history of Tonga
The history of Tonga stretches back to around roughly 4000 B.C. when the Polynesians arrived. Tonga became known as the Tongan Empire through extensive trading. The Europeans arrived in the 17th century which was followed after a couple hundred years by a single unified Tongan kingdom.
Earliest Times
Archaeological evidence shows that the first settlers in Tonga sailed from the Santa Cruz Islands, as part of the original Austronesian-speakers' (Lapita) migration which originated out of S.E. Asia some 6000 years before present. Archaeological dating places Tonga as the oldest known site in Polynesia for the distinctive Lapita ceramic ware, at 2800—2750 years before present. The Lapita people lived and sailed, traded, warred, and intermarried in the islands now known as Tonga, Samoa, and Fiji for 1000 years, before more explorers set off to the east to discover the Marquesas, Tahiti, and eventually the rest of the Pacific Ocean islands. For this reason, Tonga, Samoa, and Fiji are described by anthropologists as the cradle of Polynesian culture and civilization. This was part of the Austronesian expansion that spread people from southeastern Asia across the Pacific to the east and across the Indian Ocean to Madagascar and eastern Africa in the west.
These Polynesian people brought with them on their boats dogs, pigs, chickens, pottery and agriculture (especially root crops). They rapidly spread throughout the Tongan Islands, and in modern times (but before the arrival of Western navies and missionaries in force) had achieved population densities of 210 to 250 people per square mile (80 to 100/km²). By the Eighteenth Century, Tonga had unified under tribal leaders and had forged a maritime empire that traded and inter-married with parts of Fiji,Samoa and niue. By this time the Tongan Empire had a population of about 150,000. Although, the Tongans dominated their own inter-archipelagic realm with war canoes that carried up to 200 fighters each; their own canoes designs were cumbersome compared with the Fijian Drua.
Image:Http://www.justpacific.com/fiji/engravings/williams/canoe2.jpg
In addition, Tonga did not posses the abundance of timber for the manufacture of any canoe.
Due to the [inter-trade][1] between Fiji and Tonga, the Tongans soon learnt the deficiencies of their own designs and soon after adopted the superior sailing craft of the Fijians.
Image:Http://www.transitofvenus.auckland.ac.nz/wakavoyaging/images/waka pg23.jpg Image of Tongan canoes during [Captain Cook's voyage in 1773-74][2] to view the transition of Venus.
Tonga was never colonised and this is reflected in their hybrid monarchy/demcoracy, which is a posing question in present day Tongan society; which culminated in the 2006 race inspired [riot in Nukualofa][3]; resulting in several large buildings being torched, requiring the intervention of an Australia Police contingent.
Early Culture
Centuries before Westerners arrived, Tongans created large monumental stoneworks, most notably, 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.
Tongan Maritime empire
By the 12th century, Tongans, and the Tongan paramount chief, the Tuʻi Tonga, were known across the Pacific, from Niuē to Tikopia, sparking some historians to refer to a 'Tongan Empire'. A network of interacting navigators, chiefs, and adventurers might be a better term. It is unclear whether chiefs of the other islands actually came to Tonga regularly to acknowledge their sovereign.
European arrival and Christianisation
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 in 1616 (when they shot a Tongan off a swift sailing vessel near Niuatoputapu). On 21 January 1643 Abel Tasman was the first European to discover the islands. The most significant was Captain Cook visits in 1773, 1774, and 1777, 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) and Catholic faiths. Later other denominations followed like: Pentecostal, Mormons, Bahaʻi, Seventhdays, and still more.
Unification
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. Tonga became a British protected state under a Treaty of Friendship on 18 May 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. 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 gives Tongans much pride, as well as confidence in the monarchal system. The British High Commission in Tonga closed in March 2006.
Tonga's current king, George Tupou V, traces his line directly back through five generations of monarchs. The king, born in 1948, continues to have ultimate control of the government, despite financial irregularities and calls for democracy.
Further reading
- Queen Salote of Tonga: The Story of an Era 1900-1965 (ISBN 1-86940-205-7)
- Latukefu, S. (1974)Church and State in Tonga, ANU Press, Canberra
External links
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