France's armed takeover of
Tahiti and the
Society Islands in 1843 caused considerable apprehension among the Cook Islands'
ariki and led to requests from them to the British for protection in the event of French attack. This nervousness continued for many years and the call for protection was repeated in 1865 in a petition to
Governor Grey of New Zealand. During the 1870s the Cook Islands enjoyed prosperity and peace under the authority of Queen Makea, Makea Takau as she was known. A wily negotiator, she secured good prices for exports and cut the debts which had piled up before she became
ariki. By 1882 four of the five
ariki of Rarotonga were women. In 1888 she formally petitioned the British to set up a
Protectorate to head off what she believed to be imminent invasion by the French. The British were reluctant
administrators and continued pressure was applied to them from New Zealand and from European residents of the islands to pass the Cook Islands over to New Zealand. The first
British Resident was
Frederick Moss, a New Zealand politician who tried to help the local chiefs form a
central government. In 1898 another New Zealander,
Major W.E. Gudgeon, a veteran of the
New Zealand Wars, was made British Resident with the aim of paving the way for New Zealand to take over from
Britain as part of the
expansionist ambitions of New Zealand's
Prime Minister,
Richard Seddon. This was not favored by Makea Takau who preferred the idea of being
annexed to Britain. One of the results of the British annexation was
freedom of religion and a new influx of
missionaries from different
denominations. The first
Roman Catholic church was dedicated in 1896. After much maneuvering and politicking, the Cook Islands was formally
annexed by New Zealand on 7 October 1900 when a
deed of
cession was signed by five
ariki and seven lesser chiefs without any debate or examination of its ramifications or implications. ==Para O Tane Palace==