History of Mauritius
Mauritius was
first discovered by the Arabs in 975 AD, then by the
Portuguese between 1507and 1513. In 1598, the Dutch
landed in a bay in the south-east. The Dutch admiral,
VanWarwyck was in command of the fleet and he named
the bay after himself (Warwyck haven).The bay is now
known as Grand Port. He named the island "Mauritius"
after Prince Mauritius Van Nassau, the stadtholder
of Holland.
Although the Dutch called occasionally for shelter,
food and fresh water, they made no attempt to
develop the island. The beautiful bird, The DODO,
which was described as a feathered tortoise was an
easy target for the laziest hunter. Unfortunately,
it was fat and couldn't fly.
In 1622, Danish adventurers arrived, hoping to
exploit the ebony with which the island abounded.
The French and British, too, began to see
possibilities both for trade and strategy in the
mascarenes and sent out expeditions in 1638. Their
ships arrived too late. In May 1638, Cornelius
Simonsz Gooyer had set up the first permanent Dutch
settlement in Mauritius. He was sent by the
Netherlands East India Company and became the first
governor, over a population of 25 colonists who
planned to exploit the island's resources of fine
ebony and ambergris, rearing cattle and growing
tobacco.
Over the next few years, a hundred slaves were
imported from Madagascar and convicts sent over from
Batavia (Java). The convicts were employed in
cutting ebony. The free colonists came from Baltic
and North Sea Ports. They were hardened man who were
settlers out of desperation and coercion rather than
through brave ideals. Attempts at colonisation
failed because there were not enough settlers. By
1652, many left for the Cape of Good Hope which
offered better prospects. Other attempts at
colonisation failed miserably through cyclones,
flood, drought and plague. Food shortages, an
overall inefficient administration and attacks by
pirate ships compounded their desire to leave and in
1710 the last settlers abandoned Mauritius leaving a
batch of runaway slaves bent on vengeance for their
ill treatment.
In September 1715, Guillaume Dufresne d'Arsel took
possession of Mauritius in the name of King Louis XV
of France. He named it the Ile de France, placed the
French flag near what is now Port Louis, drew a
document witnessed by his officers declaring the
island French and sailed away after three days.
The first colonists landed at warwyck Bay (Mahebourg)
in 1722. The area was exposed to winds and dangerous
reefs, so they moved to the safety of the North West
harbour. Warwyck bay was renamed Port Bourbon and
the North West Harbour became known as Port
Louis.For the first 14 years, the French colony
followed the dismal experience of the Dutch. Only
the most desperate and toughest of the settlers
survived. Their appallingly treated slaves also
escaped and lived in the forests and sabotaged the
plantations.
The transformation of Port Louis from a primitive
harbour to a thriving sea port was largely due to
the efforts of Bertrand Mahe de Labourdonnais, an
aristocratic sea captain, 38 years of age, from St
Malo. The wretched conditions of the settlers
dismayed Labourdonnais. There were 190 whites in the
island and 648 blacks, most of them from Africa and
Malagascar and a few Indians from the Coromandel and
Malabar coasts. Labourdonnais transformed the island
from a colony of malcontents into "the star and key
of the Indian Ocean". The thatched hovels were
demolished and in their place rose forts, barracks,
warehouses, hospitals and houses. Government house
was built of coral blocks, roads were opened
throughout the island and a ship building industry
commenced.
Although he had to import slaves, Labourdonnais made
their lot easier by also importing ox-carts so that
slaves could be utilised for more skilled tasks. He
turned many of them into artisans. He also started
an agriculture programme that concentrated on
feeding the islanders and on marketable products. On
his own estates, he grew sugarcane and encouraged
new settlers to start plantations of cotton, indigo,
coffee and manioc. The first sugar factory was
opened at villebague in 1744.
