:''Not to be confused with
Caroline Island, part of
Kiribati (Southern
Line Islands), also in the central
Pacific Ocean.''
The 'Caroline Islands' form a large
archipelago of widely scattered islands in the western
Pacific Ocean, northeast of
New Guinea. Historically, this area was also called '''Nuevas Filipinas''' or '''New Philippines'''.
Description
The group consists of about 500 small coral islands, east of the
Philippines, in the Pacific Ocean; the distance from
Manila to
Yap, one of the larger islands of the group, is 1200
miles.
Politically they are divided between the
Federated States of Micronesia in the eastern part of the group, and
Palau at the extreme western end.
Most of the islands comprise low, flat
coral atolls, but some rise high above sea level.
People and culture
The native inhabitants speak a variety of
Micronesian languages including
Yapese,
Pohnpeian,
Chuukese, and
Kosraean, as well as the
Western Malayo-Polynesian language
Palauan. Other significant populations would include
Filipinos and
Japanese.
The natives live mainly by horticulture and fishing, also supplementing their diet with many different varieties of bananas and
taro, either of the "swamp" or "purple" varieties. On some islands housing continues to be built with local materials including coconut thatch. The language spoken in commerce is
English, but there are several indigenous
dialects. They traditionally believe in a Supreme Being (Yalafar) and in a bad spirit (Can), yet they have hardly any religious rites. Due to extensive
missionary work,
Christianity is the primary religion practiced in this region of
Micronesia.
History
Discovered to the occidentals in
1526, by the Spanish Toribio Alonso de Salazar, he called them "Carolinas" after the emperor
Carlos I of Spain, and Charles V of Holy Roman Empire.
The Portuguese Diego da Rocha, explorer of the Carolines, also named them the ''Sequeira Islands'' in
1527. Though early Spanish navigators in the area (from
1543) called them the '''Nuevas Filipinas''' ("New
Philippines"), Admiral Francisco Lazeano named them the '''Carolinas''' after the Spanish King
Charles II in
1686.
Some few
Western travellers subsequently visited the islands, but an early visit of missionaries (
1732) resulted in one of several murderous attacks on the newcomers; and only in
1875 did
Spain, claiming the group, make some attempt to assert her rights. The Caroline Islands were subsequently placed under the
Spanish East Indies, administered from the
Philippines.
Germany, which had occupied Yap, disputed the Spanish claim, and the matter went to the arbitration of
Pope Leo XIII in
1885. He decided in favor of Spain, but gave Germany free trading rights. The Spanish did not occupy any island formally until
1886.
Then on
1 June,
1899, after the
Spanish-American War of
1898, Spain sold the islands to Germany for 25,000,000
pesetas (nearly 1,000,000
pounds sterling), which administered them as 'Karolinen', administratively associated with
German New Guinea.
Japan occupied the islands in
1914 and received a
League of Nations mandate over them in
1920, but after
World War II the islands became trust territories of the
United States, eventually gaining independence (
1986 /
1994).
Colonial governors or officers
District officers (from
1889, styled
Bezirksamtmann):
In the ''western Caroline islands'' (
Yap and
Palau [and from 1907 Saipan])-
★
29 June 1886 - 18.. Manuel de Elisa
★ .... - .... ....
★ before
November 1897 - after November
1898 S. Cortes
★ 1899 -
1909 Arno Senfft (b.
1864 - d. 1909)
★ 1909 Rudolf Karlowa
★ 1909 -
1910 Georg Fritz
★ 1910 -
1911 Hermann Kersting
★ 1911 -
1914 Baumert
In the ''Eastern Caroline islands'' (
Ponape [and from 1911
Marshall Islands])-
★ June 1886 - 1887 Capriles
★ 14 March 1887 - 1887 Isidro Posadillo (d. 1887)
★ October 1887 - January 1891 Luis Cadarso y Rey (d. 1898)
★ c.1894 Concha
★ before November 1897 - after November 1898 J. Fernandez de Cordoba
★ 12 October 1899 - August? 1901 Albert Hahl (b. 1868 - d. 1945)
★ 1 September 1901 - 30 April 1907 Victor Berg (b. 1861 - d. 1907)
★ 1907 - 1908? Girschner (acting)
★ 1908 - 1909 Georg Fritz
★ 1909 - 18 October 1910 Gustav Boeder (d. 1910)
★ 191. - 7 October 1914 August Überhorst
Ecclesiastical history
Two
Jesuits, John Anthony Cantova and Victor Walter, attempted missionary work there in 1731; the former was soon murdered, the latter obliged to flee. Two other Jesuits were killed later. In 1767 the Jesuits were suppressed in the Spanish dominions, and during the next 120 years there is no trace of a missionary.
The controversy between Germany and Spain concerning the possession of the Carolines having been settled by
Pope Leo XIII in favour of Spain, the king directed Spanish
Capuchins to the islands, 15 March, 1886, and the
Propaganda Fide officially established that mission, 15 May, 1886, dividing it into two sections, named West and East Carolines respectively. Until then the islands had belonged ecclesiastically to the
Vicariate Apostolic of Micronesia. The Spanish Capuchins had a
catechism and prayer book printed in the Ponape dialect, and Father Anthony of Valentia wrote a small grammar and dictionary of the Yap dialect in 1890.
When the Spanish Fathers had laid the foundations of the mission, these islands passed by purchase into the hands of Germany in 1899.
Spain had contributed more than $5000 a year towards the mission; Germany granted no support. Spain had compelled the aborigines to send their children to school; Germany gave full liberty in this regard, and the people consequently began to neglect school as well as church. The mission thereby suffered greatly, and the Propaganda finally deemed it advisable to replace the Spanish Capuchins with others of German nationality (7 November 1904) and to erect one Apostolic prefecture instead of the two separate missions (18 December 1905). The Very Reverend Father Venantius of Prechthal was appointed first prefect Apostolic.
In 1906 twelve fathers and twelve brothers were working in thirteen stations, and several
Sisters of St. Francis left
Luxembourg to take charge of the ten schools, in which were 262 children. Ninety adult converts were the harvest of that year, and the Catholic population is given as 1900 among 11,600 heathens and a few Protestants. The
United States Government sent, 1 July, 1905, a Jesuit from the observatory at
Manila to erect a
meteorological station on the island of Yap, of which station the Capuchin Father Callistus was appointed director. The origin of the
East-Asiatic typhoons had been traced to these regions, and twice a day observations are made, and notice is frequently given to Manila by cable.
Postage stamps
In their first year as a German
Schutzgebiet, the Carolines used
postage stamps of Germany overprinted "Karolinen". Few examples of these survive today, especially in cancelled condition. In
1901, Germany issued its "Yacht" series with a common design for all of Germany's colonies, featuring the
Kaiser's yacht ''Hohenzollern''. The issues for the Carolines featured the inscription "KAROLINEN", all with mark and pfennig denominations. Many unused copies of the low values still exist today, left over after the Japanese occupation, but as one might expect from the short period of German rule and the very small numbers of letter-writers living in the Carolines, genuinely used stamps are both uncommon and prized.
Sources and references
(incomplete)
★
★
★
WorldStatesmen- Micronesia (not yet properly exploited)