History of the Cook Islands
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Polynesians, mainly from the area now known as French Polynesia, were the only inhabitants of the Cook Islands until the 19th century. With only minor exceptions, each island was autonomous, and within each of the larger islands there were several competing ethnic communities. Spanish explorers visited several islands in the northern group in the late 1500s and early 1600s but did not stay. Capt. James Cook was the first European to call at most of the islands in the southern group, in 1773, 1774, and 1777.
English and Tahitian missionaries of the London Missionary Society began arriving in 1821 and were the first foreigners to settle. A number of important ariki (chiefs) were converted to Christianity early on. The missionaries established a theological college on Rarotonga and exerted a strong influence on the form of government that evolved in each of the islands over the next half century.
Fear of a French takeover, such as that which had occurred in nearby Tahiti and some of the other Society Islands, prompted some chiefs to petition the United Kingdom to declare a protectorate over the Cook Islands. The British government eventually complied in 1888, and a single federal parliament was established. This was the first time that these scattered islands had come under a united government.
New Zealand was keen to annex the Cook Islands, but the United Kingdom would not agree to this except on certain conditions, one of which was that the request for annexation must come from the Cook Islands. With some persuasion from New Zealand, chiefs of the largest islands petitioned for annexation, which was undertaken in 1901. After 1912 the federal parliament was allowed to lapse, and no direct representation at the national level occurred again until 1946, when a Legislative Council was organized. In 1957 its powers were extended and its name changed to the Legislative Assembly (a 1981 constitutional amendment changed the name again, to Parliament). In 1965 the Cook Islands moved to self-government but retained a relationship of free association with New Zealand.
In the second half of the 20th century, the Cook Islands, with the help of New Zealand, worked on improving infrastructure and social conditions and developing the economy, including tourism. The change in status in 1965 brought greater autonomy, and the Cook Islands began developing relationships with the countries of the region. The islands entered into treaties as an independent political entity, became a founding member of the South Pacific Forum (from 2000, the Pacific Islands Forum) in 1971, and joined other international organizations, including UNESCO and the Asian Development Bank.