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History of Tonga

The history of Tonga is recorded since the ninth century BC, when seafarers associated with the Lapita diaspora first settled the islands which now make up the Kingdom of Tonga.[1] Along with Fiji and Samoa, the area served as a gateway into the rest of the Pacific region known as Polynesia.[2] Ancient Tongan mythologies recorded by early European explorers report the islands of 'Ata and Tongatapu as the first islands having been hauled to the surface from the deep ocean by Maui.[3][4]

Tonga and neighbouring islands and groups

Pre-contact

The dates of the initial settlement of Tonga are still subject to debate; nonetheless, one of the oldest occupied sites is found in the village of Pea on Tongatapu. Radiocarbon dating of a shell found at the site reportedly dates the occupation at 3180 ± 100 BP (Before Present).[5] Some of the oldest sites pertaining to the first occupants of the Tongan Islands are found on Tongatapu which is also where the first Lapita ceramics were found by WC McKern in 1921.[6] Nonetheless, reaching the Tongan islands (without Western navigational tools and techniques) was a remarkable feat accomplished by the Lapita peoples. Not much is known about Tonga before European contact because of the lack of a writing system during prehistoric times other than the oral history told to the early European explorers. The first time the Tongan people encountered Europeans was in April 1616 when Jacob Le Maire and Willem Schouten made a short visit to the islands to trade with them.

Early culture

 
Ha'amonga 'a Maui
 
Ancient monuments on Tongatapu, 1924 map

Centuries before Westerners arrived, Tongans created megalithic stoneworks. Most notably, these are the Haʻamonga ʻa Maui and the Langi terraced tombs. The Haʻamonga is 5 meters high and made of three coral-lime stones that weigh more than 40 tons each. The Langi are low, very flat, two or three tier pyramids that mark the graves of former kings.

What is known about Tonga before European contact comes from myths, stories, songs, poems, (as there was no writing system) as well as from archaeological excavations. Many ancient sites, kitchens and refuse heaps, have been found in Tongatapu and Haʻapai, and a few in Vavaʻu and the Niuas that provide insights into old Tongan settlement patterns, diet, economy, and culture.

The Old Tonga

The Haʻapai of three thousand years ago was a bit different from the Haʻapai of today. Large flightless birds called megapodes bounded through the tropical rain forest while giant iguanas and various other lizards rested on tree limbs.[7] The skies hosted three different species of fruit bats, three different species of pigeon, and more than two dozen other types of birds. There were no pigs, horses, dogs, cows, or rats. There were no Tongans.

The South Pacific, meanwhile, was almost completely uninhabited. Any present humans existed on the western fringes of the Solomon Islands. Then, around that time, these islanders were suddenly replaced by a new branch of humanity that originated from the Bismarck Archipelago off Papua New Guinea.[8] They intrepidly stormed through the region, rapidly colonizing and pushing east. They brought with them new plant and animal species, as well as a distinct pottery design. Today these people are named the Lapita, after the location in New Caledonia where they were first noticed archaeologically.

The Lapita Period

 
Region where Lapita pottery has been found

Around 3000 B.P., the Lapita people reached Tonga, and carbon dating places their landfall first in Tongatapu and then in Haʻapai soon after.[9] The newcomers were already well adapted to the resource-scarce island life and settled in small communities of a few households[9] on beaches just above high tide line that faced open lagoons or reefs. Through continued interaction with Lapita relatives of the west, the Haʻapaians obtained domesticated animals and cultivatable plants, but it seems that both of these possible food sources contributed minimally towards their diet for at least the first two hundred years. Instead, they feasted mainly on life in the sea: parrotfish, wrasses, turtles, surgeonfish, jacks, eels, emperors, bottom-dwellers, shellfish, and the occasional deep water tuna.[8] Just as their Polynesian descendants do today.

Sea food was inexhaustible, so reefs then were not very different from reefs today, except for the marked decline in sea turtle populations. Fauna didn't fare as well, however, and soon the giant iguanas, the megapodes, twenty four bird species, almost all pigeons, and all but one species of fruit bat were all extinct.[7]

They hunted and cooked these animals with the most basic of technologies. When shell pieces were too brittle for tools, they utilized volcanic soils for “andesite/basalt used for adze manufacture and other artifacts such as oils as hammerstones, weaving weights, cooking stones, and decorative pebbles for grave decoration.”[10] If they were lucky, they obtained harder obsidian shards from the far northern fringe volcano of Tafahi in the Niuas.[8]

Another useful technology was their eponymous pottery with “dentate” impressions and simple designs that were characteristic of all Lapita settlements in the South Pacific. Tongan Lapita designs were simpler than western Lapita designs, evolving from ornate curvilinear and rectilinear patterns into simple rectilinear forms.[10] The pottery was “slab-built earthenware of andesitic-tephra clay mixed with calcareous or mineral sand tempers and fired at a low temperature.” [10]

Decades of archaeological excavations of ancient Lapita kitchens and middens (refuse piles) both in Tongatapu and Haʻapai have taught us much about early Tongan settlement. We know what they ate, what tools they used, where they settled (one colony each on ‘Uiha, Kauvai, and Foa, and two on Lifuka), and how large the settlements were. Despite a wealth of archaeological evidence, however, the Lapita people still stifle us with two main mysteries: How did they spread through the South Pacific so quickly, and why did the Lapita settlers in Tonga quickly abandon their ornate pottery tradition?

The Lapitan diaspora began from Papua New Guinea in 1500 BC. By 2850 BP (900 BC) they were already in Tonga, meaning they virtually sprinted east for three hundred years. They travelled in small wooden boats over open ocean to invisible destinations faster than the Europeans colonizers walked across their continent.[8] Archaeologists wonder what would compel people to embark on statistically suicidal missions. It doesn't appear that population pressure was a problem, because most Lapitan islands were sparsely inhabited and could have supported much higher populations, especially if they had turned more towards available root crops.

A hypothesis from Kirch is that Lapitan culture encouraged emigration by younger sons.[8] Not just in Tonga, but throughout the South Pacific is a tradition of passing down land to eldest sons. To obtain their own land, younger sons needed to explore. Tangaloa, the chief Tongan god before the arrival of Christianity, was a younger sibling who created Tonga while searching for land from a canoe. His fish hook accidentally caught on a rock on the ocean floor and he was able to pull Tonga to the surface. If the hypothesis is correct, then there must have been some strong sibling rivalry to entice someone to fall upon places as far away as New Zealand, Hawaiʻi, and Easter Island.

The other great mystery is why the ornate pottery tradition disappeared, and with such speed. Only two hundred years after arriving, the Lapitan settlers ceased to decorate their earthenware pots at all, and the only thing the leading contemporary Tongan archaeologist can say about the disappearance is that, “Unfortunately most explanations are based on inferential speculation, and they are difficult to validate with any degree of certainty. What we can say with confidence is that, for whatever reason pottery decoration ceased in Tonga, it did so rather suddenly.”[10]

The Polynesian Plain Ware Period: 2650–1550 BP (700 BC – 400 AD)

Life began to change drastically for Haʻapaians at the same time that ornate pottery was replaced by a strictly utilitarian plain ware kit, and it is at this time that the people may be called Polynesian. Of all the linguistically and traditionally similar people who came to inhabit the triangle created by New Zealand, Hawai’i, and Easter Island, they can all trace ancestry to a few original settlers in Tonga[citation needed].

These original Polynesians in Tonga shifted somewhat away from maritime subsistence towards an increased reliance on agriculture and animal husbandry. Taro, yam, breadfruit, and banana became principal carbohydrate sources, and domesticated animals came to represent much more of the diet.[7] At original Lapita sites, 24% of bird bones came from chickens, which increased after the Polynesian transformation into 81%, marking probably the demise of other bird species as well as an increased reliance on domesticated species.[10]

More energy supportive food sources allowed a population explosion. A 25x40 m Lapitan “hamlet” grew into a village over one kilometer in length.[10] Settlement grew around most of the lagoon in Tongatapu and villages finally reached the interior of the main island. Similar expansions have been identified in the Niuas and in Vava’u.

To archaeologists, these early Polynesians provide a mystery just as perplexing as the Lapitans. By 1550 BP (400 AD), they ceased to produce any pottery at all. They seem to have turned towards more natural materials instead, and therefore the archaeological record enters into a “dark age”[10] of relatively little information until the emergence of chiefly states hundreds of years later. Speculations as to disappearance of the pottery tradition ranges from the use of coconut cups and bowls that are easier to use, a shift away from steaming shellfish in large bowls to baking in underground ovens, and the unsuitability of Tongan clays for pottery.[10] Nothing can be said with certainty except that the same disappearance also occurred in Fiji and Samoa.

The Formative Dark Age: 1550–750 BP (400–1200 AD)

Little is known about the period because of the absence of much archaeological evidence. What is clear is that population continued to increase, reaching between 17,000 and 25,000[10] on Tongatapu, and that chiefdoms arose to protect against the increased competition for resources. Tongatapu may have been politically consolidated by a single individual of the future Tuʻi Tonga familial line, as oral tradition traces the king's lineage back through 39 individuals that could have started as early as 1000 bp (950 AD).[10] The maritime empire made famous by oral tradition, however did not begin until after 750 BP (1200 AD).

