on Makin and Tarawa, initiating the battles of Makin and Tarawa, in which the Japanese were defeated. The Gilbert Islands were then used to support the invasion of the Marshall Islands in February 1944. The US built bases on Islands.

Self-determination

The Gilbert and Ellice Islands became autonomous in 1971. From 1975 to 1978, the Ellice Islands were separated, and the Gilberts became the Gilbert Islands colony, which issued stamps under that name. In 1979, the Gilberts opted for independence, becoming the independent nation of Kiribati. The Ellice Islands became the independent nation of Tuvalu.[22]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ W. David McIntyre. "The Partition of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands" (PDF). Island Studies Journal, Vol. 7, No. 1, 2012. pp. 135–146. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  2. ^ a b Reilly Ridgell. Pacific Nations and Territories: The Islands of Micronesia, Melanesia, and Polynesia. 3rd. Ed. Honolulu: Bess Press, 1995. p. 95.
  3. ^ a b Very often, this name applied only to the southern islands of the archipelago, the northern half being designated as the Scarborough Islands. Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary. Springfield, Massachusetts: Merriam Webster, 1997. p. 594
  4. ^ "Limits of Oceans and Seas, 3rd edition" (PDF). International Hydrographic Organization. 1953. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  5. ^ a b Stevenson, Robert Louis (1987) [1896]. In the South Seas, Part V, Chapter 1. Chatto & Windus; republished by The Hogarth Press.
  6. ^ Grimble, Arthur (1981). A Pattern of Islands. Penguin Travel Library. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-009517-3.
  7. ^ Maude, H.E. (1959). "Spanish Discoveries in the Central Pacific: A Study in Identification". The Journal of the Polynesian Society. 68 (4): 284–326.
  8. ^ Kelly, Celsus, O.F.M. La Austrialia del Espiritu Santo. The Journal of Fray Martín de Munilla O.F.M. and other documents relating to the Voyage of Pedro Fernández de Quirós to the South Sea (1605–1606) and the Franciscan Missionary Plan (1617–1627) Cambridge, 1966, pp. 39, 62.
  9. ^ H. E. Maude (1961). "Post-Spanish discoveries in the central Pacific". The Journal of the Polynesian Society. 70 (1): 67–111.
  10. ^ "Circumnavigation: Notable global maritime circumnavigations". Solarnavigator.net. Retrieved 20 July 2009.
  11. ^ Henry Evans Maude, On Islands and Men. 1968.
  12. ^ Morison, Samuel Eliot (22 May 1944). "The Gilberts & Marshalls: A distinguished historian recalls the past of two recently captured Pacific groups". Life. pp. 90–101. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  13. ^ Chambers, Keith S.; Munro, Doug (1980). "The Mystery of Gran Cocal: European Discovery and Mis-Discovery in Tuvalu". The Journal of the Polynesian Society. 89 (2): 167–198.
  14. ^ Robert Langdon (ed.) Where the whalers went: an index to the Pacific ports and islands visited by American whalers (and some other ships) in the 19th century, (1984), Canberra, Pacific Manuscripts Bureau, p. 64. ISBN 0-86784-471-X
  15. ^ Stanton, William (1975). The Great United States Exploring Expedition. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 245. ISBN 978-0520025578.
  16. ^ The proceedings of H.M.S. "Royalist", Captain E.H.M. Davis, R.N., May–August, 1892, in the Gilbert, Ellice and Marshall Islands.
  17. ^ a b c d e Mahaffy, Arthur William. Report by Mr. Arthur Mahaffy on a Visit to the Gilbert and Ellice Islands, 1909. London: Darling & Son, ltd. pp. 5–12.
  18. ^ Mahaffy, Arthur (1910). "(CO 225/86/26804)". Report by Mr. Arthur Mahaffy on a visit to the Gilbert and Ellice Islands. Great Britain, Colonial Office, High Commission for Western Pacific Islands (London: His Majesty's Stationery Office).
  19. ^ a b Correspondent (5 June 1913). "Modern buccaneers in the West Pacific" (PDF). New Age: 136–140.
  20. ^ Annexation of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands to his Majesty's dominions : at the Court at Buckingham Palace, the 10th day of November, 1915. Great Britain, Privy Council, Gilbert and Ellice Islands Order in Council, 1915 (Suva, Fiji : Government Printer). 1916.
