Mauritius (French: Maurice),
officially the Republic of Mauritius (French: République
de Maurice) is an island nation in the Indian Ocean about
2,000 kilometres (1,200 mi) off the southeast coast of the African
continent. The country includes the islands of Mauritius,Rodrigues,
560 kilometres (350 mi) east of the principal island, the islands of Agaléga and Saint Brandon.
The islands of Mauritius, Rodrigues and the French department of Réunion 170 km
(110 mi) form part of the Mascarene
Islands. The area of the country is 2040 km2, its
capital isPort Louis.
The first Portuguese explorers
found no indigenous people living on the island in 1507. The Dutch settled on
the island in 1598 and abandoned it in 1710. Five years later, the island
became a French colony and was renamed the Isle de France. The French developed
extensive sugar plantations on the island, and the Mauritian
Creole language came into existence during their rule. The
British took control of Mauritius in 1810 during the Napoleonic
Wars. The country remained under British rule until it became an
independent Commonwealth realm on 12 March 1968 and a
republic within the Commonwealth on 12 March 1992.
The country's populace is composed of
several ethnicities, mostly people of Indian, African, French,
and Chinese descent. Most Mauritians are
multilingual; English, French, Creole and
Chinese languages are used.
The Mauritian Constitution is based on
the Westminster model. The head of state is
the President but constitutional power is
vested in thePrime Minister who is the head of government. Mauritius is highly ranked
for democracy, economic and political freedom.
The island of Mauritius was the only
home of the Dodo bird.
The bird became extinct fewer than eighty years after its discovery.
Etymology
The
first historical evidence of the existence of an island now known as Mauritius
is on a map produced by the Italian cartographer
Alberto Cantino in 1502. From this, it appears that Mauritius was first
named Dina Arobi during the Middle Agesby Arab sailors,
the first people to visit the island. In 1507 Portuguese sailors visited the
uninhabited island. The island appears with a Portuguese name Cirne on
early Portuguese maps, probably because of the presence of the flightless
bird, the dodo which was abundant at that time. Another Portuguese
sailor, Dom Pedro
Mascarenhas, gave the name Mascarenes to
the Archipelago. In 1598 a Dutch squadron under Admiral Wybrand
Van Warwyck landed at Grand Port and named the island Mauritius,
in honour of Prince Maurice van Nassau, stadhouder of
the Dutch Republic. Later the island became a
French colony and was renamed Isle de France. On 3 December 1810 the
French formally surrendered after theNapoleonic
wars. Under British rule, the island's name reverted to Mauritius /.
Mauritius is also commonly known as Mauriceand Île Maurice in
French, Moris in creole and मॉरिशस in Hindi.[10]
History
Main article: History of Mauritius
The
island of Mauritius was unknown and uninhabited before its first recorded visit
during the Middle Ages by Arab sailors,
who named it Dina Arobi. In 1507 Portuguese sailors
visited the uninhabited island and established a visiting base. Diogo Fernandes Pereira, a Portuguese
navigator, was the first European to land in Mauritius. He named the island
'Ilha do Cirne'. The Portuguese did not stay long as they were not interested
in these islands.
In
1598 a Dutch squadron under Admiral Wybrand Van Warwyck landed at Grand Port and
named the island "Mauritius" after Prince Maurice van Nassau of
the Dutch Republic, the ruler of his country. The
Dutch established a small colony on the island in 1638, from which they
exploited ebony trees
and introduced sugar cane, domestic
animals and deer. It was from here that Dutch navigator Abel Tasman set
out to discover the western part of Australia. The first Dutch settlement
lasted only twenty years. Several attempts were made —subsequently, but the
settlements never developed enough to produce dividends and the Dutch abandoned
Mauritius in 1710.
