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It is believed the first settlers arrived in Vanuatu approx. 3,500 years ago,
from New Guinea and the Solomon Islands by sea-going canoe.
The first European to discover these islands was the Spanish explorer, Captain
Pedro Ferdinand De Quiros, in 1605. He named them "Tierra Australis del
Espiritu Santo", believing he had discovered the great southern continent.The
island he landed on still bears the name Espiritu Santo.
In 1768, the next European to land here was the French explorer Louis Antoine de
Bougainville. He put ashore on the islands of Aoba, Pentecost, and Maewo and
named them the "Cyclades" after the Greek Islands and named the strait between
the islands after himself.
In 1774, Captain James Cook sailed through the chain from north to south. He
chartered many of the islands, gave many of them their present names, and
renamed the archipelago the New Hebrides after the islands off Scotland, by
which name it was known until Independence in 1980.
Following Cook's voyage the islands were visited by other French explorers and
by 1895 both French and English subjects had settled here. In 1902 both nations
appointed Resident Commissioners and in October 1906, Britain and France signed
an agreement resolving their various claims to the country and making it a
Condominium (the only one of its kind in the world) under joint management of
both nations. It is estimated that through imported diseases brought to the
country by missionaries, sandalwood traders and blackbirding etc. the
population dropped from approx. 1,000,000 in 1800 to 45,000 in 1935.
At the end of 1978, the Condominium arrangement ceased, elections were held in
November 1979 and the nation became independent on July 30th, 1980. Vanuatu
joined the United Nations on September 15th, 1981.
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