  21. ^ "Pacific Ocean Campaigns, United States & Allied, Part 1 of 2: 1941–42". Naval-History.Net.
  22. ^ Enele Sapoaga, Hugh Larcy (ed) (1983). "Chapter 19, Post-War Development". Tuvalu: A History. University of the South Pacific/Government of Tuvalu. pp. 146–152. {{cite book}}: |last1= has generic name (help)

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Sabatier, E. (translated by U. Nixon), (1977). Astride the Equator: An account of the Gilbert Islands, Oxford University Press, Melbourne.

Siegel, Jeff (1985). "Origins of Pacific Islands Labourers in Fiji". Journal of Pacific History. 20 (1): 42–54. doi:10.1080/00223348508572504.

Ward, J. M. (1946). British policy in the South Pacific (1786–1893). Sydney: Australasian Publishing.

Weeramantry, C. Nauru: environmental damage under international trusteeship. Melbourne: Oxford University Press; 1992

Williams, M., & Macdonald, B. K. (1985). The phosphateers: A history of the British Phosphate Commissioners and the Christmas Island Phosphate Commission. Melbourne University Press, Carlton, Vic.

Willmott, B. (2007). The Chinese communities in the smaller countries of the South Pacific: Kiribati, Nauru, Tonga and the Cook Islands (Macmillan Brown Working Paper Series) [Online]. Available: http://www.pacs.canterbury.ac.nz/documents/Microsoft%20Word%20-%20Willmott_WP17.pdf 2013-05-04 at the Wayback Machine (accessed 6 February 2012).

External links

  Media related to Gilbert Islands at Wikimedia Commons

gilbert, islands, gilberts, redirects, here, other, uses, gilberts, disambiguation, gilbertese, tungaru, formerly, kingsmill, king, mill, islands, chain, sixteen, atolls, coral, islands, pacific, ocean, about, halfway, between, papua, guinea, hawaii, they, con. Gilberts redirects here For other uses see Gilberts disambiguation The Gilbert Islands Gilbertese Tungaru 2 formerly Kingsmill or King s Mill Islands 3 are a chain of sixteen atolls and coral islands in the Pacific Ocean about halfway between Papua New Guinea and Hawaii They constitute the main part of the nation of Kiribati the name of which is a rendering of Gilberts in the phonology of the indigenous Gilbertese 2 Colony of Gilbert Islands1976 1979Flag Coat of armsAnthem God Save the Queen CapitalSouth TarawaCommon languagesEnglish GilberteseGovernmentColony of the United KingdomMonarch 1976 1979Elizabeth IIGovernor 1976 1978John Hilary Smith 1978 1979Reginald James WallaceHistory Colony1 January 1 1976 Disestablished12 July 1979Population 197856 213CurrencyAustralian dollarPreceded by Succeeded byGilbert and Ellice Islands KiribatiToday part ofKiribati Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Islands of the Gilberts 1 2 Northern Gilberts 1 3 Central Gilberts 1 4 Southern Gilberts 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Contact with Europeans 2 3 US exploration 2 4 Colonial rule 2 4 1 Population 2 4 2 Economy 2 4 3 Administration 2 5 Religion 2 6 World War II 2 7 Self determination 3 See also 4 Notes 5 Bibliography 6 External linksGeography EditFurther information Geography of Kiribati The atolls and islands of the Gilbert Islands are arranged in an approximate north to south line The northernmost island in the group Makin it is approximately 420 nautical miles 780 km from southernmost Arorae as the crow flies Geographically the equator is the dividing line between the northern and southern Gilbert Islands However the International Hydrographic Organization IHO considers the entire Gilbert islands group to be in the South Pacific Ocean 4 Another way to group the Gilbert Islands is according to their former administrative districts which were known as the Northern Central and Southern Gilberts Tarawa was once a separate district as well At one time a subset of the northern Gilbert islands was known as Scarborough Islands and a subset of the southern Gilberts as the Kingsmill Group in some 19th century texts this last name of Kingsmills was applied to the entire Gilberts group 3 Geologically the Gilberts and the Ratak chain of the Marshall Islands to their north together form a continuous chain of seamounts Islands of the Gilberts Edit In official north south order grouped by former administrative district the islands and atolls are Atoll Island Mainvillage Land area Lagoon area Pop c 2005 Min numberof islets Villages Locationkm2 sq mi km2 sq miFormer