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History
The first people to set
foot on the island of Mauritius were Arab sailors and
merchants. Arabs merchant ships have been sailing the
Indian Ocean for centuries. Important trading routes
linked the east coast of Africa and Madagascar with
the Arabian peninsula, India and Indonesia.
The Mascarenes Islands
were a long way off the usual trading routes of Arab
or Indian sailors. Perhaps the islands were discovered
when a cyclone (hurricane) caught an Arab dhow unaware
and pushed it towards Mauritius. Evidence that points
to the discovery of the Mascarenes Archipelago by Arab
seamen comes from copies of Portuguese maps of the early
16th century that depict a group of three small islands
south east of Madagascar that bear Arabic names.
In 1498, the Portuguese
explorer Vasco Da Gama succeeded in rounding the cape
of Good Hope and called at various Arab-Swahili cities
along the East African coast on his way northwards.
It was at one of those city ports that an Arab or Indian
pilot showed him the way to Goa, India. Within the next
ten years, numerous Portuguese expeditions explored
the Indian Ocean, visiting Madagascar, the Seychelles
and the Comoros Islands.
Around 1507, the Portuguese
seaman Fernandez Pereira sighted Mauritius and named
it Cerne. The group of islands consisting of Mauritius,
Reunion and Rodrigues were given the names of Mascarenes
after the Portuguese captain, Pero Mascarenhas.
The Portuguese never attempted
to settle on any of the Mascarene islands. They were
more interested in protecting their trade routes with
India and therefore established settlements along the
coast of Mozambique instead.
Therefore the first Europeans to have visited Mauritius
were the Portuguese at the beginning of the sixteenth
century (most probably in 1510). However, the Dutch
who settled in the island in 1598 named it Mauritius
after Prince Maurice of Nassau. Among other things,
the Dutch introduced sugar cane and the Java deer before
leaving in 1710.
During French colonial
rule, from 1767 to 1810, the capital and main port,
Port Louis, became an important centre for trade, privateering,
and naval operations against the British. In addition,
French planters established sugarcane estates and built
up their fortunes at the expense of the labour of slaves
brought from Africa. The French patois, or colloquial
language, which evolved among these slaves and their
freed descendants, referred to as Creole, has become
the everyday language shared by most of the island's
inhabitants. French is used in the media and literature,
and the Franco-Mauritian descendants of the French settlers
continue to dominate the sugar industry and economic
life of modern Mauritius.
The British captured the island in 1810 and gave up
sovereignty when Mauritius became independent in 1968.
During this period, the French plantation aristocracy
maintained its economic, and, to a certain degree, its
political prominence. The British abolished slavery
but provided for cheap labour on the sugar estates by
bringing nearly 500,000 indentured workers from the
Indian subcontinent. The political history of Mauritius
in the twentieth century revolves around the gradual
economic and political empowerment of the island's Indian
majority.
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