France,
which already controlled neighbouring Île Bourbon (now Réunion),
took control of Mauritius in 1715 and renamed it Isle de France. The 1735 arrival of French
governor Bertrand-François Mahé de La
Bourdonnais coincided with development of a prosperous economy
based on sugar production. Mahé de La Bourdonnais established Port Louis as
a naval base and a shipbuilding centre. Under his governorship, numerous
buildings were erected, a number of which are still standing today — these
include part of Government House, the Château de Mon Plaisir and the Line
Barracks, the headquarters of the police force. The island was under the
administration of the French East India Company which
maintained its presence until 1767.
From
1767 to 1810, except for a brief period during the French
Revolution when the inhabitants set up a government virtually
independent of France, the island was controlled by officials appointed by the French
Government. Jacques-Henri Bernardin de
Saint-Pierre visited the island and wrote Paul et
Virginie, a successful novel situated on the island. In particular Charles Mathieu Isidore Decaen,
a successful General in the French Revolutionary Wars and, in
some ways, a rival of Napoléon I,
ruled as Governor of Isle de France and
Réunion from 1803 to 1810. British navalcartographer and
explorer Matthew Flinders was arrested and detained
by the General Decaen on the island, in contravention of an order from
Napoléon. During the Napoleonic Wars, Mauritius became a base from
which French corsairs organised successful raids
on British commercial ships. The raids continued until 1810, when aRoyal Navy expedition
led by Commodore Josias Rowley, R.N.,
an Anglo-Irish aristocrat, was sent to capture the island.
Despite winning the Battle of Grand Port, the only French
naval victory over the British during these wars, the French surrendered to a British invasion at
Cap Malheureux three months later. They formally surrendered on 3 December
1810, on terms allowing settlers to keep their land and property and to use the
French language and law of France in criminal and civil matters. Under British
rule, the island's name reverted to Mauritius.
Champ
de Mars, Port Louis, 1880.
The
British administration, which began with Sir Robert Farquhar as Governor, was followed by rapid social and
economic changes. Slavery was abolished in 1835. The planters received two
million pounds sterling in compensation for the loss of their slaves who had
been imported from Africa and Madagascar during the French occupation. The abolition of slavery had important
impacts on Mauritius' society, economy and population. The planters brought a
large number of indentured labourers from India to work in
the sugar cane fields. Between 1834 and 1921, around half a million indentured
labourers were present on the island. They worked on sugar estates, factories,
in transport and on construction sites. Additionally, the British brought 8,740 Indian soldiers
to the island.
At
the outbreak of World War II in 1939, many Mauritians
volunteered to serve under the British flag in Africa and the Near East,
fighting against the German and Italian armies. Some went to England to become
pilots and ground staff in the RAF. Mauritius was never really threatened, but several
British ships were sunk outside Port-Louis by German submarines in 1943.
The
first general elections were held on 9 August 1948 and were won by the Labour Party. This party, led by Guy
Rozemont, bettered its position in 1953, and, on the strength of the election
results, demanded universal suffrage. Constitutional conferences
were held in London in 1955 and 1957, and the ministerial system was
introduced. Voting took place for the first time on the basis of universal
adult suffrage on 9 March 1959. The general election was again won by the
Labour Party, led this time by Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam. A
Constitutional Review Conference was held in London in 1961 and a programme of
further constitutional advance was established. Two eminent British academics, Richard
Titmussand James Meade, published a report which dwelt
upon the social problems caused by overpopulation and the monoculture of sugar
cane. This led to an intense campaign to halt the population explosion, and the
1960s registered a sharp decline in population growth.
In
1965, the Chagos Archipelago was split from the
territory of Mauritius to form British Indian Ocean Territory.
A General election took place on 7 August 1967, and the Labour Party and its
two allies obtained the majority of seats. Mauritius adopted a new
constitution, independence was proclaimed on 12 March 1968, and the country
became a member of the Commonwealth realm. Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam
became the first prime minister of Mauritius. In 1969, the opposition party Mauritian Militant Movement (MMM) led
by Paul Berenger was founded. Later in 1971,
the MMM, backed by unions, called a series of strikes in the port which caused
a state of emergency in the country, and the leader was imprisoned.
Mauritius
was proclaimed a republic within the Commonwealth twenty four years after
independence on 12 March 1992.
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