district of the Northern GilbertsMakin Makin 7 89 3 0 0 3 0 1 2 385 6 2 3 23 N 173 00 E 3 383 N 173 000 E 3 383 173 000 Makin Butaritari Temanokunuea 13 49 5 2 191 7 74 0 3 280 11 11 3 09 N 172 50 E 3 150 N 172 833 E 3 150 172 833 Butaritari Marakei Rawannawi 14 13 5 5 19 6 7 6 2 741 1 8 2 00 N 173 17 E 2 000 N 173 283 E 2 000 173 283 Marakei Abaiang Tuarabu 17 48 6 7 232 5 89 8 5 502 4 20 18 1 50 N 172 57 E 1 833 N 172 950 E 1 833 172 950 Abaiang Tarawa Betio 31 02 12 0 343 6 132 7 45 989 9 30 1 26 N 173 00 E 1 433 N 173 000 E 1 433 173 000 Tarawa Former district of the Central GilbertsMaiana Tebwangetua 16 72 6 5 98 4 38 0 1 908 9 12 0 55 N 173 00 E 0 917 N 173 000 E 0 917 173 000 Maiana Abemama Kariatebike 27 37 10 6 132 4 51 1 3 404 8 12 0 24 N 173 50 E 0 400 N 173 833 E 0 400 173 833 Abemama Kuria Tabontebike 15 48 6 0 1 082 2 6 0 13 N 173 24 E 0 217 N 173 400 E 0 217 173 400 Kuria Aranuka Takaeang 11 61 4 5 19 4 7 5 1 158 4 3 0 09 N 173 35 E 0 150 N 173 583 E 0 150 173 583 Aranuka Nonouti1 Teuabu 19 85 7 7 370 4 143 0 3 179 12 9 0 40 S 174 20 E 0 667 S 174 333 E 0 667 174 333 Nonouti Former district of the Southern GilbertsTabiteuea1 Buariki 37 63 14 5 365 2 141 0 4 898 2 18 1 20 S 174 50 E 1 333 S 174 833 E 1 333 174 833 Tabiteuea Beru1 Taubukinberu 17 65 6 8 38 9 15 0 2 169 1 9 1 20 S 175 59 E 1 333 S 175 983 E 1 333 175 983 Beru Nikunau1 Rungata 19 08 7 4 1 912 1 6 1 21 S 176 28 E 1 350 S 176 467 E 1 350 176 467 Nikunau Onotoa1 Buariki 15 62 6 0 54 4 21 0 1 644 30 7 1 52 S 175 33 E 1 867 S 175 550 E 1 867 175 550 Onotoa Tamana Bakaka 4 73 1 8 875 1 3 2 30 S 175 58 E 2 500 S 175 967 E 2 500 175 967 Tamana Arorae Roreti 9 48 3 7 1 256 1 2 2 38 S 176 49 E 2 633 S 176 817 E 2 633 176 817 Arorae Gilbert Islands South Tarawa 281 10 108 5 1 866 5 720 7 83 382 117 156 3 23 N to 2 38S172 50 to 176 49 E1 part of Kingsmill Group proper Source for land areas Kiribati 2005 Census ReportNorthern Gilberts Edit The Northern Gilberts meang or mweang geographically and traditionally encompass Butaritari Makin Marakei Abaiang literally northland and Tarawa They have unique tonal accents with differences particularly noted amongst Butaritari and Makin inhabitants Traditionally Butaritari and Makin were ruled by a chief who lived on Butaritari called Makin or Great Makin This chief had all the powers and authority to make and impose decisions on the Islanders a system very different from the Southern Gilbert Islands where power was wielded collectively by the unimwane or old men of the island 5 The northern Gilberts have a greater mean rainfall in comparison to the southern and central Gilberts allowing cultivation of a wider crop range Butaritari and Makin supply most of the bananas sold in Kiribati The cultivation of taro or babai Cyrtosperma merkusii has been historically easier in the northern Gilberts due to a higher water table and regular rainfall Central Gilberts Edit The Central Gilberts or nuka have traditionally included Maiana Abemama Kuria and Aranuka However the latter three are considered the main islands that have unique historical and cultural characteristics which distinguish the Central Gilberts from the north and south 6 Tembinok the last king of Abemama Kuria and Aranuka died in the early part of the 20th century 5 Southern Gilberts Edit The Southern Gilberts include the atolls of Nonouti South and North Tabiteuea Beru Nikunau Onotoa Tamana and the most southerly island of Arorae History EditMain article History of Kiribati Prehistory Edit The islands had been inhabited by Oceanians for several millennia at least 2 000 years probably 3 000 Contact with Europeans Edit Portrait of a native of the Makin islands drawn by Alfred Thomas Agate 1841 In 1606 Portuguese navigator Pedro Fernandes de Queiros sighted Butaritari and Makin which he named the Buen Viaje Islands 7 8 1852 map by J G Barbie du Bocage Includes regions of Polynesia Micronesia Melanesia and Malesia Scarborough Islands are the Northern Gilberts Gilbert Island probably Tarawa Bishop s Island Tabiteuea Kingsmill Islands the Southern Gilberts just above ile Saint Augustin Nanumea The British explorer Vice Admiral John Byron passed through the islands in 1765 during his circumnavigation of the globe as captain of HMS Dolphin 9 10 In 1788 Captain Thomas Gilbert on Charlotte and Captain John Marshall on Scarborough crossed