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Culture Gallery or the Pacific
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Introduction
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In this section we like to introduce
some of the cultural aspects of the Pacific. We offer links to websites
with further valuable information, aswell as links to culture pages
within our website (per destination). For more information on literature
& paintings on the Pacific, go to:
- Explorers
- Novels &
Writers on the Pacific
- Charles Darwin
- Herman Melville
- Fiction
- Short
Stories
- Poetry
- Robert
Louis Stevenson
- John Hawkesworth's Account of the
Voyages...in the Southern Hemisphere... London, 1773 edn, Vols. I-III.
- Vol. I (Table
of Contents):
-
1....
General
Introduction
-
23....
Nautical Terms
-
35....
A Description of
the Cuts
-
37....
Chapter I. Byron's
Passage from the Downs to Rio de Janeiro
-
44.... Chapter II. The
Passage from Rio de Janeiro to Port Desire; with some Description
of that Place.
-
59....
Chapter III. The
Course from Port Desire in Search of Pepys' Island, and afterwards
to the Coast of Patagonia, with a Description of the Inhabitants.
-
69.... Chapter IV. The
Passage up the Streight of Magellan, to Port Famine; with some
Account of that Harbour, and the adjacent Coast.
-
77....
Chapter V. The
Course from Port Famine to Falklands, with some Account of the
Country.
-
86....
Chapter VI. The
Passage through the Streight of Magellan as far as Cape Monday,
with a Description of Several Bays and Harbours, formed by the
Coast on each Side.
-
94....
Chapter VII. The
Passage from Cape Monday, in the Streight of Magellan, into the
South Seas; with some general Remarks on the Navigation of that
Streight
-
111....
Chapter VIII. The
Run from the Western Entrance of the Streight of Magellan, to the
Islands of Disappointment
-
122....
Chapter IX. The
Discovery of King George's Island, with a Description of them, and
an Account of Several Incidents that happened there.
-
133....
Chapter X. The Run
from King George's Islands to the Islands of Sappan, Tinion, and
Aguigan; with an Account of Several Islands that were discovered
in that Track
-
143....
Chapter XI. The
Arrival of the Dolphin and Tamar at Tinian, a Description of the
present Condition of that Island, and an Account of the
Transactions there.
-
151....
Chapter XII. The
Run from Tinian to Pulo Timoan, with some Account of the
Inhabitants and Productions, and thence to Batavia
-
159....
Chapter XIII.
Transactions at Batavia, and departure from that Place.
-
167....
Chapter XIV. The
Passage from Batavia to the Cape of Good Hope, and from thence to
England.
- Vol. II (Table
of Contents):
-
362....
AN Account OF A
VOYAGE round the WORLD IN THE YEARS MDCCLXVI, MDCCLXVII, and
MDCCLXVIII. By SAMUEL WALLIS, Esq; Commander of his Majesty's Ship
the DOLPHIN
-
363....
Chapter I. The
Passage to the Coast of Patagonia, with some account of the
Natives.
-
379....
Chapter II. The
Passage through the Streight of Magellan, with some further
account of the Patagonians, and a description of the Coast on each
side, and its Inhabitants
-
410....
Chapter III. A
particular Account of the Places in which we anchorede during our
Passage through the Streight, and of the Shoals and Rocks that lie
near them.
-
419....
Chapter IV. The
Passage from the Strieght of Magellan, to King George the Third's
Island, called Otaheite, in the South Sea, with an Account of the
Discovery of several other Islands, and a Description of their
Inhabitants.
-
433....
Chapter V. An
Account of the Discovery of King George the Third's Island, or
Otaheite, and of several Incidents which happenned both on board
the Ship, and on Shore.
-
454....
Chapter VI. The
Sick sent on Shore, and a regular Trade established with the
Natives; some Account of their Character and Manners, of their
Visits on board the Ship, and a Variety of Incidents that happened
during this Intercourse.
-
472....
Chapter VII. An
Account of an Expedition to discover the inland Part of the
Country, and our other Transcations, till we quitted the Island to
continue our Voyage.
-
480....
Chapter VIII. A
more particular Account of the Inhabitants of Otaheite, and of
their doemstic Life, Manners, and Arts.
-
490....
Chapter IX.
Passage from Otaheite to Tinian, with some Account of several
other Islands that were discovered in the South Seas.
-
498....
