A Vietnamese
Đông Sơn drum was once uncovered in Timbang Dayang Hill on the island that was between 2,000 and 2,500 years old, together with the findings of ancient
Chinese ceramics around the island and in
Kudat, indicating the island's interaction with various
Chinese and
Vietnamese dynasties. The island was once under the rule of the
Sultanate of Brunei, as were much of the areas of northern
Borneo before
the arrival of European powers. The Bruneian Sultanate used to exact
tribute from the coastal people, whilst the interior was free from any
thalassocratic control. Around 1704, Brunei
ceded the northern part of Borneo from
Kimanis northward, including the islands of
Palawan, Banggi, and
Balambangan, to the
Sultanate of Sulu as a reward for their help during the
Brunei Civil War.
British acquisition In 1759,
Alexander Dalrymple, a Scottish geographer, hydrographer, and publisher, was dispatched by the
East India Company (EIC) to establish trade relations with the Sulu Sultanate, where he signed a treaty of alliance and commerce with Sultan
Bantilan of Sulu in early January 1761. The following year on 12 September 1762, Sultan Bantilan held the council of the chief people at
Sulu, in which the island of Balambangan was granted to the EIC. Within the same year, Dalrymple established a factory at Banggi to process
spice obtained from the
Bugis working in the
Moluccas, although the plan never materialised. Following the
British occupation of Manila, Sultan
Alimuddin of Sulu, who had been imprisoned in Manila by the
Spanish authorities, was freed by the British and allowed to return to his throne, which was welcomed by the Sulu people. The first direct contact between the indigenous islanders of Bonggi Dusun and the
English was made on 23 January 1763 when he took the island for the EIC and hoisted
the British flag. He returned to Sulu in 1764 to renegotiate the agreement, and a new cession was made by the Sulu Sultanate on 2 July 1764, which gave the EIC exclusive rights on the islands of Balambangan and Banggi. By 1773, the British began establishing a settlement with John Herbert as Chief Resident, accompanied by Captain
Thomas Forrest, while Dalrymple was dismissed by the EIC due to some disagreements with the company authority. Herbert, however, cheated the EIC out of large sums of money and quarrelled with local Sulu chiefs, causing the Sulus to regret their deals with the EIC and causing the British garrison to be attacked by the Sulus, with the Balambangan settlement being destroyed by
Sulu pirates in March 1775. Due to his conduct, Herbert was dismissed by the EIC later that same year. In 1877, Sultan
Abdul Momin of Brunei granted the territories from the Sulaman River to the Paitan River on the northeast coast to Overbeck and Dent, including the island of Banggi (spelt as Banguey at the time) and all other islands within three marine leagues of the coast (approximately from the shoreline), as well as from the Paitan to the
Sibuco River. Following the
American Navy's consideration to build a naval depot in Banggi as well as the
Kingdom of Italy's attempt to acquire the island from the Sultanate of Brunei in 1870 to establish a
penal settlement, the British established the protectorate of
North Borneo through the NBCC in 1881. The Germans also began to get involved in commercial activities on the island with the establishment of a
tobacco estate at
Limbuak Darat in 1884. By 1885, the British surveyed the proposed town of Mitford, which is the English name of
Karakit or
Kerahid by the Bonggi Dusun. Since the establishment of North Borneo, the British administered Banggi Island directly from
Kudat District with the only administration building on the island having been a police quarters at Mitford established in 1887. In 1903, the Sultanate of Sulu made further confirmation of their cession of all islands near to the territory of North Borneo, from Banggi to as far as the Sibuco Bay. The British began establishing schools in the 1950s to address islander literacy, with further administration infrastructure being established throughout the foundation of the Malaysian federation in 1963.
Present history In 2014, a new township was proposed to be built on the island. The island has also been part of the gazetted area of
Tun Mustapha Marine Park since 2016. A district office was constructed in the town of Karakit in the 2010s, covering Balambangan Island, Manawali Cape Island, and
Tigabu Island. Other public infrastructure including a government rest house, hotel,
Royal Malaysia Police station, health clinic, and homestay are operated by the islanders. In 2024, one of the primary schools on the island was chosen as part of the
British Council's global English programs together with three other schools from the
State of Palestine,
Greece, and
Cameroon. == Geography ==