through Kuria Aranuka Tarawa Abaiang Butaritari and Makin without attempting to land on the atolls 11 12 In 1820 the islands were named the Gilbert Islands or iles Gilbert in French by Adam Johann von Krusenstern a Baltic German Admiral of the Russian Czar after the British Captain Thomas Gilbert who crossed the archipelago in 1788 French captain Louis Duperrey was the first to map the whole Gilbert Islands archipelago He commanded La Coquille on its circumnavigation of the earth 1822 1825 13 Map of Abaiang and Tarawa from US Ex Ex US exploration Edit Many whaling ships called at the islands in the 19th century The first recorded visit was by the Ann and Hope which called at Nikunau in December 1799 14 Two ships of the United States Exploring Expedition 1838 1842 USS Peacock and Flying Fish under the command of Captain William L Hudson visited many of the Gilbert Islands then called the Kingsmill Islands or Kingsmill Group in English While in the Gilberts they devoted considerable time to mapping and charting reefs and anchorages 15 Colonial rule Edit In 1886 an Anglo German agreement partitioned the unclaimed central Pacific leaving Nauru in the German sphere of influence while Ocean Island and the future GEIC wound up in the British sphere of influence A British protectorate was first proclaimed over the Gilberts by Captain Edward H M Davis of HMS Royalist on 27 May 1892 16 British official Arthur Mahaffy visited the Islands in 1909 He noted that the villages are kept in admirable order and the roads are scrupulously clean A hospital was on each island as well 17 The conduct of William Telfer Campbell the second resident commissioner of the Gilberts was criticised as to his legislative judicial and administrative management including allegations of forced labour exacted from islanders and became the subject of the 1909 report by Arthur Mahaffy 18 In 1913 an anonymous correspondent to The New Age journal described the mis administration of W Telfer Campbell and questioned the partiality of Arthur Mahaffy as he was a former colonial official in the Gilberts 19 In 1915 starting from 1916 the Gilbert and Ellice Islands were proclaimed a colony of the British Empire 20 Population Edit The natives of the Gilbert Islands are Austronesian peoples similar in many respects to the natives of the Marshalls or the Carolines citation needed In Mahaffy s 1909 report to the British Government he described the missionaries or Protectorate staff then resident in the Gilbert Islands 17 At the outbreak of World War II about 78 of the native population were said to be Christians This group was divided mainly into two denominations Congregationalists 43 and Roman Catholics 35 Catholics becoming quickly the majority at the end of the Colony The rest of the population were then largely semi pagan agnostics they did not adhere to the Christian faith nor did they retain much of their beliefs in their own ancient gods Native diet during this time consisted mainly of fish coconuts pandanus fruit babai swamp taro chicken and some pork 17 Housing for Europeans employed in the island was simple constructed of European and native materials and generally of the bungalow type Mahaffy described the native clothing as being of shocking shape and atrocious color and that the style was changing into kilt s of leaves or fine woven mats 17 Economy Edit In the early to mid 20th century the principal source of income for Gilbert islanders was from working on the production of phosphate from the deposits on Banaba Ocean Island an island to the west of the Gilbert Islands 19 In addition coconut palms were cultivated on some of the islands All labor was supervised by the British and every effort was made to see that the wages and living conditions were fair and adequate Sanitary inspections by the British did much to improve the general living conditions on most of the islands Mahaffy noted in 1909 that extreme poverty is virtually unknown and that most people on the island owned their own land Residents paid taxes with the majority of taxes going back into the community and a small portion going to the Protectorate 17 Administration Edit Judged to be about 84 literate the Gilbertese responded readily to the colony s educational efforts All education in the islands came under the supervision of the Colonial Education Department whose