Tongan Maritime Empire

 
Tomb of Chief Tongamana
 
Burial ground on Tongatapu

By the 12th century, Tongans, and the Tongan kings named the Tu'i Tonga, were known across the Pacific, from Niue, Samoa to Tikopia. They ruled these nations for more than 400 years, sparking some historians to refer to a "Tongan Empire", although it was more of a network of interacting navigators, chiefs, and adventurers. It is unclear whether chiefs of the other islands actually came to Tonga regularly to acknowledge their sovereign. Distinctive pottery and Tapa cloth designs also show that the Tongans have travelled from the far reaches of Micronesia, to Fiji and Hawaii.[11]

In 950 AD Tu'i Tonga 'Aho'eitu started to expand his rule outside of Tonga. According to leading Tongan scholars, including Okusitino Mahina, the Tongan and Samoan oral traditions indicate that the first Tu'i Tonga was the son of their god Tangaloa.[12] As the ancestral homeland of the Tu'i Tonga dynasty and the abode of deities such as Tagaloa 'Eitumatupu'a, Tonga Fusifonua, and Tavatavaimanuka. By the time it comes to the 10th Tu’i Tonga Momo, and his successor, ‘Tu’itatui, the empire had already stretched from Tikopia in the west to Niue in the east.[13] Their realm contained Wallis and Futuna, Tokelau, Tuvalu, Rotuma, Nauru, parts of Fiji, Marquesas, parts of the Solomon Islands, Kiribati, Niue, Cook Islands, and parts of Samoa.[13] To better govern the large territory, the Tu’i Tongas had their throne moved by the lagoon at Lapaha, Tongatapu. The influence of the Tu’i Tonga was renowned throughout the Pacific, and many of the neighboring islands participated in the widespread trade of resources and new ideas.

Under the 10th Tuʻi Tonga, Momo and his son Tuʻitātui (11th Tuʻi Tonga) the empire was at its height of expansion, tributes for the Tu'i Tonga were said to be exacted from all tributary chiefdoms of the empire. This tribute was known as the " 'Inasi " and was conducted annually at Mu'a following the harvest season when all countries that were subject to the Tu'i Tonga must bring a gift for the gods, who was recognized as the Tu'i Tonga.[14] Captain Cook witness an Inasi ceremony in 1777, in which he noticed a lot of foreigners in Tonga, especially the darker people that resembles African descend from Fiji, Solomon Islands[citation needed] and Vanuatu.[11] The finest mats of Samoa ('ie toga) are incorrectly translated as "Tongan mats;" the correct meaning is "treasured cloth" ("ie" = cloth, "toga" = female goods, in opposition to "oloa" = male goods).[15] Many fine mats came into the possession of the Tongan royal families through chiefly marriages with Samoan noblewomen, such as Tohu'ia the mother of Tu'i Kanokupolu Ngata who came from Safata, 'Upolu, Samoa. These mats, including the Maneafaingaa and Tasiaeafe, are considered the crown jewels of the current Tupou line[16] (which is derived matrilineally from Samoa).[17] The success of the Empire was largely based upon the Imperial Navy. The most common vessels were long-distance double-canoes fitted with triangular sails. The largest canoes of the Tongan kalia type could carry up to 100 men. The most notable of these were the Tongafuesia, ʻĀkiheuho, the Lomipeau, and the Takaʻipōmana. It should be mentioned that the Takaʻipōmana was actually a Samoan kalia; according to Queen Salote and the Palace Records this was the Samoan double-canoe that brought Tohu'ia Limapō from Samoa to wed the Tu'i Ha'atakalaua.[17] The large navy allowed for Tonga to become wealthy with large amounts of trade and tribute flowing into the Royal Treasury.[11]

The Tuʻi Tonga decline began due to numerous wars and internal pressure. In the 13th or 14th century Samoa defeated Tu'i Tonga Talakaifaiki under the lead of the Malietoa family. In response the falefā was created as political advisors to the Empire. The falefā officials were initially successful in maintaining some hegemony over other subjected islands but increased dissatisfaction led to the assassination of several rulers in succession. The most notable were, Havea I (19th TT), Havea II (22nd TT), and Takalaua (23rd TT), who were all known for their tyrannical rule. In AD 1535, Takalaua was assassinated by two foreigners while swimming in the lagoon of Mu'a. His successor, Kauʻulufonua I pursued the killers all the way to ʻUvea, where he killed them.[18]

 
Page from the ship's log of Abel Tasman with the description of t' Eijlandt Amsterdam, nowadays Tongatapu[19]

Because of so many assassination attempts on the Tu'i Tonga, Kauʻulufonua established a new dynasty called Tu'i Ha'atakalaua in honor of his father and he gave his brother Mo’ungamotu’a, the title of Tu’i Ha’a Takalaua. This new dynasty was to deal with the everyday decisions of the empire, while the position of Tu’i Tonga was to be the nation's spiritual leader, though he still controlled the final say in the life or death of his people. The Tu'i Tonga "empire" at this period becomes Samoan in orientation as the Tu'i Tonga kings themselves became ethnic Samoans who married Samoan women and resided in Samoa.[20] Kau'ulufonua's mother was a Samoan from Manu'a,[21] Tu'i Tonga Kau'ulufonua II and Tu'i Tonga Puipuifatu had Samoan mothers and as they married Samoan women the succeeding Tu'i Tongas - Vakafuhu, Tapu'osi, and 'Uluakimata - were allegedly more "Samoan" than "Tongan."[22]

In 1610, the 6th Tu’i Ha’a Takalaua, Mo'ungatonga, created the position of Tu’i Kanokupolu for his half-Samoan son, Ngata, which divided regional rule between them, though as time went on the Tu’i Kanokupolu's power became more and more dominant over Tonga. The Tu'i Kanokupolu dynasty oversaw the importation and institution of many Samoan policies and titles and according to Tongan scholars this Samoanized form of government and custom continues today in the modern Kingdom of Tonga [23] Things continued this way for a long time afterward. The first Europeans arrived in 1616, when the Dutch explorers Willem Schouten and Jacob Le Maire spotted Tongans in a canoe off the coast of Niuatoputapu, and the famous Abel Tasman followed soon after. These visits were brief, however, and did not change the island much at all.

The dividing line between the two moieties was the old coastal road named Hala Fonua moa (dry land road). Still today the chiefs who derive their authority from the Tuʻi Tonga are named the Kau hala ʻuta (inland road people) while those from the Tuʻi Kanokupolu are known as the Kau hala lalo (low road people). Concerning the Tuʻi Haʻatakalaua supporters: when this division arose, in the 15th century, they were of course the Kauhalalalo. But when the Tuʻi Kanokupolu had overtaken them they shifted their allegiance to the Kauhalaʻuta.

Modern archeology, anthropology and linguistic studies confirm widespread Tongan cultural influence ranging widely[24][25] through East 'Uvea, Rotuma, Futuna, Samoa and Niue, parts of Micronesia (Kiribati, Pohnpei), Vanuatu, and New Caledonia and the Loyalty Islands,[26] and while some academics prefer the term "maritime chiefdom",[27] others argue that, while very different from examples elsewhere, "..."empire" is probably the most convenient term."[28]

European arrival and Christianization

 
Close-up of the 1622 Map of the Pacific by Hessel Gerritsz showing among others Goede hoop Elt (Niuafo'ou, Cocos Eylandt (Tafahi) and Verraders eylandt (Niuatoputapu). It is one of the earliest maps where those island are drawn.
 
Cook's map of 1777

In the 15th century and again in the 17th, civil war erupted. It was in this context that the first Europeans arrived, beginning with Dutch explorers Willem Schouten and Jacob Le Maire. Between April 21 to 23, 1616 they moored at the Northern Tongan islands "Cocos Island" (Tafahi) and "Traitors Island" (Niuatoputapu), respectively. The kings of both of these islands boarded the ships and Le Maire drew up a list of Niuatoputapu words, a language now extinct. On April 24, 1616, they tried to moor at the "Island of Good Hope" (Niuafo'ou), but a less welcoming reception there made them decide to sail on.

On January 21, 1643, the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman was the first European to visit the main island (Tongatapu) and Haʻapai after rounding Australia and New Zealand while looking for a faster route to Chile. He mapped several islands. Tasman named the island of Tongatapu t’ Eijlandt Amsterdam (Amsterdam Island), because of its abundance of supplies.[29] This name is no longer used except by historians.

The most significant impact had the visits of Captain Cook in 1773, 1774, and 1777, followed by the first London missionaries in 1797, and the Wesleyan Methodist Walter Lawry in 1822. Around that time, most Tongans converted en masse to the Wesleyan (Methodist) or Catholic faiths. Other denominations followed, including Pentecostals, Mormons, Seventh-day Adventists, and most recently the Bahá'í faith.