In 1746, with England and France at war,
Labourdonnais led an expedition of nine ships from
the Ile de France to India. There they defeated a
British squadron and captured Madras, the most
important British outpost. Labourdonnais' actions
resulted in a conflict with Dupleix, his superior in
India. Dupleix wanted Madras razed to the ground but
Labourdonnais refused because he knew the British
would pay a ransom to get Madras back. He was
accused of accepting a bribe to preserve Madras and
was replaced as Governor of Ile de France. On his
return to France, he was thrown in the Bastille and
even though in 1751, he was found innocent, he died
a broken man two years later, aged 54. His statue
stands in Port Louis facing out across the harbour.
The town of Mahebourg (started in 1805) is also
named after him.
During the seven years war (1756-1763) France and
England continued to battle over control of the
Indian Ocean and the French East India company
enlisted privateers. When the French lost the wars
in India, they blamed the company and accused its
officials of corruption. This resulted in the
official handling over of Mauritius to the French
King.In 1767, the Royal Government was established
on the island. At that time, there was a population
of 18,773 which included 3,163 Europeans and 587
free blacks, mostly Hindus. The rest were slaves.
Pierre Poivre (Peter Pepper) was picked as
administrator. He introduced varieties of plants
from South America, including pepper, and even
offered tax incentives to planters to grow them.
Under his influence, the colony developed as an
agricultural and trading centre. He improved the
harbour facilities and the accommodation for both
colonists and slaves.
When the French East India Company was wound up, and
their monopoly broken, private enterprise became the
fashion. Everyone was trying to make profits. In
1785 the Ile de France was declared the seat of
government of all French possessions east of the
Cape. A French nobleman, Vicomte de Souillac was
made governor (1779-1787) bringing an era of
extravagance to the colony. Port Louis became
renowned for its bright social life with dancing
parties for the young and the old, duelling,
gambling, drinking and hunting. At the same time,
public affairs were neglected; fraud, corruption and
dishonesty were common-place and land speculation
and scandals were rife.
On the last Sunday in January 1790, a packet-boat
arrived in the Port Louis harbour from France,
flying a new flag, the Tricolour. It brought news of
the revolution in France. The colonists' enthusiasm
for the revolutionary principles of liberty,
equality and fraternity faltered when in 1796, two
agents of the Directoire, wearing splendid orange
cloaks, arrived from France and informed the
colonists that slavery was abolished. The news was
received with anger and the agents had to flee for
their lives.
The last French governor of Ile de France was
appointed by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1803 to bring the
colony back to order after 13 years of autonomy.
With such a task, it was inevitable that the
governor, General Charles Decaen, would be unpopular.
Charles Decaen curried favour with the elite by
allowing slavery and privateering, which were both
hugely profitable, to continue.
Decaen founded primary schools and the Lycee
Colonial which became Royal College. He extended
Government House, created Mahebourg near Grand Port
and encouraged intellectual societies and
agriculture development. He also codified the
Napoleonic laws which are still in force.
Under his governorship, Port Louis became Port
Napoleon and Mahebourg became Port Imperial..
Decaen found himself increasingly isolated from
France. The British were expanding their influence
in the Indian Ocean.On the 3 December 1810, the
British, under General Abercrombie, marched into
Port Napoleon where the French surrendered. Ile de
France, Port Napoleon and Port Imperial was reverted
to their former names, Mauritius, Port Louis and
Mahebourg. Soldiers were to be treated as civilians,
not as prisoners of war and were allowed to leave
the island. Settlers who did not want to stay under
a British administrator were permitted to return to
France with all their possessions.
In 1810, Robert Farquhar, aged 34 became the first
English governor. He announced that civil and
judicial administration would be unchanged. Those
who refused to take an oath of allegiance to the
British Crown ere asked to leave Mauritius within a
reasonable time. Under his governorship sugar
production increased, Port Louis was transformed
into a free port, roads were built and trade
flourished. He mixed with everyone and encouraged
younger generation to open dialogue with coloured
leaders.The British also preserved the island's
laws, customs, language, religion and property. The
treaty of Paris did restore Bourbon/Reunion island
in 1814 but the Ile de France, by now with its
former name of Mauritius, was confirmed as a British
possession.