aims were to educate native boys for employment in government and commercial work and to standardize the level of education throughout the colony The bulk of the education was provided by the missions which maintained all the village schools and trained the native school teachers With the availability of European style medical care life improved The Phoenix Islands Settlement Scheme sought to provide an outlet through the development of three uninhabited atolls in the Phoenix Islands and was the last attempt at human colonization within the British Empire Religion Edit Hiram Bingham II 1831 1908 was the first to translate the Bible into Gilbertese and also wrote hymns for the Gilbertese language Joanna Gordon Clark writes of their religious belief The Gilbert and Ellice Islanders had a strong set of beliefs of their own pre the Christian missionaries they had a strong foundation myth involving trees and the two genders Their ancestors they said had been white skinned and red haired and came from elsewhere perhaps the West possibly coinciding with the outward spread of Homo sapiens from Africa and elsewhere As might be expected they gave power to the natural forces and gave them names and godly characteristics sun moon etc but believed in one spirit god a bit similar to the god of Genesis in that he she seemed to have power over dark and light and so on and was pretty much invisible They had a strong belief in behaving properly to their ancestors and especially their parents and had well developed community rules for courtesy to others Read A Pattern of Islands by Arthur Grimble who worked in these islands and on Banaba for the Colonial Administration from just before the First World War to the mid thirties or thereabouts It is a remarkable informative funny and warm hearted account of these people and their religion Other religions on the islands figure slightly and there are remarkable stories of adventures bravery political machinations etc Probably out of print but second hand copies are available I think I have two and the illustrations are delightful World War II Edit Main article Japanese occupation of the Gilbert Islands On the same day as the attack on Pearl Harbor the Japanese invaded the Gilbert Islands occupying 3 of them by 9 December 1941 21 On 17 August 1942 221 U S Marines of the 2nd Marine Raider Battalion raided Makin from two submarines The raid was intended by the Americans to confuse the Japanese about US intentions in the Pacific a feint to draw Japanese attention away from the planned invasion route through the Solomons It is instead believed to have alerted the Japanese to the strategic importance of the Gilbert Islands and led to their reinforcement and fortification Marines captured during this operation were subsequently summarily executed by the Japanese in gross violation of the laws of war The 19 Marines who died were left behind for the villagers to bury In 1999 a Marine Honor guard was sent to recover the bodies and found them after a villager showed them where to dig All were exhumed and were taken to the United States Tarawa and Abemama were occupied in force by the Japanese in September 1942 and during the next year garrisons were built up on Betio Tarawa Atoll and Butaritari Makin Atoll Only nominal forces were placed on other islands in the Gilberts On 20 November 1943 the U S Army and U S 2nd Marine Division landed on Makin and Tarawa initiating the battles of Makin and Tarawa in which the Japanese were defeated The Gilbert Islands were then used to support the invasion of the Marshall Islands in February 1944 The US built bases on Islands Self determination Edit The Gilbert and Ellice Islands became autonomous in 1971 From 1975 to 1978 the Ellice Islands were separated and the Gilberts became the Gilbert Islands colony which issued stamps under that name In 1979 the Gilberts opted for independence becoming the independent nation of Kiribati The Ellice Islands became the independent nation of Tuvalu 22 See also EditNaval Base Gilbert IslandsNotes Edit W David McIntyre The Partition of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands PDF Island Studies Journal Vol 7 No 1 2012 pp 135 146 Retrieved 24 October 2020 a b Reilly Ridgell Pacific Nations and Territories The Islands of Micronesia Melanesia and Polynesia 3rd Ed Honolulu Bess Press 1995 p 95 a