Chapter XI. Some
Account of the present State of the Island of Tinian, and our
Employment there; with what happened in the Run from thence to
Batavia.
-
507....
Chapter XII.
Transactions at Batavia, and an Account of the Passage from thence
to the Cape of Good Hope
-
513....
Chapter XIII. An
Account of our Transactions at the Cape of Good Hope, and of the
Return of the Dolphin to England.
-
520....
A Table of the
Latitude and Longitudes of Wallis's Voyage
- Vol. III (Table
of Contents):
-
524....
AN ACCOUNT OF A
VOYAGE round the WORLD, IN THE YEARS MDCCLXVI, MDCCLXVII,
MDCCLXVIII, and MDCCLXIX. By PHILIP CARTERET, Esquire, Commander
of his Majesty's Sloop the SWALLOW.
-
525....
Chapter I. The Run
from Plymouth to Madeira, and from thence through the Streight of
Magellan
-
537....
Chapter II. The
Passage from Cape Pillar, at the Western Entrance of the Streight
of Magellan, to Masasuero; with some Account of that Island
-
557....
Chapter III. The
Passage from Masasuero to Queen Charlotte's Islands; several
Mistakes corrected concerning Davis's Land, and an Account of some
small Islands, supposed to be the same that were seen by Quiros.
-
568....
Chapter IV. An
Account of the Discovery of Queen Charlotte's Island, with a
Description of them and their Inhabitants, and of what happened at
Egmont Island.
-
584....
Chapter V.
Departure from Egmont Island, and Passage to Nova Britannia; with
a Description of several other Islands, and their Inhabitants.
-
595....
Chapter VI.
Discovery of a Streight dividing the Land called Nova Britannia
into two Islands, with a Description of several small Islands that
lie in the Passge, and the Land on each side, with the Inhabitants
-
602....
Chapter VII. The
Passage from Saint George's Channel to the Island of Mindanao,
with an Account of many Islands that were seen, and Incidents that
happened by the Way.
-
611....
Chapter VIII. Some
Account of the Coast of Mindanao, and the Islands near it, in
which several Mistakes of Dampier are corrected.
-
622....
Chapter IX. The
Passage from Mindanao to the Island of Celebes, with a particular
Account of the Streight of Macassar, in which mnay Errors are
corrected.
-
630....
Chapter X.
Transactions off Macassar, and the Passage thence to Bonthain.
-
638....
Chapter XI.
Transactions at Bonthain, while the Vessel was waiting for a Wind
to carry her to Batavia, with some Account of the Place, the Town
of Macassar, and the adjacent Country.
-
649....
Chapter XII.
Passage from Bonthain Bay, in the Island of Celebes, to Batavia.
Transactions there, and the Voyage round of Good Hope to England.
-
669....
A Table of the
Variation of the Compass, as observed on board of the SWALLOW
- Painters & Paintings
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Links to cultural information per country: ANGLONESIA
Anglonesia is a neologism
used here to refer to Australia,
New Zealand
and the United
States
in the Pacific (ANZUS). The progress from colonialism to
independence in the Pacific Islands region (both north and south of the
equator) has not brought an end to the influence of the former colonial
powers. Presently, there are ten territories or dependencies linked
directly to an extraregional government, and five others are constrained
in their foreign policies by the terms of their free associaton compacts.
Like these territories, the independent states are also affected by the
political, security and economic policies of the extraregional powers.
There continues to be an overlap of interests between outsiders and
islanders, which is likely to persist even as more island stated begin to
exert their influence more and more within the region as well as globally. On our website you find more
cultural info on Anglonesia at:
MELANESIA
As diverse internally as
they are different from each other, the islands of Melanesia - those in Papua
New Guinea, Solomon
Islands, Vanuatu,
New
Caledonia, and Fiji
- defy convenient generalizations. Their traditional societies were
fragmented into over 900 small linguistic groups that had their own forms
of social and political organizations, little contact with each other, and
no ambitions to develop national organizations. Only after the coming of
the Europeans did these small social groups begin to merge into larger
identities. This process was most rapid in Fiji, where traditional groups
were more homogeneous than those in other islands. History presented both
Fiji and New Caledonia with a new source of social division; immigrant
Indians in the former and French settlers in the latter soon became
numerically, as well as politically and economically, important.
Elsewhere, the foreigners remained tiny minorities, in contrast to the
indigenous Melanesians.