Sugar production developed into a major foreign
income earner and the planters relied increasingly
on slave labour in spite of the 1807 Act abolishing
it in the British Empire. Judge Jeremie was
appointed Attorney-General in Mauritius and arrived
from England in 1832 to announce abolition without
indemnity to a hostile reception of sugar planters
and slave owners.
Slavery was finally abolished in 1835 but not before
the owners received £2,000,000 compensation from the
British.
Shortly afterwards thousands of Indians from Madras,
Calcutta and Bombay were encouraged to emigrate to
Mauritius with promises of a labour contract that
included a salary and accommodation and a passage
home. They arrived in dreadful conditions at Port
Louis where they were housed in temporary depots and
distributed to the sugar estates. They were paid
very little, subjected to harsh treatment and forced
to work long hours. These indentured labourers or
'coolies', were slaves by another name and were to
form the majority of the population.
Things improved only slightly when an Immigration
Department was established in the mid-nineteenth
century. In 1872, a Royal Commission was appointed
to look into the problems of Indian immigration.
Their living standards became more tolerable and
when immigration ceased in 1907 and another Royal
Commission made recommendations for social political
reform, many Indians had settled permanently in
Mauritius and indeed formed the majority of the
population.
Also in 1907, Mohandas Gandhi (later Mahatma Gandhi)
visited Maritius and as a result sent Manillal
Doctor, an Indian lawyer, to Port Louis in 1907 to
organise the indentured labourers who had no say in
politics and no civil rights. Only 2 percent of the
population were entitled to vote and the Indians
were totally underrepresented.
In 1936, the Labour Party was formed and persuaded
the Indians to take politician action and campaign
for better working conditions.
The Second World War brought infrastructural
development. The British based their fleet at Port
Louis and Grand Port, as well as building an airport
at Plaisance and a sea plane base at Baie du
Tombeau. A large telecommunication station was built
at Vacoas, although the first underwater telephone
cable, linking South Africa to Australia, had been
laid to Mauritius in 1901.
In the election held after the war, the Mauritius
Labour Party won the majority of seats in the
Legislative Council set up under the 1948
constitution. this success was repeated in 1953.
After the 1959 election (the first held following
the introduction of universal adult franchise),
Hindu doctor (later Sir) Seewoosagur Ramgoolam,
leader of the Mauritius labour Party became Chief
Minister, then Premier in 1965, holding the post
until 1982.
Mauritius became an independent country within the
Commonwealth of Nations in 1968, Queen Elizabeth II
as Head of State represented by a Governor General.
In 1971, social and industrial unrest led by the
Mouvement Militant Mauricien (MMM) resulted in a
state of emergency. The party's leaders, including
Paul Berenger, a Franco-Mauritian born in 1945, were
jailed for a year.
In the election of 1982, the MMM with Paul Berenger
as General Secretary and a 53 year old Hindu
British-trained lawyer, Anerood Jugnauth as
President, captured all 62 directly elected seats .
Anerood Jugnauth became Prime Minister with Berenger
as his Finance Minister.
In 1992, Mauritius became an independent republic
with the Commonwealth.
Since independence, Mauritius has changed
drastically from a sugar producing island to a newly
industrialised nation. For many, Mauritius was
synonymous with the dodo. Much of its success is
attributable to a policy of diversification from its
traditional one crop industry, sugar to tourism,
textile and agriculture. Mauritius has now the
distinction of being one of the most stable
countries in the developing world.
Mauritius is also promoted in holiday brochures as
one of those faraway places associated with the dodo
and desert island dreams. It is a country of diverse
cultures justifying the tourist office's claim to
being " the most cosmopolitan island in the sun"
with a smiling, natural and charming people.