The islands were also visited by the Spanish under Francisco Antonio Mourelle in 1781 and Alessandro Malaspina (who unsuccessfully claimed Vavau for Spain) in 1793 and by the French under Marc-Joseph Marion du Fresne in 1772, Jean-François de Galaup, comte de Lapérouse in 1787, Fletcher Christian in 1789 and Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux in 1793.[30]

Unification

 
King George Tupou I, c. 1880

In 1799, the 14th Tuʻi Kanokupolu, Tukuʻaho was murdered, which sent Tonga into a civil war for fifty years. Finally, the islands were united into a Polynesian kingdom in 1845 by the ambitious young warrior, strategist, and orator Tāufaʻāhau. He held the chiefly title of Tu'i Kanokupolu, but was baptised with the name King George Tupou I.

In 1875, with the help of missionary Shirley Baker, he declared Tonga a constitutional monarchy, at which time he emancipated the serfs, enshrined a code of law, land tenure, and freedom of the press, and limited the power of the chiefs. The islands were not fully surveyed until 1898, when the British warships HMS Egeria (1873) and HMS Penguin (1876) completed the task.[30]

20th century

 
King George Tupou II, 1909

Kingdom of Tonga (1900–70)

Tonga became a British protected state under a Treaty of Friendship on May 18, 1900, when European settlers and rival Tongan chiefs tried to oust the second king. The Treaty of Friendship and protected state status ended in 1970 under arrangements established prior to her death by the third monarch, Queen Sālote.

On 18 May 1900, to discourage German advances,[31] the Kingdom of Tonga became a Protected State with the United Kingdom under a Treaty of Friendship signed by George Tupou II after European settlers and rival Tongan chiefs attempted to overthrow him.[32][33] Foreign affairs of the Kingdom of Tonga were conducted through the British Consul. The United Kingdom had veto power over foreign policies and finances of the Kingdom of Tonga.[31]

Tonga was affected by the 1918 flu pandemic, with 1,800 Tongans killed, around eight percent of the residents.[34]

For most of the 20th century Tonga was quiet, inward-looking, and somewhat isolated from developments elsewhere in the world. Tonga's complex social structure is essentially broken into three tiers: the king, the nobles, and the commoners. Between the nobles and commoners are Matapule, sometimes called "talking chiefs," who are associated with the king or a noble and who may or may not hold estates. Obligations and responsibilities are reciprocal, and although the nobility are able to extract favors from people living on their estates, they likewise must extend favors to their people. Status and rank play a powerful role in personal relationships, even within families.

Independence (1970)

 
Tongan 1 paʻanga coin depicting Queen Salote Tupou III.
 
Royal Tongan wedding, 1976

On 4 June 1970, protected state status ended under arrangements established prior to her death in 1965 by the third monarch, Queen Sālote.

Tonga joined the Commonwealth of Nations in 1970, and the United Nations in 1999. While exposed to colonial forces, Tonga has never lost indigenous governance, a fact that makes Tonga unique in the Pacific and boosts confidence in the monarchical system. The British High Commission in Tonga closed in March 2006.

Tonga's current king, Tupou VI, traces his line directly back through six generations of monarchs. The previous king, George Tupou V, born in 1946, continued to have ultimate control of the government until July 2008. At that point, concerns over financial irregularities and calls for democracy led to his relinquishing most of his day-to-day powers over the government.[35]

Tongans are beginning to confront the problem of how to preserve their cultural identity and traditions in the wake of the increasing impact of Western technology and culture. Migration and the gradual monetization of the economy have led to the breakdown of the traditional extended family. Some of the poor, once supported by the extended family, are now being left without visible means of support.

Educational opportunities for young commoners have advanced, and their increasing political awareness has stimulated some dissent against the nobility system. In addition, the rapidly increasing population is already too great to provide the constitutionally mandated 8.25 acre (33,000 m2) api for each male at age 16. In mid-1982, population density was 134 persons per square kilometer. Because of these factors, there is considerable pressure to move to the Kingdom's only urban center.

21st century

 
ʻAkilisi Pōhiva, leader of the democratic movement and Prime Minister from 2014 to 2019

2002 election

In the March 2002 election, supporters of the Human Rights and Democracy Movement (HRDM) won seven of the nine popularly-elected seats for people's representatives, with the remaining two representing "traditionalist" values. Voter turnout was 48.9%.[36] The nine nobles and all the cabinet ministers that sit in the Legislative Assembly generally support the government. Following the election, HRDM leader 'Akilisi Pohiva was arrested and charged with sedition over an article published in his newspaper Kele’a alleging the king had a secret fortune,[37] but was later acquitted by a jury.[38]

In 2003, the Taimi 'o Tonga (Tongan Times), a newspaper published in New Zealand in the Tongan language that had been critical of the government was prohibited from distribution in Tonga due to government objections to its political content. After the newspaper obtained two court orders, it was again distributed freely. A Media Operators Bill and constitutional amendment, intended to restrict media freedom in Tonga, was hotly debated in 2003. The legislation allowed the government to exert control over coverage of "cultural" and "moral" issues, ban publications it deemed offensive, and ban foreign ownership of the media. In October 2003, thousands of Tongans marched peacefully through the streets of the capital city Nukuʻalofa in an unprecedented demonstration against the government's plans to limit media freedom. Despite the protests, the Media Operators Bill and constitutional amendment passed the Legislature and as of December 2003 needed only the King's signature to become law.

By February 2004, the amendment was passed and licensure of news media was required. Those papers denied licenses under the new act included the Taimi 'o Tonga (Tongan Times), the Kele'a and the Matangi Tonga, while those permitted licenses were uniformly church based or pro-government. Further opposition to government action included calls by the Tu'i Pelehake (a prince, nephew of the King and elected member of parliament) for Australia and other nations to pressure the Tongan government to democratize the electoral system, and a legal writ calling for a judicial investigation of the bill. The latter was supported by some 160 people, including 7 of the 9 elected "People's Representatives".

2005 election

 
Feleti Sevele, first commoner to serve as Prime Minister of Tonga since the 19th century

At the 2005 Tongan general election, the Human Rights and Democracy Movement won seven of the nine popularly-elected seats (the rest of the 30 MPs are appointed by the King or are members of the Tongan aristocracy). 'Aho'eitu 'Unuaki'otonga Tuku'aho, son of the King, initially retained his position as Prime Minister, but he resigned in 2006, after the Tongan Speaker of the House was found guilty of bribery.[39] The position passed to Feleti Sevele, Minister of Labour and one of the two independent candidates elected, as well as the first non-noble Prime Minister of the country.

In 2005 the government spent several weeks negotiating with striking civil service workers before reaching a settlement. A constitutional commission met in 2005–2006 to study proposals to update the constitution. A copy of the commission's report was presented to King Taufa'ahau Tupou IV, shortly before his death in September 2006.

2006 riots

 
The start of the major fires due to the 2006 Tonga riots in Nukuʻalofa
 
Tupoutoʻa-Lavaka Tupou VI (centre) in a mourning dress for his recently deceased father, king Tāufaʻāhau Tupou IV in 2006. He is flanked by his two sons, the new chiefs ʻUlukālala (left) and Ata (right)

Tonga did not rate as an "electoral democracy" under the criteria of Freedom House's Freedom in the World 2006 report. This is likely because while elections exist, they could only elect nine of 30 Legislative Assembly seats, the remainder being selected either by the nobility or the government; as such the people have a voice in but no control over the government.

The public expected democratic changes from the new monarch. On November 16, 2006, rioting broke out in the capital city of Nukuʻalofa when it seemed that the parliament would adjourn for the year without having made any advances in increasing democracy in government. Government buildings, offices, and shops were looted and burned[40] Eight people died in the riots.[41] The government agreed that elections would be held in 2008 in which a majority of the parliament would be elected by popular vote.[42] A state of emergency was declared on November 17, with emergency laws giving security forces the right to stop and search people without a warrant.[43]

On 18 January 2007 Pōhiva was arrested[44] and charged with sedition[45] over his role in the 2006 Nuku'alofa riots.

