Prehistory Along with
New Guinea, the
Bismarck Archipelago and the
Solomon Islands Archipelago, the Admiralty Islands were first inhabited approximately 40,000 years ago, in the initial wave of migration out of
Southeast Asia that also populated
Australia. This early society appears to have cultivated
taro, and to have deliberately introduced wild animals from New Guinea such as
bandicoots and large
rats.
Obsidian was gathered and traded throughout the Admiralty Islands archipelago. The
Lapita culture arose around 3,500 years ago, and its extent ranged from the Admiralty Islands to
Tonga and
Samoa. Its origins are contested, but it may well have been a product of another wave of migration from Southeast Asia. Lapita society featured renowned
pottery,
stilt houses, the introduction of domestic animals such as
pigs,
dogs, and
chickens, and substantial developments in agriculture and boat technology, allowing long-distance trade to develop. Lapita society, as a distinct culture and extended trade network, collapsed around 2,000 years ago. Saavedra charted Manus as
Urays la Grande. Its visit was also reported in 1616 by the
Dutch navigator
Willem Schouten. The name 'Admiralty Islands' was devised by Captain
Philip Carteret of the
British Royal Navy in 1767. Between 1884 and 1914 the area was administered as a
German colony. In November 1914, the islands were occupied by troops of the
Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force landed from the SS
Siar. A few shots fired from a machine gun on
Siar over the heads of the tiny German garrison at
Lorengau were the last shots fired in the battle. After the war, the islands were governed by the
Commonwealth of Australia under a
League of Nations mandate.
Japanese troops landed on
Manus Island on 7 April 1942. In 1944, Japanese forces occupying the islands were attacked and defeated by
Allied forces in
Operation Brewer. Subsequently, a large
American airbase and
Manus Naval Base was built at Lombrum near Lorengau.
Independence Following
Papuan independence in 1975, the Admiralty Islands became part of
Papua New Guinea. They became the
Manus Province of the
Islands Region in Papua New Guinea. ==See also==