The earliest settlers on the island were an
Illyrian tribe that came to the region in the
Bronze Age; traces of their settlement can still be seen around Pag. In the 1st century BC, the
Romans took possession, and have left numerous archeological and cultural artifacts. The
Croats arrived in the 7th century along with the great migration and settled in the area. The island was for some time under the rule of the
Croatian kingdom. Yet the island was always fought over, and in the 11th and 12th centuries was divided between the communities of
Rab (Arbe) and
Zadar (Zara). From the 12th to 14th centuries, Pag, along with other
Dalmatian islands and towns, was fiercely contested between the
Republic of Venice and the
Croatian-Hungarian rulers. For four centuries from the start of the 15th century, it was held by Venice, until Venice lost its independence in 1797.
Austria and
France then fought over Dalmatia with victory going to the Austrians. The island passed from
Austria-Hungary to the
Kingdom of Yugoslavia after
World War I, and then to the
Independent State of Croatia (1941–45) when the
Ustashe set up
concentration camps at
Slana and Metajna, where they killed thousands of Serbs, Jews, and Croatian anti-fascists. On 10 April 1944, the
Kotar Committee of the Communist Party of
Senj () placed priority on the assignment to secure a food supply line from
Olib to
Velebit over the 2nd Coastal Operation Sector (). Already on March 16th the Secretary of the Kotar Committee of Senj relayed the information from Olib to the Okrug Committee of the Communist Party of Croatia (), that the task had been carried out and that he was returning to Velebit in the evening with 16
Yugoslav Partisans from various command posts who were on Olib with him, and with 2
saboteurs who had participated in the operation. The transport of food from Olib to Pag had been difficult, as it had to be done in small
brazzera with
oars. The food was kept in bunkers and at night transported from
Stara Novalja to Velebit in three trips. The process was repeated regularly. Still in March, a regular transport route Velebit-Olib-
Molat was established in two variants: one across the
Velebit Channel between Pag and
Rab ending variously at Olib or Molat, and the other across the Velebit Channel to Pag at
Pastura, where the Novalja Partisans transported it to a rowboat hidden by a valley, and on to Olib. After the Second World War it returned to Yugoslavia and, after the
dissolution of Yugoslavia in 1991, the island became part of the
Republic of Croatia. ==Economy==