2008 election

The April 2008 elections saw a 48% turnout to elect the nobles' representatives and the 9 people's representatives. Most of the pro-democracy MPs were reconfirmed, despite several facing charges of sedition over the 2006 Nuku'alofa riots[46] All nine elected MPs were pro-democracy activists.[47] About two weeks before the election, it was announced that the Tonga Broadcasting Commission would henceforth censor candidates' political broadcasts,[48] and that TBC reporters would be banned from reporting on political matters.[49]Tonga Review criticised the decision as an undue restriction on freedom of speech.[50] On 29 May 2008, in the speech from the throne at the opening of Parliament, Princess Regent, Salote Mafile'o Pilolevu Tuita announced that the government would introduce a political reform bill by June 2008, and that the current term of Parliament would be the last one under the current constitution[51]

In July 2008, three days before his coronation, King George Tupou V announced that he would relinquish most of his power and be guided by his Prime Minister's recommendations on most matters, following upcoming elections.[35]

In November 2009, a constitutional review panel recommended a ceremonial monarchy stripped of real political power and to invest political power in a completely elected Legislative Assembly of Tonga (the Fale Alea) which, up to this point was largely hereditary due to the fact that most of the seats where designated for the nobles.[52][53] and were preceded by a programme of constitutional reform.[54]

Democratisation and 2010 elections

In April 2010 the Legislative Assembly enacted a package of political reforms towards a fully representative democracy, increasing the number of directly elected people's representatives from 9 to 17,[55] with ten seats for Tongatapu, three for Vavaʻu, two for Haʻapai and one each for Niuas and ʻEua.[56] All of the seats are single-seat constituencies, as opposed to the multi-member constituencies used before. These changes mean that 17 out of 26 representatives (65.4%) would be directly elected, up from 9 out of 30 (30.0%).[57][58] The aristocracy would still select its nine representatives, while all remaining seats, which were previously appointed by the monarch, would be abolished.[58]

Early general elections under the new electoral law were held on 25 November 2010.[59] The Taimi Media Network described the 2010 Tongan Legislative Assembly as "Tonga’s first democratically elected Parliament".[60] The Democratic Party of the Friendly Islands (DPFI), founded in September 2010 specifically to fight the election and led by veteran pro-democracy campaigner 'Akilisi Pohiva, secured the largest number of seats, with 12 out of the seventeen "people's representative" seats.[61]ʻAkilisi Pohiva, the MP for Tongatapu 1, had sought to become Prime Minister, but the nobles and independent MP entrusted Lord Tuʻivakanō with the task of forming a government, relegating the DPFI to the status of a de facto parliamentary opposition.[62] The DPFI put forward bills for further democratisation, including the proposal of direct election of the Prime Minister from among the 26 elected MPs, as well as of universal suffrage for all 26 MPs. These proposals were not taken forward by the conservative majority.[63][64]

At the death of King George Tupou V on 18 March 2012, his son ʻAhoʻeitu ʻUnuakiʻotonga Tukuʻaho became King of Tonga, with the regnal name ʻAhoʻeitu Tupou VI.

New elections in 2014 saw the DPFI lose three seats to independent candidates. Its leader Pohiva was nevertheless appointed as new Prime Minister of Tonga. On August 25, 2017 Pohiva was dismissed by the King along with the rest of parliament with fresh elections to be held on November 16. The Elections resulted in the DPFI winning 14 seats - enough for Pohivia to form government without relying on nobles' or independent MPs.[65][66]

2022 tsunami

On 15 January 2022 a tsunami caused by an eruption of the Hunga Tonga–Hunga Haʻapai volcano swept through many parts of Tonga. Many places in Australia and other countries were also put on high alert.[67] Two people died and two others were injured.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ D Burley et al. 2012 High Precision U/Th Dating of First Polynesian Settlement PLOS ONE November 07, 2012
  2. ^ DV Burley. 1998. Tongan Archaeology and the Tongan Past, 2850-150 B.P. In: Journal of World Prehistory 12:337–392
  3. ^ Honolulu: The Museum
  4. ^ John Martin. 2005 (reprint). William Mariner: An Account of the Natives of the Tonga Islands in the South Pacific Ocean. Vol. 1. Elibron Classics
  5. ^ Kirch 1997:273
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  8. ^ a b c d e Patrick Vinton Kirch, The Lapita Peoples: Ancestors of the Oceanic World
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  19. ^ Nationaal Archief, archiefinventaris 1.11.01.01 inventarisnummer 121, scan 85 hdl:10648/877f659e-35ce-4059-945e-294a4d05d29c
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Further reading

  • Corbett, Jack, Wouter Veenendaal, and Lhawang Ugyel. "Why monarchy persists in small states: the cases of Tonga, Bhutan and Liechtenstein." Democratization 24.4 (2017): 689–706. online
  • James, Kerry. "Is there a Tongan middle class? Hierarchy and protest in contemporary Tonga." Contemporary Pacific (2003): 309–336. online
  • Latukefu, S. (1974)Church and State in Tonga, ANU Press, Canberra
  • Lawson, Stephanie. Tradition Versus Democracy in the South Pacific: Fiji, Tonga and Western Samoa (Cambridge University Press, 1996).
  • Quanchi, Max (2005). Historical Dictionary of the Discovery and Exploration of the Pacific Islands. The Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0810853959.
  • van der Grijp, Paul. "Travelling Gods and Nasty Spirits. Ancient Religious Representations and Missionization in Tonga (Polynesia)." Paideuma (2002): 243–260. online
  • Wood-Ellem, Elizabeth. Queen Salote of Tonga: The Story of an Era 1900–1965 (1999)
  • Woodcock, George. "Tonga: The Last of the Victorians." History Today (1975) 25#1 pp 31–39.

