Raroia and Takume were called
Napaite, "the Twins" (-
ite, two), by the ancient
Paumotu people. The first recorded Europeans to reach Raroia were those of the Spanish expedition led by the Portuguese explorer
Pedro Fernandes de Queirós on 14 February 1606. The island was charted as
La Fugitiva (the fugitive in Spanish). It was later sighted again in 1820 by
Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, who named it
Barclay de Tolly after the Russian field marshal
Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly. In 1947,
Thor Heyerdahl's
Kon-Tiki raft arrived in Raroia after its 101-day journey from South America. Later, one of the crew members,
Bengt Danielsson, lived there and studied the economy and the society. He wrote some books about Raroia, notably his thesis
Work and Life on Raroia (Uppsala, 1955). In his 1952 book
Raroia: Happy Island of the South Seas, he observes, "The Raroian peace stems from the fact that the people have no material anxieties and no other object in life than just to live" (Danielsson, 294). In April 2006
Raroia Airport began serving the air transportation needs of the atoll, with irregular visits by
Air Tahiti flights. ==Administration==