Mauritius has an almost perfect year round climate
and hotels with excellent service, comfortable
accommodation and a full range of water and land
sports, dazzling white beaches, deep blue lagoons
and an enchanting mountain scenery.
deuxieme version
History Of Mauritius
Arab traders knew of Mauritius as early as the 10th
century but never stopped to settle it. Portuguese
naval explorers stumbled upon it in the wake of
Vasco de Gama's voyage around the Cape of Good Hope
in 1498. Still, apart from introducing pesky monkeys
and rats, the Portuguese did little to influence the
island. This was left to the next wave of
immigrants, the Dutch. In 1598, Vice Admiral
Wybrandt van Warwyck came ashore and claimed the
island for the Netherlands, christening it after his
ruler, Maurice, Prince of Orange and Count of
Nassau. It was another 40 years before the Dutch
began to settle the country, preferring instead to
use it as a supply base on the route to Java.
The colony, however, never really flourished, and
the Dutch departed for good in 1710, leaving in
their wake the extinction of the dodo and the
introduction of African slaves, Javan deer, wild
boar, tobacco and sugar cane.
Five years later, French captain Guillaume Dufresne
d'Arsal claimed the island, renamed it Īle de France
and gave it over to the French East India Company to
run as a trading base. Popular settlement began in
1721, and within 15 years the first sugar mill had
been built, along with a road network and hospital.
During the second half of the 18th century, the
island's capital, Port Louis, became a free trading
base and haven for corsairs - mercenary marines paid
by a country to plunder the ships of its enemies.
Tired of the competition, the British moved in on
the corsairs (and on Mauritius) in 1810. After an
initial defeat at the Battle of Vieux Grand Port,
the Brits landed at Cap Malheureux on the northern
coast and took the island.
The 1814 Treaty of Paris ceded ile de France,
Rodrigues and the Seychelles to the victors but
allowed Franco-Mauritians to retain their language,
religion, Napoleonic Code legal system and sugar
plantations. In 1835, the slaves were freed and the
labour force was supplemented by workers brought in
from China and India.
While the Franco-Mauritian plantations produced
wealthy sugar barons (as they do today), Indian
workers continued to be indentured by the thousands.
Through strength of numbers, Indians gradually
bolstered their say in the country's management,
aided in 1901 by a visit from Mahatma Gandhi. In
1936, the Labour
Party was founded to continue the struggle for
labourers' rights. The following year, their burden
was lightened by a new constitution granting the
vote to anyone over 21 who could sign their name.
Under the direction of Dr Seewoosagur Ramgoolam (who
was later knighted), membership swelled and the
party flourished.
Mauritius was granted independence from Britain on
12 March 1968, and Sir Ramgoolam was elected prime
minister, a title he retained for the next 13 years.
He was succeeded by a coalition of the leftist
Mouvement Militant Mauricien (MMM) and the Parti
Socialiste Mauricien, though tensions in the
parties' upper ranks rattled the infrastructure
throughout their reign. In 1986, three Mauritian MPs
were caught at Amsterdam's airport with heroin in
their suitcases, and the resulting inquiry
implicated other politicians in drug money and led
to several resignations.
Mauritius officially became a republic in 1992. Sir
Ramgoolam's grandson, Navin Ramgoolam, won the
elections in 1995 and led the country in its pursuit
of prosperity until September 2000, when new
elections were won by an alliance of the Socialist
Militant Party and the Militant Movement - the
former's Anerood Jugnath will be prime minister
until 2003, when he will be replaced by the latter's
Paul Berenger, who'll be the first non-Hindu to hold
the office since the country gained its
independence.
Tensions between the Creole population, descended
from former slaves, and the Indo-Mauritian majority,
exploded in 1999. Popular reggae singer Joseph
'Kaya' Topize was arrested during a rally to
legalize marijuana and died of a skull fracture
while in police custody. Riots broke out across the
island, particularly in Port Louis
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