External links

  • Photo of Haʻamonga Trilithon
  • The Friendly Islands: 1616 to 1900

history, tonga, history, tonga, recorded, since, ninth, century, when, seafarers, associated, with, lapita, diaspora, first, settled, islands, which, make, kingdom, tonga, along, with, fiji, samoa, area, served, gateway, into, rest, pacific, region, known, pol. The history of Tonga is recorded since the ninth century BC when seafarers associated with the Lapita diaspora first settled the islands which now make up the Kingdom of Tonga 1 Along with Fiji and Samoa the area served as a gateway into the rest of the Pacific region known as Polynesia 2 Ancient Tongan mythologies recorded by early European explorers report the islands of Ata and Tongatapu as the first islands having been hauled to the surface from the deep ocean by Maui 3 4 Tonga and neighbouring islands and groups Contents 1 Pre contact 2 Early culture 2 1 The Old Tonga 2 2 The Lapita Period 2 3 The Polynesian Plain Ware Period 2650 1550 BP 700 BC 400 AD 2 4 The Formative Dark Age 1550 750 BP 400 1200 AD 3 Tongan Maritime Empire 4 European arrival and Christianization 5 Unification 6 20th century 6 1 Kingdom of Tonga 1900 70 6 2 Independence 1970 7 21st century 7 1 2002 election 7 2 2005 election 7 3 2006 riots 7 4 2008 election 7 5 Democratisation and 2010 elections 7 6 2022 tsunami 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksPre contact EditThe dates of the initial settlement of Tonga are still subject to debate nonetheless one of the oldest occupied sites is found in the village of Pea on Tongatapu Radiocarbon dating of a shell found at the site reportedly dates the occupation at 3180 100 BP Before Present 5 Some of the oldest sites pertaining to the first occupants of the Tongan Islands are found on Tongatapu which is also where the first Lapita ceramics were found by WC McKern in 1921 6 Nonetheless reaching the Tongan islands without Western navigational tools and techniques was a remarkable feat accomplished by the Lapita peoples Not much is known about Tonga before European contact because of the lack of a writing system during prehistoric times other than the oral history told to the early European explorers The first time the Tongan people encountered Europeans was in April 1616 when Jacob Le Maire and Willem Schouten made a short visit to the islands to trade with them Early culture Edit Ha amonga a Maui Ancient monuments on Tongatapu 1924 map Main article Early history of Tonga Centuries before Westerners arrived Tongans created megalithic stoneworks Most notably these are the Haʻamonga ʻa Maui and the Langi terraced tombs The Haʻamonga is 5 meters high and made of three coral lime stones that weigh more than 40 tons each The Langi are low very flat two or three tier pyramids that mark the graves of former kings What is known about Tonga before European contact comes from myths stories songs poems as there was no writing system as well as from archaeological excavations Many ancient sites kitchens and refuse heaps have been found in Tongatapu and Haʻapai and a few in Vavaʻu and the Niuas that provide insights into old Tongan settlement patterns diet economy and culture The Old Tonga Edit The Haʻapai of three thousand years ago was a bit different from the Haʻapai of today Large flightless birds called megapodes bounded through the tropical rain forest while giant iguanas and various other lizards rested on tree limbs 7 The skies hosted three different species of fruit bats three different species of pigeon and more than two dozen other types of birds There were no pigs horses dogs cows or rats There were no Tongans The South Pacific meanwhile was almost completely uninhabited Any present humans existed on the western fringes of the Solomon Islands Then around that time these islanders were suddenly replaced by a new branch of humanity that originated from the Bismarck Archipelago off Papua New Guinea 8 They intrepidly stormed through the region rapidly colonizing and pushing east They brought with them new plant and animal species as well as a distinct pottery design Today these people are named the Lapita after the location in New Caledonia where they were first noticed archaeologically The Lapita Period Edit Region where Lapita pottery has been found Tongan megapodes Around 3000 B P the Lapita people reached Tonga and carbon dating places their landfall first in Tongatapu and then in Haʻapai soon after 9 The newcomers were already well adapted to the resource scarce island life and settled in small communities of a few households 9 on beaches just above high tide line that faced open lagoons or reefs Through continued interaction with Lapita relatives of the west the Haʻapaians obtained domesticated animals and cultivatable plants but it seems that both of these possible food sources contributed minimally towards their diet for at least the first two hundred years Instead they feasted mainly on life in the sea parrotfish wrasses turtles surgeonfish jacks eels emperors bottom dwellers shellfish and the occasional deep water tuna 8 Just as their Polynesian descendants do today Sea food was inexhaustible so reefs then were not very different from reefs today except for the marked decline in sea turtle populations Fauna didn t fare as well however and soon the giant iguanas the megapodes twenty four bird species almost all pigeons and all but one species of fruit bat were all extinct 7 They hunted and cooked these animals with the most basic of technologies When shell pieces were too brittle for tools they utilized volcanic soils for andesite basalt used for adze manufacture and other artifacts such as oils as hammerstones weaving weights cooking stones and decorative pebbles for grave decoration 10 If they were lucky they obtained harder obsidian shards from the far northern fringe volcano of Tafahi in the Niuas 8 Another useful technology was their eponymous pottery with dentate impressions and simple designs that were characteristic of all Lapita settlements in the South Pacific Tongan Lapita designs were simpler than western Lapita designs evolving from ornate curvilinear and rectilinear patterns into simple rectilinear forms 10 The pottery was slab built earthenware of andesitic tephra clay mixed with calcareous or mineral sand tempers and fired at a low temperature 10 Decades of archaeological excavations of ancient Lapita kitchens and middens refuse piles both in Tongatapu and Haʻapai have taught us much about early Tongan settlement We know what they ate what tools they used where they settled one colony each on Uiha Kauvai and Foa and two on Lifuka and how large the settlements were Despite a wealth of archaeological evidence however the Lapita people still stifle us with two main mysteries How did they spread through the South Pacific so quickly and why did the Lapita settlers in Tonga quickly abandon their ornate pottery tradition The Lapitan diaspora began from Papua New Guinea in 1500 BC By 2850 BP 900 BC they were already in Tonga meaning they virtually sprinted east for three hundred years They travelled in small wooden boats over open ocean to invisible destinations faster than the Europeans colonizers walked across their continent 8 Archaeologists wonder what would compel people to embark on statistically suicidal missions It doesn t appear that population pressure was a problem because most Lapitan islands were sparsely inhabited and could have supported much higher populations especially if they had turned more towards available root crops A hypothesis from Kirch is that Lapitan culture encouraged emigration by younger sons 8 Not just in Tonga but throughout the South Pacific is a tradition of passing down land to eldest sons To obtain their own land younger sons needed to explore Tangaloa the chief Tongan god before the arrival of Christianity was a younger sibling who created Tonga while searching for land from a canoe His fish hook accidentally caught on a rock on the ocean floor and he was able to pull Tonga to the surface If the hypothesis is correct then there must have been some strong sibling rivalry to entice someone to fall upon places as far away as New Zealand Hawaiʻi and Easter Island The other great mystery is why the ornate pottery tradition disappeared and with such speed Only two hundred years after arriving the Lapitan settlers ceased to decorate their earthenware pots at all and the only thing the leading contemporary Tongan archaeologist can say about the disappearance is that Unfortunately most explanations are based on inferential speculation and they are difficult to validate with any degree of certainty What we can say with confidence is that for whatever reason pottery decoration ceased in Tonga it did so rather suddenly 10 The Polynesian Plain Ware Period 2650 1550 BP 700 BC 400 AD Edit Life began to change drastically for Haʻapaians at the same time that ornate pottery was replaced by a strictly utilitarian plain ware kit and it is at this time that the people may be called Polynesian Of all the linguistically and traditionally similar people who came to inhabit the triangle created by New Zealand Hawai i and Easter Island they can all trace ancestry to a few original settlers in Tonga citation needed These original Polynesians in Tonga shifted somewhat away from maritime subsistence towards an increased reliance on agriculture and animal husbandry Taro yam breadfruit and banana became principal carbohydrate sources and domesticated animals came to represent much more of the diet 7 At original Lapita sites 24 of bird bones came from chickens which increased after the Polynesian transformation into 81 marking probably the demise of other bird species as well as an increased reliance on domesticated species 10 More energy supportive food sources allowed a population explosion A 25x40 m Lapitan hamlet grew into a village over one kilometer in length 10 Settlement grew around most of the lagoon in Tongatapu and villages finally reached the interior of the main island Similar expansions have been identified in the Niuas and in Vava u To archaeologists these early Polynesians provide a mystery just as perplexing as the Lapitans By 1550 BP 400 AD they ceased to produce any pottery at all They seem to have turned towards more natural materials instead and therefore the archaeological record enters into a dark age 10 of relatively little information until the emergence of chiefly states hundreds of years later Speculations as to disappearance of the pottery tradition ranges from the use of coconut cups and bowls that are easier to use a shift away from steaming shellfish in large bowls to baking in underground ovens and the unsuitability of Tongan clays for pottery 10 Nothing can be said with certainty except that the same disappearance also occurred in Fiji and Samoa The Formative Dark Age 1550 750 BP 400 1200 AD Edit Little is known about the period because of the absence of much archaeological evidence What is clear is that population continued to increase reaching between 17 000 and 25 000 10 on Tongatapu and that chiefdoms arose to protect against the increased competition for resources Tongatapu may have been politically consolidated by a single individual of the future Tuʻi Tonga familial line as oral tradition traces the king s lineage back through 39 individuals that could have started as early as 1000 bp 950 AD 10 The maritime empire made famous by oral tradition however did not begin until after 750 BP 1200 AD Tongan Maritime