b Very often this name applied only to the southern islands of the archipelago the northern half being designated as the Scarborough Islands Merriam Webster s Geographical Dictionary Springfield Massachusetts Merriam Webster 1997 p 594 Limits of Oceans and Seas 3rd edition PDF International Hydrographic Organization 1953 Retrieved 28 December 2020 a b Stevenson Robert Louis 1987 1896 In the South Seas Part V Chapter 1 Chatto amp Windus republished by The Hogarth Press Grimble Arthur 1981 A Pattern of Islands Penguin Travel Library Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 009517 3 Maude H E 1959 Spanish Discoveries in the Central Pacific A Study in Identification The Journal of the Polynesian Society 68 4 284 326 Kelly Celsus O F M La Austrialia del Espiritu Santo The Journal of Fray Martin de Munilla O F M and other documents relating to the Voyage of Pedro Fernandez de Quiros to the South Sea 1605 1606 and the Franciscan Missionary Plan 1617 1627 Cambridge 1966 pp 39 62 H E Maude 1961 Post Spanish discoveries in the central Pacific The Journal of the Polynesian Society 70 1 67 111 Circumnavigation Notable global maritime circumnavigations Solarnavigator net Retrieved 20 July 2009 Henry Evans Maude On Islands and Men 1968 Morison Samuel Eliot 22 May 1944 The Gilberts amp Marshalls A distinguished historian recalls the past of two recently captured Pacific groups Life pp 90 101 Retrieved 3 December 2019 Chambers Keith S Munro Doug 1980 The Mystery of Gran Cocal European Discovery and Mis Discovery in Tuvalu The Journal of the Polynesian Society 89 2 167 198 Robert Langdon ed Where the whalers went an index to the Pacific ports and islands visited by American whalers and some other ships in the 19th century 1984 Canberra Pacific Manuscripts Bureau p 64 ISBN 0 86784 471 X Stanton William 1975 The Great United States Exploring Expedition Berkeley University of California Press pp 245 ISBN 978 0520025578 The proceedings of H M S Royalist Captain E H M Davis R N May August 1892 in the Gilbert Ellice and Marshall Islands a b c d e Mahaffy Arthur William Report by Mr Arthur Mahaffy on a Visit to the Gilbert and Ellice Islands 1909 London Darling amp Son ltd pp 5 12 Mahaffy Arthur 1910 CO 225 86 26804 Report by Mr Arthur Mahaffy on a visit to the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Great Britain Colonial Office High Commission for Western Pacific Islands London His Majesty s Stationery Office a b Correspondent 5 June 1913 Modern buccaneers in the West Pacific PDF New Age 136 140 Annexation of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands to his Majesty s dominions at the Court at Buckingham Palace the 10th day of November 1915 Great Britain Privy Council Gilbert and Ellice Islands Order in Council 1915 Suva Fiji Government Printer 1916 Pacific Ocean Campaigns United States amp Allied Part 1 of 2 1941 42 Naval History Net Enele Sapoaga Hugh Larcy ed 1983 Chapter 19 Post War Development Tuvalu A History University of the South Pacific Government of Tuvalu pp 146 152 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last1 has generic name help Bibliography EditAsian Development Bank 2009b Kiribati s political economy and capacity development Online Available http www adb org documents reports KIR Political Economy Capacity Development KIR Economic Development pdf permanent dead link accessed 6 February 2012 Bedford R Macdonald B amp Munro D 1980 Population estimates for Kiribati and Tuvalu 1850 1900 Review and speculation Journal of the Polynesian Society 89 199 246 Bollard A E 1981 The Financial Adventures of J C Godeffroy and Son in the Pacific Journal of Pacific History 16 1 3 19 doi 10 1080 00223348108572410 Borovnik M 2006 Working overseas Seafarers remittances and their distribution in Kiribati Asian Pacific Viewpoint 47 151 161 Burnett G 2005 Language games and schooling Discourses of colonialism in Kiribati education Asia Pacific Journal of Education 25 1 93 106 Cochrane G 1970 The Administration of Wagina Resettlement Scheme Human Organization 29 2 123 132 Correspondent 1913 5 June Modern buccaneers in the West Pacific New Age pp 136 140 Online Available http dl lib brown edu pdfs 1140814207532014 pdf accessed 6 February 2012 Couper AD The island trade an analysis of the environment and operation of seaborne trade among three islands in the Pacific