Whaling vessels were among the earliest and most consistent visitors to the islands in the 19th century. The first such vessel for which a record exists is the
New Hazard in 1813. These ships came for fresh drinking water, firewood and food provisions.
Prehistory The prehistory of the Austral Islands is largely in the dark, as only a few
archaeological excavations have been carried out so far. The date of the earliest settlement is unclear, as radiocarbon dates are scarcely available. However, due to their peripheral location in the
Polynesian Triangle, scholars suspect that the Austral Islands were colonized relatively late, possibly by visitors from the
Society Islands,
Mangareva, or the
Cook Islands. The Noble families of the Austral Islands and the clans of the Society Islands share
kinship. For example, chief Tamatoa of Tubuai believed that he was descended from an
ariki from the island of Raiatea. The
American archaeologist Patrick Vinton Kirch has further suggested that the Austral Islands, the southern Cook Islands, and the Society Islands should be seen as one extended cultural family. At Atiahara, on the north coast of
Tubuai, a near-beach settlement was excavated beginning in 1995 under the direction of American archaeologist Mark Eddowes, probably from a very early settlement phase. Food remains from the waste pits suggest that the inhabitants fed mainly on shellfish (fish, mussels, crustaceans) from the
lagoon. Other food animals included pigs, chickens and Pacific rat. The processing of mussel shells, probably also for the exchange of
goods with other settlements, was an integral part of the economy. Dating of charcoal remains yielded dates of 1453 (±150 years) and 1113 (±50 years). According to the current state of research, an initial settlement of the Austral Islands can be assumed at the beginning of the
second millennium AD. After initial settlement in caves and rock ledges near the
coast, a stratified tribal society developed rapidly in settlements near the beach. The structure of the settlements reflected the social order. There were strictly separate dwellings, built of perishable materials, for the aristocracy, the priests, the middle class (artisans, artists),
warriors, adolescents and pubescent girls. Due to increasing tribal warfare, the
beach settlements were abandoned, probably in the seventeenth or eighteenth century. The inhabitants retreated to heavily fortified settlements in the inland
hills, comparable to the Pā of New Zealand. On Rapa Island, for example, 15 such
castles have been recorded. The
Norwegian archaeological expedition to
Easter Island and the eastern Pacific in 1956, led by Thor Heyerdahl, determined an antiquity of between 200 and 300 years for a fortified settlement on Rapa's Morongo Uta hill and dated the Hatututi castle complex of Raivavae to 1700 AD. Numerous wars and probably also
overexploitation of natural resources may have drastically reduced the population even before the arrival of
Europeans.
European exploration and colonization Rurutu was the first of the Austral Islands to be discovered by
Europe in 1769.
James Cook reached the island, which he named Ohetiroa, during his first voyage to the Pacific on August 14, 1769. After
HMS Endeavour anchored off the island for the night, Cook launched the pinnace the next day under the command of
Lieutenant Gore. Naturalist
Joseph Banks was also on the ship. A large number of armed warriors were walking along the shore. As Cook had ordered to avoid any risk, the Pinasse returned to the
ship without having attempted a landing. The
Spaniard Tomás de Gayangos was the first European to reach the island of
Raivavae on February 5, 1775, with the ships Águila and Júpiter as part of an expedition to Tahiti initiated by
Manuel de Amat y Junyent. The next day Gayangos had a ship leave
Tahiti with Lieutenant Benarcosi and two translators, but they were prevented from landing in Mahanatoa Bay by several war canoes. James Cook discovered the island of
Tubuai in March 1777 during his third voyage, but also failed to set foot on the island. His report was known to
Fletcher Christian, the leader of the mutineers on
HMS Bounty. After the
mutiny of the Bounty on April 28, 1789, off Tofua, the ship first headed for Tubuai, but only stayed there for a week before sailing for Tahiti. Armed with provisions and several Tahitian women, the mutineers returned to Tubuai to settle. However, internal disputes and bloody clashes with the islanders, in which 66 Tubuans were killed, caused the Bounty to depart only three months later.
Rapa Iti was discovered in 1791 by
George Vancouver, Marotiri in 1800 by
George Bass, Rimatara in 1811 by British Tahitian sandalwood trader Samuel Pinder Henry, and Maria Atoll was finally discovered for the Western Hemisphere in 1824 by Nantucket whaling captain
George Washington Gardner. After the Pomaré dynasty consolidated its rule in Tahiti with
British support and
Pomaré II was crowned king in 1819, it decided to extend its sphere of influence to the Austral Islands. Captain Lewis' American brig brought the king, his court and several missionaries from the
London Missionary Society (LMS) to the Austral Islands in October 1819. Lewis was rewarded with Raivavae sandalwood. The clans were engaged in one of their usual tribal wars. Pomaré managed to mediate between the warring parties and resolve the conflict diplomatically. He left as governor one of his Tahitian chiefs, who prepared the ground for the LMS Protestant missionaries who followed from Moorea a year later.
Queen Pomaré IV of Tahiti ceded part of her
sovereignty to France. As a result, France formally declared a
protectorate over Tubuai in 1874 and Raivavae in 1876. With the end of the Pomaré dynasty-the last king of Tahiti was Pomaré V-the islands were annexed in 1880 and became a
French colony. One exception was two small islands that the colonial powers of France and Britain had apparently overlooked. Rurutu, under King Teuruarii IV, and Rimatara, under
Queen Tamaeva IV, initially remained independent kingdoms. After an exchange of diplomatic notes and after
Britain expressed no interest in the islands, Rurutu came under French suzerainty on March 27, 1889, and
Rimatara on March 29, 1889, The final
annexation took place in 1900, Rimatara and Rurutu also became
French colonies. ==Geography==