Empire EditMain article Tuʻi Tonga Empire Tomb of Chief Tongamana Burial ground on Tongatapu By the 12th century Tongans and the Tongan kings named the Tu i Tonga were known across the Pacific from Niue Samoa to Tikopia They ruled these nations for more than 400 years sparking some historians to refer to a Tongan Empire although it was more of a network of interacting navigators chiefs and adventurers It is unclear whether chiefs of the other islands actually came to Tonga regularly to acknowledge their sovereign Distinctive pottery and Tapa cloth designs also show that the Tongans have travelled from the far reaches of Micronesia to Fiji and Hawaii 11 In 950 AD Tu i Tonga Aho eitu started to expand his rule outside of Tonga According to leading Tongan scholars including Okusitino Mahina the Tongan and Samoan oral traditions indicate that the first Tu i Tonga was the son of their god Tangaloa 12 As the ancestral homeland of the Tu i Tonga dynasty and the abode of deities such as Tagaloa Eitumatupu a Tonga Fusifonua and Tavatavaimanuka By the time it comes to the 10th Tu i Tonga Momo and his successor Tu itatui the empire had already stretched from Tikopia in the west to Niue in the east 13 Their realm contained Wallis and Futuna Tokelau Tuvalu Rotuma Nauru parts of Fiji Marquesas parts of the Solomon Islands Kiribati Niue Cook Islands and parts of Samoa 13 To better govern the large territory the Tu i Tongas had their throne moved by the lagoon at Lapaha Tongatapu The influence of the Tu i Tonga was renowned throughout the Pacific and many of the neighboring islands participated in the widespread trade of resources and new ideas Under the 10th Tuʻi Tonga Momo and his son Tuʻitatui 11th Tuʻi Tonga the empire was at its height of expansion tributes for the Tu i Tonga were said to be exacted from all tributary chiefdoms of the empire This tribute was known as the Inasi and was conducted annually at Mu a following the harvest season when all countries that were subject to the Tu i Tonga must bring a gift for the gods who was recognized as the Tu i Tonga 14 Captain Cook witness an Inasi ceremony in 1777 in which he noticed a lot of foreigners in Tonga especially the darker people that resembles African descend from Fiji Solomon Islands citation needed and Vanuatu 11 The finest mats of Samoa ie toga are incorrectly translated as Tongan mats the correct meaning is treasured cloth ie cloth toga female goods in opposition to oloa male goods 15 Many fine mats came into the possession of the Tongan royal families through chiefly marriages with Samoan noblewomen such as Tohu ia the mother of Tu i Kanokupolu Ngata who came from Safata Upolu Samoa These mats including the Maneafaingaa and Tasiaeafe are considered the crown jewels of the current Tupou line 16 which is derived matrilineally from Samoa 17 The success of the Empire was largely based upon the Imperial Navy The most common vessels were long distance double canoes fitted with triangular sails The largest canoes of the Tongan kalia type could carry up to 100 men The most notable of these were the Tongafuesia ʻAkiheuho the Lomipeau and the Takaʻipōmana It should be mentioned that the Takaʻipōmana was actually a Samoan kalia according to Queen Salote and the Palace Records this was the Samoan double canoe that brought Tohu ia Limapō from Samoa to wed the Tu i Ha atakalaua 17 The large navy allowed for Tonga to become wealthy with large amounts of trade and tribute flowing into the Royal Treasury 11 The Tuʻi Tonga decline began due to numerous wars and internal pressure In the 13th or 14th century Samoa defeated Tu i Tonga Talakaifaiki under the lead of the Malietoa family In response the falefa was created as political advisors to the Empire The falefa officials were initially successful in maintaining some hegemony over other subjected islands but increased dissatisfaction led to the assassination of several rulers in succession The most notable were Havea I 19th TT Havea II 22nd TT and Takalaua 23rd TT who were all known for their tyrannical rule In AD 1535 Takalaua was assassinated by two foreigners while swimming in the lagoon of Mu a His successor Kauʻulufonua I pursued the killers all the way to ʻUvea where he killed them 18 Page from the ship s log of Abel Tasman with the description of t Eijlandt Amsterdam nowadays Tongatapu 19 Because of so many assassination attempts on the Tu i Tonga Kauʻulufonua established a new dynasty called Tu i Ha atakalaua in honor of his father and he gave his brother Mo ungamotu a the title of Tu i Ha a Takalaua This new dynasty was to deal with the everyday decisions of the empire while the position of Tu i Tonga was to be the nation s spiritual leader though he still controlled the final say in the life or death of his people The Tu i Tonga empire at this period becomes Samoan in orientation as the Tu i Tonga kings themselves became ethnic Samoans who married Samoan women and resided in Samoa 20 Kau ulufonua s mother was a Samoan from Manu a 21 Tu i Tonga Kau ulufonua II and Tu i Tonga Puipuifatu had Samoan mothers and as they married Samoan women the succeeding Tu i Tongas Vakafuhu Tapu osi and Uluakimata were allegedly more Samoan than Tongan 22 In 1610 the 6th Tu i Ha a Takalaua Mo ungatonga created the position of Tu i Kanokupolu for his half Samoan son Ngata which divided regional rule between them though as time went on the Tu i Kanokupolu s power became more and more dominant over Tonga The Tu i Kanokupolu dynasty oversaw the importation and institution of many Samoan policies and titles and according to Tongan scholars this Samoanized form of government and custom continues today in the modern Kingdom of Tonga 23 Things continued this way for a long time afterward The first Europeans arrived in 1616 when the Dutch explorers Willem Schouten and Jacob Le Maire spotted Tongans in a canoe off the coast of Niuatoputapu and the famous Abel Tasman followed soon after These visits were brief however and did not change the island much at all The dividing line between the two moieties was the old coastal road named Hala Fonua moa dry land road Still today the chiefs who derive their authority from the Tuʻi Tonga are named the Kau hala ʻuta inland road people while those from the Tuʻi Kanokupolu are known as the Kau hala lalo low road people Concerning the Tuʻi Haʻatakalaua supporters when this division arose in the 15th century they were of course the Kauhalalalo But when the Tuʻi Kanokupolu had overtaken them they shifted their allegiance to the Kauhalaʻuta Modern archeology anthropology and linguistic studies confirm widespread Tongan cultural influence ranging widely 24 25 through East Uvea Rotuma Futuna Samoa and Niue parts of Micronesia Kiribati Pohnpei Vanuatu and New Caledonia and the Loyalty Islands 26 and while some academics prefer the term maritime chiefdom 27 others argue that while very different from examples elsewhere empire is probably the most convenient term 28 European arrival and Christianization Edit Close up of the 1622 Map of the Pacific by Hessel Gerritsz showing among others Goede hoop Elt Niuafo ou Cocos Eylandt Tafahi and Verraders eylandt Niuatoputapu It is one of the earliest maps where those island are drawn Cook s map of 1777 In the 15th century and again in the 17th civil war erupted It was in this context that the first Europeans arrived beginning with Dutch explorers Willem Schouten and Jacob Le Maire Between April 21 to 23 1616 they moored at the Northern Tongan islands Cocos Island Tafahi and Traitors Island Niuatoputapu respectively The kings of both of these islands boarded the ships and Le Maire drew up a list of Niuatoputapu words a language now extinct On April 24 1616 they tried to moor at the Island of Good Hope Niuafo ou but a less welcoming reception there made them decide to sail on On January 21 1643 the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman was the first European to visit the main island Tongatapu and Haʻapai after rounding Australia and New Zealand while looking for a faster route to Chile He mapped several islands Tasman named the island of Tongatapu t Eijlandt Amsterdam Amsterdam Island because of its abundance of supplies 29 This name is no longer used except by historians The most significant impact had the visits of Captain Cook in 1773 1774 and 1777 followed by the first London missionaries in 1797 and the Wesleyan Methodist Walter Lawry in 1822 Around that time most Tongans converted en masse to the Wesleyan Methodist or Catholic faiths Other denominations followed including Pentecostals Mormons Seventh day Adventists and most recently the Baha i faith The islands were also visited by the Spanish under Francisco Antonio Mourelle in 1781 and Alessandro Malaspina who unsuccessfully claimed Vavau for Spain in 1793 and by the French under Marc Joseph Marion du Fresne in 1772 Jean Francois de Galaup comte de Laperouse in 1787 Fletcher Christian in 1789 and Antoine Bruni d Entrecasteaux in 1793 30 Tongans as depicted by Isaack Gilsemans during Abel Tasman s trip to Tongatapu in 1642 43 Tongan canoes with sails and cabins and two Tongan men paddling a smaller canoe in the foreground derived from Boats of the Friendly Isles a record of Cook s visit to Tonga 1773 74 Captain Cook welcomed on the island of Haapai 1777 1930 engraving Vavaʻu Tonga girls playing traditional games circa 1800 perhaps Malaspina s voyage of 1793Unification Edit King George Tupou I c 1880 In 1799 the 14th Tuʻi Kanokupolu Tukuʻaho was murdered which sent Tonga into a civil war for fifty years Finally the islands were united into a Polynesian kingdom in 1845 by the ambitious young warrior strategist and orator Taufaʻahau He held the chiefly title of Tu i Kanokupolu but was baptised with the name King George Tupou I In 1875 with the help of missionary Shirley Baker he declared Tonga a constitutional monarchy at which time he emancipated the serfs enshrined a code of law land tenure and freedom of the press and limited the power of the chiefs The islands were not fully surveyed until 1898 when the British warships HMS Egeria 1873 and HMS Penguin 1876 completed the task 30 Two Tongan young women 1823 Training School at Tonga 1852 King George Tupou I of the Friendly Islands 1852 Ata a Tonga Chief 1853 Siege of a Tongan village during the expedition of Dumont d Urville 1863 Interior of a Tongan house 1871 drawing Tongan seaman during the Challenger Expedition 1874 Tongan notables in the 1880s Nukuʻalofa in 188720th century Edit Coat of arms of Tonga 1875 King George Tupou II 1909 Kingdom of Tonga 1900 70 Edit Main articles British Western Pacific Territories and Kingdom of Tonga 1900 70 Tonga became a British protected state under a Treaty of Friendship on May 18 1900 when European settlers and rival Tongan chiefs tried to oust the second king The Treaty of Friendship and protected state status ended in 1970 under arrangements established prior to her death by the third monarch Queen Salote On 18 May 1900 to discourage German advances 31 the Kingdom of Tonga became a Protected State with the United Kingdom under a Treaty of Friendship signed by George Tupou II after European settlers and rival Tongan chiefs attempted to overthrow him 32 33 Foreign affairs of the Kingdom of Tonga were conducted through the British Consul The United Kingdom had veto power over foreign policies and finances of the Kingdom of Tonga 31 Tonga was affected by the 1918 flu pandemic with 1 800 Tongans killed around eight percent of the residents 34 For most of