Canberra Australian National University Department of Geography 1967 Couper AD Protest movements and proto cooperatives in the Pacific Islands Journal of the Polynesian Society 1968 77 263 74 Davis E H M Captain RN 1892 Proceedings of H M S Royalist Online Available http www janeresture com davisdiaries captaindavis html and http www janeresture com nikunau index htm Archived 2006 10 16 at the Wayback Machine accessed 6 February 2012 Di Piazza A 1999 Te Bakoa site Two old earth ovens from Nikunau Island Republic of Kiribati Archaeology in Oceania 34 1 40 42 Di Piazza A 2001 Terre d abondance ou terre de misere Representation de la secheresse a Nikunau Republique de Kiribati Pacifique central Land of abundance or land of scarcity Ideas about drought on Nikunau Republic of Kiribati Central Pacific L Homme 157 35 58 Firth Stewart 1973 German Firms in the Western Pacific Islands 1857 1914 Journal of Pacific History 8 1 10 28 doi 10 1080 00223347308572220 Geddes W H 1977 Social individualisation on Tabiteuea Atoll Journal of the Polynesian Society 86 371 393 Geddes W H Chambers A Sewell B Lawrence R amp Watters R 1982 Islands on the Line team report Atoll economy Social change in Kiribati and Tuvalu No 1 Canberra Australian National University Development Studies Centre Goodall N 1954 A history of the London Missionary Society 1895 1945 London Oxford University Press Goodenough W H 1955 A problem in Malayo Polynesian social organization American Anthropologist 57 71 83 Grimble A 1921 From birth to death in the Gilbert Islands Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 51 25 54 Grimble A F 1952 A Pattern of Islands John Murray London Grimble A F 1957 Return to the Islands Life and Legend in the Gilberts John Murray LondonGrimble A F 1989 Tungaru traditions Writings on the atoll culture of the Gilberts Honolulu University of Hawaii Press Grimble A F amp Clarke S G 1929 Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony Instructions and Hints to District Officers Deputy Commissioners and Sub accountants His Britannic Majesty s High Commission for the Western Pacific Suva Fiji Tabai I 1993 The first twelve years in H Van Trease Ed Atoll Politics The Republic of Kiribati pp 309 320 Christchurch University of Canterbury Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies Kazama K 2001 Reorganized meeting house system The focus of social life in a contemporary village in Tabiteuea South Kiribati People and Culture in Oceania 17 83 113 Kiribati National Statistics Office 2009 Keystats workbook Online Available http www spc int prism Country KI Stats Economic GFS Revenue Current htm accessed 11 September 2011 Kiribati National Statistics Office 2009 Statistics Online Available http www spc int prism Country KI Stats index htm accessed 14 November 2009 Koch G E translated by G Slatter 1986 The Material Culture of Kiribati Institute of Pacific Studies of the University of the South Pacific Suva Fiji Land Copra Tax Register 1910 1916 Available in Kiribati National Archives Tarawa GEIC 4 11 II 18 Latouche J P 1983 Mythistoire Tungaru Cosmologies et genealogies aux Iles Gilbert Paris Societe d Etudes Linguistiques et Anthropologiques de France Lawrence R 1992 Kiribati change and context in an atoll world in Robillard A B Ed Social Change in the Pacific Islands Kegan Paul International London pp 264 99 Levesque Rodrigue 1989 Canadian Whalers in Micronesia 1840 1850 Journal of Pacific History 24 2 225 237 doi 10 1080 00223348908572617 Lundsgaarde H P 1966 Cultural Adaptation in the Southern Gilbert Islands University of Oregon Oregon Lundsgaarde H P 1974 The evolution of tenure principles on Tamana Island Gilbert Islands In H P Lundsgaarde Ed Land tenure in Oceania pp 179 214 Honolulu University Press of Hawaii Lundsgaarde H P 1978 Post contact changes in Gilbertese maneaba organization In N Gunson Ed The Changing Pacific Essays in Honour of H E Maude pp 67 79 Melbourne Oxford University PressLundsgaarde H P amp Silverman M G 1972 Category and group in Gilbertese kinship An updating of Goodenough s analysis Ethnology 11 95 110 Macdonald B 1971 Local government in the Gilbert and Ellice Islands 1892 1969 part 1 Journal of Administration Overseas 10 280 293 Macdonald B 1972 Local government in the Gilbert and Ellice Islands 1892 1969 part 2 Journal of Administration Overseas 11 11 27 Macdonald B K 