The island has been inhabited by
Melanesians since about 1500 BC. It was charted by Dutch captains
Jacob Le Maire and
Willem Corneliszoon Schouten in June 1616 and then named "Gardner Islands". They were later visited by
Abel Tasman who then dubbed the area to the "Visser Islands". The area came under German sovereignty in 1885 as part of
German New Guinea. The area was managed initially by the
German New Guinea Company.
Carl Emil Pettersson, a Swedish sailor who was shipwrecked and landed on the island in 1904, became its king (nicknamed "Strong Charly") after his marriage to the daughter of a local chief after he died. After the
First World War, the area ended up under Australian control, and
Australia later became officially mandated for the entire
Bismarck Archipelago by the
United Nations. From 1942 to 1945, the area was occupied by
Japan, but returned to the Australian government mandate until Papua New Guinea became independent in 1975. ==References==