The physical differences between the islands are
obvious; Papua New Guinea dwarfs the rest, having six times the population
and 25 times the land area of Fiji, the next largest area in Melanesia.
And yet, all of the Melanesian territories are large by Pacific standards,
a fact that contributes to their importance in regional and international
forums. Their economies also differ in scale. In the early 1980s the per
capita gross domesitic product of New Caledonia was 14 times that of the
poorest country, Vanuatu, some 12 times that of the Solomon Islands, about
nine time that of Papua New Guinea, and four times that of Fiji. The
predominantly agrarian Melanesian sectors of each of these economies,
however, resemble each other, and many Melanesian households live in ways
fundamentally unchanged from those of their ancestors. Politically, New
Caledonia is the exception; although the other Melanesian states have
achieved independence, it remains a French territory. The other Melanesian
states gave rhetorical support to the movement of its indigenous
inhabitants to become the last Melanesians to obtain nationhood.
On our website you find more
cultural info on Melanesia at:
MICRONESIA
Micronesia, or
"Little Islands," refers to a myriad of coral atolls and
volcanic islands scattered across the immense expanse of the western
Pacific. Its main archipelagic units are the Caroline Islands composing
most of the Federated
States of Micronesia
as well as Palau
(or, Republic of Belau); the Glibert Islands (Kiribati);
the Mariana Islands, including Guam
and the Commonwealth
of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI); the Marshall
Islands (Republic of); and the single island of Nauru
(Republic of). Although stretched across an area larger than the
continental United States, the more than 2,000 islands of Micronesia have
a combined land area of a mere 3,100 square kilometers - roughly the size
of the state of Rhode Island. Fewer than 100 of these poorly endowed,
economically underdeveloped islands are inhabited. A mid-1994 estimate of
the population was about 392,000.
Diversity is a distinctive feature of the area -
hence very few generalizations are valid for all of the indigenous
societies. Major ethnolinguistic groupings include the Chamorros,
Gilbertese, Kosraeans, Marshallese, Nauruans, Palauans, Polynesians,
Pohnpeians, Chuukese, and Yapese. The Chamorros are native to Guam and the
Northern Marianas, Gilbertese to Kiribati, and Polynesians to the outer
atolls of Pohnpei. Other groupings derive ther names from their respective
island designations.
Politically, Micronesia is complex, but all of
its constitutional entities maintain governmental systems that are
traceable to the Western democracies. Kiribati and Nauru are fully
independent nations. Guam is an integral territory of the United States
while the CNMI is a commonwealth of the United States. The rest of
Micronesia entered into a relationship of Free Association with the United
States following termination of the Trust Territory of the Pacific
Islands. The U.S. remains responsible for their external defense and
provides some financial assistance in return for certain strategic
compensation.
On our website you find more
cultural info on Micronesia at:
POLYNESIA
The region known as
Polynesia (from the Greek, meaning "many islands") is vast in
terms of sea area, covering approximately 39 million square kilometers -
excluding New
Zealand
and Hawaii,
territories originally settled by Polynesians but containing predominantly
non-Polynesian populations. In contrast, the total land area of the region
is only about 8,260 square kilometers, the largest island being Tahiti
at 1,042 square kilometers. The total population of the region in the
early 1990s was approximately 511,000. Only French
Polynesia
and Western
Samoa
have populations of over 100,000, and tiny Pitcairn
Island's population was only 100 in 1987 (latest data available).
Scarcity of arable land - in fact, any land at all - and the stagnation of
subsistence economies in which copra represented the only significant
export stimulated large-scale out-migration to other regions of the
Pacific, including Australia,
New Zealand, New
Caledonia, and the United States. Tourism, fishing, and the
exploitation of the resources of the ocean floor, however, present
potential sources of future economic growth.
Polynesia contains an impressive diversity of
political entities. Tonga
is an independent kingdom that was under British protection between 1901
and 1970. Western Samoa and Tuvalu
are states that gained their independence in 1962 and 1978, respectively.
The Cook
Islands and Niue
are self-governing in free association with New Zealand, which assumes
responsibility for their defense. Tokelau
is a territory of New Zealand administered by that nation from Apia,
Western Samoa. French Polynesia and Wallis
and Futuna are two overseas territories of France. Pitcairn Island is
a British colony and American
Samoa is an unorganized, unincorporated territory of the United
States, and Easter
Island (Rapanui) is a province of Chile. On
our website you find more cultural info on
Polynesia at:
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