| 1889 Perron map TAHITI & MOOREA, FRENCH POLYNESIA, #196 |
Nice small map titled Taiti et Moorea, from wood engraving with fine detail and clear impression, approx. size with margins is 16.5 x 15.5 cm. From La Nouvelle Géographie universelle, la terre et les hommes, 19 vol. (1875-94), great work of Elisee Reclus. Cartographer is Charles Perron.
Tahiti
largest island of the Îles du Vent (Windward Islands) of the Society Islands,
French Polynesia, in the central South Pacific Ocean. Its nearest neighbour is
Moorea, 12 miles (20 km) to the northwest. The island of Tahiti consists of two
ancient eroded volcanic cones, Tahiti Nui and Tahiti Iti (the Taiarapu
Peninsula), connected by the narrow Isthmus of Taravao. The island, with an area
403 square miles (1,043 square km), accounts for almost one-third of the total
land area of French Polynesia. Papeete, on Tahiti's northwestern coast, is the
capital and administrative centre of French Polynesia.
Apart from a fertile coastal plain, the terrain of Tahiti is jagged and
mountainous, rising to Mount Orohena (7,339 feet [2,237 metres]) on Tahiti Nui
and to Roniu (4,340 feet [1,323 metres]) on Tahiti Iti. Many swift streams, the
largest of which is the Papenoo in the north, descend to the coast. The island,
33 miles (53 km) long, is fringed by coral reefs and lagoons. Natural vegetation
includes coconut palms, pandanus, hibiscus, and tropical fruit trees.
Tahiti lies within the easterly trade-winds belt. It is divided into a wet
southern portion, with more than 100 inches (2,500 mm) of precipitation
annually, and a drier northern portion, receiving about 70 inches (1,800 mm).
The rainy season is from December to March. Average daily temperatures range
from 76 °F (24 °C) in July and August to 84 °F (29 °C) in January and February.
This climate lends itself to the cultivation of coconuts (for copra), sugarcane,
vanilla, and coffee, all of which are grown on the coastal plain and are shipped
from Papeete.
According to tradition, the original Tahitians were Polynesians who arrived from
another of the Society Islands, Raiatea, a Polynesian cultural diffusion centre.
On Tahiti they developed political districts, closely connected with a graded
system of rank and authority that rested on the extended family organized around
each temple. The high chiefs (arii nui) exercised considerable authority,
supported by supernatural sanctions and a priesthood, but their relationship
with lesser chiefs and people was reciprocal. This society disappeared under
European influence, and intermarriage and the French policy of assimilation
produced a people basically Polynesian, though with much admixture of other
ethnicities (chiefly French and Chinese) and deeply influenced by French
culture. More than two-thirds of the population of French Polynesia lives on
Tahiti.
In 1767 Tahiti (then usually called Otaheite) was visited by Capt. Samuel Wallis
of the British navy, who named it King George III Island. It was subsequently
visited by Louis-Antoine de Bougainville (1768), who claimed it for France. He
named it La Nouvelle Cythère (“The New Cythera”) in honour of the Greek island
of Cythera. It was then visited by two English navigators, James Cook in 1769
and William Bligh in the HMS Bounty in 1788. The first permanent European
settlers (1797) were members of the Protestant London Missionary Society, who
helped the local Pomare family gain control of the entire island. Tahitian chief
Pomare II (1803–24) embraced Christianity in 1815, triumphed over the other
Tahitian rulers, and established a “missionary” kingdom with a scriptural code
of law. However, the missionaries' power was challenged during the reigns of
Pomare III (1824–27) and Queen Pomare IV (1827–77) by Tahitian rivals and by the
effects of disease, prostitution, and alcoholism, as well as the influence of
European traders and beachcombers. After Queen Pomare IV deported two French
Roman Catholic missionary priests in 1836, the French dispatched a warship in
1842 to demand reparations and to arrange a French protectorate. When Pomare V
(Queen Pomare's son) abdicated in 1880, Tahiti was proclaimed a French colony.
The island does not have a single administrative identity; it is divided into a
number of communes, and Papeete is the capital of both Îles du Vent and
Tuamotu-Gambier Islands, two administrative subdivisions within French
Polynesia.
Tahiti has become an important tourist centre, receiving visitors through the
Papeete transpacific port and the international airport at Faaa, near Papeete.
The French artist Paul Gauguin lived on Tahiti in 1891–93 and 1895–1901; the
Paul Gauguin Museum, on the southern coast, contains a number of his paintings.
Moorea
volcanic island, second largest of the Îles du Vent (Windward Islands) in the
Society Islands of French Polynesia, central South Pacific Ocean. The island,
the remains of an ancient, half-eroded volcano, lies 12 miles (20 km) northwest
of Tahiti. It is triangular, rugged, and mountainous, with many streams and
fertile soils. Its highest peak is Mount Tohivea, at 3,960 feet (1,207 metres).
The chief village, Afareaitu, lies on the east coast overlooked by Muaputa
(2,723 feet [830 metres]). Cook (Paopao) Bay and Opunohu (Papetoai) Bay, divided
by Mount Rotui, are on the north coast at the centre of what was once the
volcano's crater; Haapiti town is on the west. The American writer Herman
Melville traveled to the region in the 1840s, and some villages on the eastern
coast of Moorea became the models for the Tahitian villages in his novel Omoo
(1847). The island's chief crops are vanilla, copra, and coffee. Moorea is now a
favoured tourist location. Area 51 square miles (132 square km). Pop. (2002)
14,226.