HISTORY
Although little prehistory
of the Solomon Islands is known, material excavated on Santa Ana,
Guadalcanal, and Gawa indicates that a hunter-gatherer people
lived on the larger islands as early as 1000 B.C. Some Solomon
Islanders are descendants of Neolithic, Austronesian-speaking
peoples who migrated somewhat later to the Pacific Islands from
Southeast Asia.
The European discoverer of
the Solomons was the Spanish explorer Alvaro de Mendana Y Neyra,
who set out from Peru in 1567 to seek the legendary Isles of Solomon.
British mariner Philip Carteret , entered Solomon waters in 1767.
In the years that followed, visits by explorers were more frequent.
Missionaries began visiting
the Solomons in the mid-1800s. They made little progress at first,
however, because "blackbirding"--the often brutal recruitment
of laborers for the sugar plantations in Queensland and Fiji--led
to a series of reprisals and massacres. The evils of the labor
trade prompted the United Kingdom to declare a protectorate over
the southern Solomons in 1893. In 1898 and 1899, more outlying
islands were added to the protectorate; in 1900 the remainder
of the archipelago, an area previously under German jurisdiction,
was transferred to British administration. Under the protectorate,
missionaries settled in the Solomons, converting most of the population
to Christianity.
In the early 20th century,
several British and Australian firms began largescale coconut
planting. Economic growth was slow, however, and the islanders
benefited little. With the outbreak of World War II, most planters
and traders were evacuated to Australia, and most cultivation
ceased.
From May 1942, when the Battle of the Coral Sea was fought, until December 1943,
the Solomons were almost constantly a scene of combat. Although U.S. forces
landed on Guadalcanal virtually unopposed in August 1942, they were soon engaged
in a bloody fight for control of the islands' airstrip, which the U.S. forces
named Henderson Field. One of the most furious sea battles ever fought took
place off Savo Island, near Guadalcanal, also in August 1942. Before the
Japanese completely withdrew from Guadalcanal in February 1943, over 7,000
Americans and 21,000 Japanese died. By December 1943, the Allies were in command
of the entire Solomon chain. The large-scale American presence toward the end of
the war, which dwarfed anything seen before in the islands, triggered various
millennial movements and left a lasting legacy of friendship.
Postwar
Developments
Following
the end of World War II, the British colonial government returned.
The capital was moved from Tulagi to Honiara to take advantage
of the infrastructure left behind by the U.S. military. A native
movement known as the Marching Rule defied government authority.
There was much disorder until some of the leaders were jailed
in late 1948. Throughout the 1950s, other indigenous dissident
groups appeared and disappeared without gaining strength.
In 1960, an advisory council
of Solomon Islanders was superseded by a legislative council,
and an executive council was created as the protectorate's policymaking
body. The council was given progressively more authority.
In 1974, a new constitution
was adopted establishing a parliamentary democracy and ministerial
system of government. In mid-1975, the name Solomon Islands officially
replaced that of British Solomon Islands Protectorate. On January
2, 1976, the Solomons became self-governing, and independence
followed on July 7, 1978.