
Chromograph map of Samoa - George Cram 1896
People from the
Lau islands in
Fiji and
Tonga arrived to
Samoa islands approximately 3500 years ago and from there settled most of
Polynesia. Each centuries people were either exiled or travelled from
Tonga settling in
Samoa due to loss of war, battle or allies. They were known as the Tongan rebellions who were driven out by several
Tu'i Tonga. These immigrants settled in the Samoas islands for many centuries until they moved on to settle eastern Polynesia. There is evidence to suggest they travelled as far as
South America. Contact with
Europeans began in the early
1700s but did not intensify until the arrival of
English missionaries and traders in the
1830s.
Halfway through the
19th century, the
United Kingdom,
Germany and the
United States all claimed parts of the kingdom of
Samoa, and established
trade posts.
King
Malietoa Laupepa died in 1898 and was succeeded by Malietoa Tooa Mataafa. The US and British consuls supported
Malietoa Tanu, Laupepa's son. US and British warships, including
USS ''Philadelphia'' shelled Apia on March 15, 1899.
In the
Samoa Tripartite Convention, a joint commission of three members,
Bartlett Tripp for the United States,
C. N. E. Eliot, C.B. for Great Britain, and
Freiherr Speck von Sternberg for Germany, agreed to divide the islands. Germany received the western part, (later known as
Western Samoa), containing Upolu and Savaii (the current Samoa) and other adjoining islands. These islands became known as German Samoa. The US accepted Tutuila and Manu'a, which comprise a territory of the US known as
American Samoa. In exchange for Britain ceding claims in Samoa, Germany transferred their protectorates in the
North Solomon Islands. The monarchy was disestablished.
From
1908, with the establishment of the
Mau movement ("opinion") movement, Western Samoans began to assert their claim to independence.
Shortly after the outbreak of
World War I, in August 1914,
New Zealand sent an expeditionary force to seize and occupy German Samoa. Although Germany refused to officially surrender the islands, no resistance was offered and the occupation took place without any fighting.
New Zealand continued the occupation of Western Samoa throughout World War I. In
1919, under the
Treaty of Versailles, Germany dropped its claims to the islands.
New Zealand administered Western Samoa first as a
League of Nations Mandate and then as a
United Nations trusteeship until the country received its independence on
January 1,
1962 as
Western Samoa. Samoa was the first
Polynesian nation to reestablish independence in the
20th century.
In July
1997 the
constitution was amended to change the country's name from "Western Samoa" to "Samoa." Samoa had been known simply as Samoa in the United Nations since joining the organization in
1976. The neighboring U.S. territory of
American Samoa protested the move, feeling that the change diminished its own Samoan identity. American Samoans still use the terms "Western Samoa" and "Western Samoans."
In
2002, New Zealand's
prime minister Helen Clark formally apologised for two incidents during the period of New Zealand's administration: a failure to
quarantine an
influenza-carrying ship in
1919, leading to an
epidemic which devastated the Samoan population, and the shooting of leaders of the nonviolent Mau movement during a ceremonial procession in
1929.
Samoa's rugby union team has achieved some notable successes, particularly in the
sevens version of the game.
References
★ Eustis, Nelson. 1979. ''Aggie Grey of Samoa''. Hobby Investments, Adelaide, South Australia. 2nd printing, 1980. ISBN 0-9595609-0-4.
External links
★
Samoa, A Hundred Years Ago And Long Before by George Turner, an eText available from
Project Gutenberg