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Mailu Island


FieldValue
nameMailu Island
pushpin_mapPapua New Guinea
coordinates
pushpin_label_positionright
pushpin_map_captionLocation within Papua New Guinea
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_namePapua New Guinea
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Central Province
subdivision_type2District
subdivision_name2Abau District
subdivision_type3LLG
subdivision_name3Amazon Bay Rural LLG
population_total770
population_as_of2000
population_density_km2auto
demographics_type1Languages
demographics1_title1Main languages
demographics1_info1Mailu language
timezone1AEST
utc_offset1+10
blank_name_sec1Location
blank_info_sec1250 km ESE of Port Moresby

Mailu Island (sometimes known as the Toulon Island) is a small, 1.8 km long, island in Central Province, Papua New Guinea. It lies 250 km ESE from Port Moresby.

Characteristics

Mailu is an island that has been inhabited since ancient times. It is located 8 km south of the New Guinean coast. Bananas, taro, yams, betel, sugarcane, as well as coconut, areca nut and sago palms grow on the island. The village is located on the NE shores. There is a smaller island right off Mailu's southern point. Pottery was made by the women on Mailu Island and traded with goods from the coast, mainly the South Cape and the Aroma people to the NW.

History

First recorded sighting of Mailu island was by the Spanish expedition of Luís Vaez de Torres, that landed on it on 24 August 1606. It was charted as San Bartolomé. Spaniards reported that its inhabitants called it Ratiles. All the nearby land including the coast of New Guinea was called by the Spaniards Magna Margarita to honour the wife of the king of Spain at that time Philip III, Margaret of Austria. Still today the nearby coastal village of Magarida keeps this name.

This island was visited by Polish anthropologist Bronisław Malinowski in 1914. Mailu Island was also visited by Austrian anthropologist and photographer Hugo Bernatzik in 1932. Bernatzik, who published an ethnography a few years later, described Mailu as a very pleasant place and had a good impression of the Mailuans, as reliable people of a good character and skilled seafarers. He admired the buildings and the boats and took photographs of Mailu houses from the inside and outside. Bernatzik also took pictures of the islanders and their artifacts, reflecting a culture that he deemed was dying in contact with the modern world. Frank Hurley also visited Mailu during his journeys.

Between 1972 and 1974 New Zealand archaeologist Geoffrey Irwin carried out a survey of Mailu Island and the neighbouring coast where linguistically related groups, speakers of Mailuan languages, live.

References

References

  1. Malinowski. (2013-04-15). "Malinowski amongst the Magi: The Natives of Mailu [1915/1988]". Routledge.
  2. Geoffrey Irwin, ''The Emergence of Mailu as a Central Place in Papuan Prehistory.'' 1985
  3. Patricia May & Margaret Tuckson, ''The Traditional Pottery of Papua New Guinea,'' University of Hawai`i Press {{ISBN. 978-0-8248-2344-3
  4. Hilder, Brett ''The voyage of Torres'', Brisbane, 1980, pp.42,48,51,54
  5. Hugo Bernatzik, ''Südsee; ein Reisebuch''. first edition [[Leipzig]] 1934
  6. [http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3201344 ''Photograph album of Papua and the Torres Strait'']
  7. Geoffrey Irwin, ''The Emergence of Mailu as a Central Place in Papuan Prehistory.'' 1985
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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