the 20th century Tonga was quiet inward looking and somewhat isolated from developments elsewhere in the world Tonga s complex social structure is essentially broken into three tiers the king the nobles and the commoners Between the nobles and commoners are Matapule sometimes called talking chiefs who are associated with the king or a noble and who may or may not hold estates Obligations and responsibilities are reciprocal and although the nobility are able to extract favors from people living on their estates they likewise must extend favors to their people Status and rank play a powerful role in personal relationships even within families King George Tupou II going to the Opening of Tongan Parliament in 1900 Richard Seddon and wife at the opening of the Tongan parliament 1900 Royal Throne of Tonga 1900 Members of the Tonga Defence Force of 2nd NZEF on parade in Tonga celebrating the capitulation of Italy in 1945 Bishop John Rogers Pisila wife of Fusitu a and Suli Seuli matapule of Fusitu a watching dancing Inauguration of the Catholic church in Kolofo ou 1967Independence 1970 Edit Tongan 1 paʻanga coin depicting Queen Salote Tupou III Royal Tongan wedding 1976 On 4 June 1970 protected state status ended under arrangements established prior to her death in 1965 by the third monarch Queen Salote Tonga joined the Commonwealth of Nations in 1970 and the United Nations in 1999 While exposed to colonial forces Tonga has never lost indigenous governance a fact that makes Tonga unique in the Pacific and boosts confidence in the monarchical system The British High Commission in Tonga closed in March 2006 Tonga s current king Tupou VI traces his line directly back through six generations of monarchs The previous king George Tupou V born in 1946 continued to have ultimate control of the government until July 2008 At that point concerns over financial irregularities and calls for democracy led to his relinquishing most of his day to day powers over the government 35 Tongans are beginning to confront the problem of how to preserve their cultural identity and traditions in the wake of the increasing impact of Western technology and culture Migration and the gradual monetization of the economy have led to the breakdown of the traditional extended family Some of the poor once supported by the extended family are now being left without visible means of support Educational opportunities for young commoners have advanced and their increasing political awareness has stimulated some dissent against the nobility system In addition the rapidly increasing population is already too great to provide the constitutionally mandated 8 25 acre 33 000 m2 api for each male at age 16 In mid 1982 population density was 134 persons per square kilometer Because of these factors there is considerable pressure to move to the Kingdom s only urban center 21st century Edit ʻAkilisi Pōhiva leader of the democratic movement and Prime Minister from 2014 to 2019 This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2016 2002 election Edit In the March 2002 election supporters of the Human Rights and Democracy Movement HRDM won seven of the nine popularly elected seats for people s representatives with the remaining two representing traditionalist values Voter turnout was 48 9 36 The nine nobles and all the cabinet ministers that sit in the Legislative Assembly generally support the government Following the election HRDM leader Akilisi Pohiva was arrested and charged with sedition over an article published in his newspaper Kele a alleging the king had a secret fortune 37 but was later acquitted by a jury 38 In 2003 the Taimi o Tonga Tongan Times a newspaper published in New Zealand in the Tongan language that had been critical of the government was prohibited from distribution in Tonga due to government objections to its political content After the newspaper obtained two court orders it was again distributed freely A Media Operators Bill and constitutional amendment intended to restrict media freedom in Tonga was hotly debated in 2003 The legislation allowed the government to exert control over coverage of cultural and moral issues ban publications it deemed offensive and ban foreign ownership of the media In October 2003 thousands of Tongans marched peacefully through the streets of the capital city Nukuʻalofa in an unprecedented demonstration against the government s plans to limit media freedom Despite the protests the Media Operators Bill and constitutional amendment passed the Legislature and as of December 2003 needed only the King s signature to become law By February 2004 the amendment was passed and licensure of news media was required Those papers denied licenses under the new act included the Taimi o Tonga Tongan Times the Kele a and the Matangi Tonga while those permitted licenses were uniformly church based or pro government Further opposition to government action included calls by the Tu i Pelehake a prince nephew of the King and elected member of parliament for Australia and other nations to pressure the Tongan government to democratize the electoral system and a legal writ calling for a judicial investigation of the bill The latter was supported by some 160 people including 7 of the 9 elected People s Representatives 2005 election Edit Feleti Sevele first commoner to serve as Prime Minister of Tonga since the 19th century At the 2005 Tongan general election the Human Rights and Democracy Movement won seven of the nine popularly elected seats the rest of the 30 MPs are appointed by the King or are members of the Tongan aristocracy Aho eitu Unuaki otonga Tuku aho son of the King initially retained his position as Prime Minister but he resigned in 2006 after the Tongan Speaker of the House was found guilty of bribery 39 The position passed to Feleti Sevele Minister of Labour and one of the two independent candidates elected as well as the first non noble Prime Minister of the country In 2005 the government spent several weeks negotiating with striking civil service workers before reaching a settlement A constitutional commission met in 2005 2006 to study proposals to update the constitution A copy of the commission s report was presented to King Taufa ahau Tupou IV shortly before his death in September 2006 2006 riots Edit The start of the major fires due to the 2006 Tonga riots in Nukuʻalofa Tupoutoʻa Lavaka Tupou VI centre in a mourning dress for his recently deceased father king Taufaʻahau Tupou IV in 2006 He is flanked by his two sons the new chiefs ʻUlukalala left and Ata right Main article 2006 Tonga riots Tonga did not rate as an electoral democracy under the criteria of Freedom House s Freedom in the World 2006 report This is likely because while elections exist they could only elect nine of 30 Legislative Assembly seats the remainder being selected either by the nobility or the government as such the people have a voice in but no control over the government The public expected democratic changes from the new monarch On November 16 2006 rioting broke out in the capital city of Nukuʻalofa when it seemed that the parliament would adjourn for the year without having made any advances in increasing democracy in government Government buildings offices and shops were looted and burned 40 Eight people died in the riots 41 The government agreed that elections would be held in 2008 in which a majority of the parliament would be elected by popular vote 42 A state of emergency was declared on November 17 with emergency laws giving security forces the right to stop and search people without a warrant 43 On 18 January 2007 Pōhiva was arrested 44 and charged with sedition 45 over his role in the 2006 Nuku alofa riots 2008 election Edit The April 2008 elections saw a 48 turnout to elect the nobles representatives and the 9 people s representatives Most of the pro democracy MPs were reconfirmed despite several facing charges of sedition over the 2006 Nuku alofa riots 46 All nine elected MPs were pro democracy activists 47 About two weeks before the election it was announced that the Tonga Broadcasting Commission would henceforth censor candidates political broadcasts 48 and that TBC reporters would be banned from reporting on political matters 49 Tonga Review criticised the decision as an undue restriction on freedom of speech 50 On 29 May 2008 in the speech from the throne at the opening of Parliament Princess Regent Salote Mafile o Pilolevu Tuita announced that the government would introduce a political reform bill by June 2008 and that the current term of Parliament would be the last one under the current constitution 51 In July 2008 three days before his coronation King George Tupou V announced that he would relinquish most of his power and be guided by his Prime Minister s recommendations on most matters following upcoming elections 35 In November 2009 a constitutional review panel recommended a ceremonial monarchy stripped of real political power and to invest political power in a completely elected Legislative Assembly of Tonga the Fale Alea which up to this point was largely hereditary due to the fact that most of the seats where designated for the nobles 52 53 and were preceded by a programme of constitutional reform 54 Democratisation and 2010 elections Edit In April 2010 the Legislative Assembly enacted a package of political reforms towards a fully representative democracy increasing the number of directly elected people s representatives from 9 to 17 55 with ten seats for Tongatapu three for Vavaʻu two for Haʻapai and one each for Niuas and ʻEua 56 All of the seats are single seat constituencies as opposed to the multi member constituencies used before These changes mean that 17 out of 26 representatives 65 4 would be directly elected up from 9 out of 30 30 0 57 58 The aristocracy would still select its nine representatives while all remaining seats which were previously appointed by the monarch would be abolished 58 Early general elections under the new electoral law were held on 25 November 2010 59 The Taimi Media Network described the 2010 Tongan Legislative Assembly as Tonga s first democratically elected Parliament 60 The Democratic Party of the Friendly Islands DPFI founded in September 2010 specifically to fight the election and led by veteran pro democracy campaigner Akilisi Pohiva secured the largest number of seats with 12 out of the seventeen people s representative seats 61 ʻAkilisi Pohiva the MP for Tongatapu 1 had sought to become Prime Minister but the nobles and independent MP entrusted Lord Tuʻivakanō with the task of forming a government relegating the DPFI to the status of a de facto parliamentary opposition 62 The DPFI put forward bills for further democratisation including the proposal of direct election of the Prime Minister from among the 26 elected MPs as well as of universal suffrage for all 26 MPs These proposals were not taken forward by the conservative majority 63 64 At the death of King George Tupou V on 18 March 2012 his son ʻAhoʻeitu ʻUnuakiʻotonga Tukuʻaho became King of Tonga with the regnal name ʻAhoʻeitu Tupou VI New elections in 2014 saw the DPFI lose three seats to independent candidates Its leader Pohiva was nevertheless appointed as new Prime Minister of Tonga On August 25 2017 Pohiva was dismissed by the King along with the rest of parliament with fresh elections to be held on November 16 The Elections resulted in the DPFI winning 14 seats enough for Pohivia to form government without relying on nobles or independent MPs 65 