1982 Cinderellas of the Empire Towards a History of Kiribati and Tuvalu Australian National University Press Canberra Macdonald B 1996a Governance and Political Process in Kiribati Economics Division Working Papers 96 2 Canberra Australian National University National Centre for Development Studies Macdonald B 1996b Now an island is too big limits and limitations of Pacific Islands history Journal of Pacific Studies 20 23 44 Macdonald B 1998 Pacific Islands stakeholder participation in development Kiribati Pacific Islands Discussion Paper Series No 5 Washington DC World Bank East Asia and Pacific Region Papua New Guinea and Pacific Islands Country Management Unit Mason L Ed 1985 Kiribati A Changing Atoll Culture University of the South Pacific Institute of Pacific Studies Suva Fiji Maude H C amp Maude H E Eds 1994 An anthology of Gilbertese oral tradition Suva Fiji Institute of Pacific Studies of the University of the South Pacific Maude H E 1949 The Co operative Movement in the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Technical Paper No 1 South Pacific Commission Sydney Maude H E 1952 The Colonisation of the Phoenix Islands Journal of the Polynesian Society Vol 61 Nos 1 2 pp 62 89 Maude H E 1963 The Evolution of the Gilbertese Boti An Ethnohistorical Interpretation Journal of the Polynesian Society 72 Supplement pp 1 68 Maude H E 1964 Beachcombers and Castaways Journal of the Polynesian Society 73 pp 254 293 Maude H E 1967 The Swords of Gabriel A Study in Participant History Journal of Pacific History 2 1 113 136 doi 10 1080 00223346708572105 Maude H E 1977a Foreword in Sabatier E translated by U Nixon Astride the Equator An Account of the Gilbert Islands Oxford University Press Melbourne pp v viii Maude H E 1977b Notes in Sabatier E translated by U Nixon Astride the Equator An Account of the Gilbert Islands Oxford University Press Melbourne pp 353 373 Maude H E ed 1991 The story of Karongoa Suva Fiji Institute of Pacific Studies of the University of the South Pacific Maude H E amp Doran E Jr 1966 The precedence of Tarawa Atoll Annals of the Association of American Geographers 56 269 289 Maude H E amp Leeson I 1965 The Coconut Oil Trade of the Gilbert Island Journal of the Polynesian Society 74 pp 396 437 McCreery D amp Munro D 1993 The cargo of the Montserrat Gilbertese labor in Guatemalan coffee 1890 1908 The Americas 49 271 295 Munro D Firth S Towards colonial protectorates the case of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Australian Journal of Politics and History 1986 32 63 71 Munro D Firth S From company rule to consular control Gilbert Island labourers on German plantations in Samoa Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 1987 16 24 43 Munro Doug Firth Stewart 1990 German Labour Policy and the Partition of the Western Pacific The View from Samoa Journal of Pacific History 25 1 85 102 doi 10 1080 00223349008572627 Officer on Board the Said Ship 1767 A voyage round the world in His Majesty s Ship the Dolphin commanded by the honourable commodore Byron London J Newbery and F Newbery Sabatier E translated by U Nixon 1977 Astride the Equator An account of the Gilbert Islands Oxford University Press Melbourne Siegel Jeff 1985 Origins of Pacific Islands Labourers in Fiji Journal of Pacific History 20 1 42 54 doi 10 1080 00223348508572504 Ward J M 1946 British policy in the South Pacific 1786 1893 Sydney Australasian Publishing Weeramantry C Nauru environmental damage under international trusteeship Melbourne Oxford University Press 1992Williams M amp Macdonald B K 1985 The phosphateers A history of the British Phosphate Commissioners and the Christmas Island Phosphate Commission Melbourne University Press Carlton Vic Willmott B 2007 The Chinese communities in the smaller countries of the South Pacific Kiribati Nauru Tonga and the Cook Islands Macmillan Brown Working Paper Series Online Available http www pacs canterbury ac nz documents Microsoft 20Word 20 20Willmott WP17 pdf Archived 2013 05 04 at the Wayback Machine accessed 6 February 2012 External links Edit Media related to Gilbert Islands at Wikimedia Commons The Battle for Tarawa Appendix G Gilbert Islands Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gilbert Islands amp oldid 1151261214, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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