, 1885. Tautira is where Catholic missionaries first landed which eventually led to the takeover of Tahiti by the
French people, and which also ended Protestants' hold on Tahiti: In 1773 the Spaniards established a catholic mission, of two friars, in the bay of Tautira, which was abandoned at eleven months. Earlier, in 1772,
Domingo de Bonechea, the
Basque captain landed at
Aguilla near the Aiurua River, about from Tautira. He had left two missionaries to try convert the indigenous people to
Christianity, in 1772. However, when he returned from Peru in 1775 he found that the two missionaries he had left behind on
Tahiti failed to convert the natives, and eventually they preferred to return to
Peru. However, de Bonechea died on Tahiti during this campaign and he is buried in the Catholic Church in Tautira, which is now named after him.
James Cook had landed at
Tautira Bay (or "Cooks Anchorage") during his voyage. The chiefs of Tautira were reportedly once replaced by the chiefs of
Teahupo'o after conflict. In 1886,
Robert Louis Stevenson, the author of
Treasure Island,
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and other children's books, stayed here for two months to recuperate from his illness. Stevenson had moved to the village from Papeete and lived in a hut called the "bird-cage house" where the beautiful Princess Moe, an old lady of royalty, tended him back to good health, bringing him dishes of raw fish in coconut milk, lime juice, sea water and chilli. The local chief,
Ori O Ori, befriended him and kept him in his house, and they had even exchanged names as “Rui” and “Terii-Tera”. It was during his stay here that Stevenson wrote to his friends calling Tautira as “The Garden of the World”. In 1915, Tautira was described as being "the second town of the island". ==Geography==