66 2022 tsunami Edit On 15 January 2022 a tsunami caused by an eruption of the Hunga Tonga Hunga Haʻapai volcano swept through many parts of Tonga Many places in Australia and other countries were also put on high alert 67 Two people died and two others were injured citation needed See also EditHistory of Oceania List of monarchs of Tonga Prime Minister of Tonga Politics of Tonga Kingdom of Tonga 1900 70 References Edit D Burley et al 2012 High Precision U Th Dating of First Polynesian Settlement PLOS ONE November 07 2012 DV Burley 1998 Tongan Archaeology and the Tongan Past 2850 150 B P In Journal of World Prehistory 12 337 392 Honolulu The Museum John Martin 2005 reprint William Mariner An Account of the Natives of the Tonga Islands in the South Pacific Ocean Vol 1 Elibron Classics Kirch 1997 273 WC McKern 1929 Archaeology of Tonga Bernice P Bishop Museum Bulletin 60 a b c Shutler Burley Dickinson Nelson amp Carlson Oceana Publications Early Lapita Sites the colonisation of Tonga and recent data from northern Ha apai a b c d e Patrick Vinton Kirch The Lapita Peoples Ancestors of the Oceanic World a b Burley Dickinson Barton amp Shutler Jr Lapita on the Periphery New data on old problems in the Kingdom of Tonga a b c d e f g h i j David V Burley Journal of World Prehistory Vol 12 No 3 1998 Tongan Archaeology and the Tongan Past 2850 150 B P a b c Rutherford Noel 1977 Friendly Islands A History of Tonga Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 550519 1 Archived from the original on November 17 2021 Retrieved March 16 2021 see writings of Ata of Kolovai in O Tama a Aiga by Morgan Tuimaleali ifano writings by Mahina also coronation edition of Spasifik Magazine The Pacific Islands An Encyclopedia edited by Lal and Fortune p 133etc a b Has Paul 2016 Tonga and Environment History Information Early and Middle History the People Tradition and Culture Political Information CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform ISBN 978 1 5391 1742 1 Archived from the original on August 22 2021 Retrieved April 27 2020 St Cartmail Keith 1997 The art of Tonga Honolulu Hawai i University of Hawai i Press p 39 ISBN 978 0 8248 1972 9 the Tongan linguistic analogue is to onga see http collections tepapa govt nz objectdetails aspx oid 535267 amp coltype pacific 20cultures amp regno fe011574 Archived October 24 2012 at the Wayback Machine Kie Hingoa Named Mats Ie Toga Fine Mats and Other Treasured Textiles of Samoa and Tonga Journal of the Polynesian Society Special Issue 108 2 June 1999 a b see Songs and Poems of Queen Salote edited by Elizabeth Wood Ellem Thomson Basil January 1901 Note Upon the Natives of Savage Island or Niue The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 31 137 145 doi 10 2307 2842790 JSTOR 2842790 Archived from the original on November 17 2021 Retrieved September 16 2019 Nationaal Archief archiefinventaris 1 11 01 01 inventarisnummer 121 scan 85 hdl 10648 877f659e 35ce 4059 945e 294a4d05d29c The Pacific Islands An Encyclopedia edited by Lal and Fortune p 133 Gunson Niel 1997 Great Families of Polynesia Inter island Links and Marriage Patterns Journal of Pacific History 32 2 139 179 doi 10 1080 00223349708572835 Tongan Society Edward Gifford Tongan Society at the Time of Captain Cook s Visits Queen Salote Bott and Tavi Gunson Niel 1997 Great Families of Polynesia Inter island Links and Marriage Patterns Journal of Pacific History 32 2 139 179 doi 10 1080 00223349708572835 also Deconstructing the Island Group Australian National University Gunson Niel 1997 Great Families of Polynesia Inter island Links and Marriage Patterns Journal of Pacific History 32 2 139 179 doi 10 1080 00223349708572835 Tongan Society Edward Gifford Tongan Society at the Time of Captain Cook s Visits Queen Salote Bott and Tavi see http planet tonga com language journal Emancipation in Tonga index shtml Archived March 5 2006 at the Wayback Machine History of Tonga Okusitino Mahina 2004 and journal articles Recent Advances in the Archaeology of the Fiji West Polynesia Region Archived September 18 2009 at the Wayback Machine 2008 Vol 21 University of Otago Studies in Prehistoric Anthropology Hawaiki Ancestral Polynesia An Essay in Historical Anthropology Archived April 30 2016 at the Wayback Machine Patrick Vinton Kirch Roger C Green 2001 Geraghty P 1994 Linguistic evidence for the Tongan empire Archived June 29 2016 at the Wayback Machine Geraghty P 1994 in Language Contact and Change in the Austronesian World pp 236 39 Monumentality in the development of the Tongan maritime chiefdom Archived February 27 2012 at the Wayback Machine Clark G Burley D and Murray T 2008 Antiquity 82 318 994 1004 Pacific voyaging after the exploration period Neich R 2006 in K R Howe ed Vaka Moana voyages of the ancestors the discovery and settlement of the Pacific 198 245 Auckland David Bateman p230 Hooker Brian 2013 The European Discovery of the Tonga Islands Terrae Incognitae 36 20 27 doi 10 1179 tin 2004 36 1 20 S2CID 140737896 a b Quanchi Historical Dictionary of the Discovery and Exploration of the Pacific Islands p 239 a b Tonga Culture History amp People Archived from the original on September 28 2019 Retrieved December 12 2017 Tonga becomes a protectorate to the United Kingdom Archived from the original on April 1 2016 Retrieved December 12 2017 Geography Government History Tonga Archived from the original on March 9 2017 Retrieved December 12 2017 Kohn George C 2008 Encyclopedia of plague and pestilence from ancient times to the present Infobase Publishing p 363 ISBN 978 0 8160 6935 4 Archived from the original on January 1 2016 Retrieved December 12 2017 a b Tonga s king to cede key powers Archived February 8 2011 at the Wayback Machine BBC July 29 2008 James p 314 Michael Field May 13 2002 Tonga s king centre piece in sedition court case against politicians and journalists Archived from the original on October 14 2008 Retrieved January 10 2010 MPs acquitted on sedition charges The Age May 20 2003 Archived from the original on March 14 2016 Retrieved July 15 2008 Jury finds Tongan Speaker guilty of bribery Archived 2006 03 02 at the Wayback Machine Matangi Tonga 26 January 2006 Rioting crowd leaves leaves trail of wreckage in Nuku alofa Matangi Tonga November 16 2006 Archived from the original on February 4 2007 Riot death toll in Tonga reaches eight RNZ November 17 2006 Retrieved December 28 2021 Six died in Tonga rioting report New Zealand Herald November 17 2006 Retrieved December 28 2021 Tonga declares state of emergency ABC November 17 2006 Archived from the original on October 1 2008 Pro democracy MP ʻAkilisi Pōhiva arrested Pacific Media Watch January 18 2007 Archived from the original on February 8 2012 Tongan pro democracy leader released on bail facing charges of sedition RNZ January 19 2007 Archived from the original on February 23 2012 Retrieved December 28 2021 Pro democracy MPs mostly returned in Tonga Radio New Zealand Archived February 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine 25 April 2008 Tongans elect pro democracy MPs BBC News April 25 2008 Archived from the original on June 28 2017 Retrieved December 12 2017 TBC s censorship committee makes its mark on coming election Archived April 11 2008 at the Wayback Machine Matangi Tonga 11 April 2008 Reporting restrictions in Tonga criticised by region Archived April 15 2008 at the Wayback Machine ABC Radio Australia 10 April 2008 Tonga and Zimbabwe have something in common restriction on free speech Archived April 12 2008 at the Wayback Machine Tonga Review 7 April 2008 Tonga political reform to begin next month Archived October 16 2011 at the Wayback Machine Islands Business 29 May 2008 Tonga s king to cede key powers BBC July 29 2008 Archived from the original on February 8 2011 Retrieved April 22 2010 His Majesty King George Tupou V A Monarch for a time of change Fiji Daily Post July 28 2008 Archived from the original on December 13 2017 Retrieved April 22 2010 Commission pessimistic over ability of Assembly to meet 2010 election deadline Matangi Tonga November 12 2009 Archived from the original on May 5 2010 Retrieved April 22 2010 Tonga Parliament enacts political reforms Radio New Zealand International April 15 2010 Archived from the original on December 10 2011 Retrieved April 21 2010 Tonga parliament votes on amended boundaries Radio New Zealand International April 20 2010 Archived from the original on June 12 2012 Retrieved April 21 2010 Tonga s pro democracy movement hails assembly reform Radio New Zealand International April 21 2010 Archived from the original on September 24 2010 Retrieved April 22 2010 a b Dorney Sean November 24 2010 Tonga prepares for historic poll Australia Network News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved November 24 2010 Civics education vital ahead of Tonga election says advocate Radio New Zealand International April 21 2010 Archived from the original on June 12 2012 Retrieved April 22 2010 Absence of PM from opening of Parliament questioned Archived March 16 2012 at the Wayback Machine Taimi Media Network June 9 2011 Malkin Bonnie November 27 2010 King prepares to hand over powers after election in Tonga Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media Archived from the original on August 1 2020 Retrieved November 26 2010 Tonga Fale Alea Legislative Assembly Archived September 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Interparliamentary Union Parliament rejects a Bill to change Tonga s electoral system Archived July 1 2019 at the Wayback Machine Matangi Tonga 24 October 2013 Tonga Democrats to table more reform plans Archived December 13 2017 at the Wayback Machine Radio New Zealand International 30 October 2013 Tora Iliesa December 31 2014 Dawn of a New Era Pohiva is the first elected commoner to be PM PDF Tonga Daily News Archived from the original PDF on February 10 2015 Retrieved February 9 2015 Tongan democracy activist becomes first commoner elected as PM ABC News Australia December 29 2014 Archived from the original on January 28 2015 Retrieved February 9 2015 Hussey Sam Bruno Gus January 15 2022 Beaches evacuated and closed as BOM updates tsunami warning for Australia s east coast 7NEWS Retrieved January 18 2022 Further reading EditCorbett Jack Wouter Veenendaal and Lhawang Ugyel Why monarchy persists in small states the cases of Tonga Bhutan and Liechtenstein Democratization 24 4 2017 689 706 online James Kerry Is there a Tongan middle class Hierarchy and protest in contemporary Tonga Contemporary Pacific 2003 309 336 online Latukefu S 1974 Church and State in Tonga ANU Press Canberra Lawson Stephanie Tradition Versus Democracy in the South Pacific Fiji Tonga and Western Samoa Cambridge University Press 1996 Quanchi Max 2005 Historical Dictionary of the Discovery and Exploration of the Pacific Islands The Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0810853959 van der Grijp Paul Travelling Gods and Nasty Spirits Ancient Religious Representations and Missionization in Tonga Polynesia Paideuma 2002 243 260 online Wood Ellem Elizabeth Queen Salote of Tonga The Story of an Era 1900 1965 1999 Woodcock George Tonga The Last of the Victorians History Today 1975 25 1 pp 31 39 External links EditTonga Visitors Bureau Ministry of Tourism Kingdom of Tonga Photo of Haʻamonga Trilithon The Friendly Islands 1616 to 1900 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Tonga amp oldid 1126238288, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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