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BONIN ISLANDS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 208 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BONIN ISLANDS  , called by the

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Japanese 'OGASAWARA-JIMA, a chain of small islands belonging to
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Japan, stretching nearly due north and south, a little east of 142 E., and from 26° 35' to 27° 45' N., about 500 M. from the mainland of Japan . They number twenty, according to Japanese investigations, and have a coast-
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line of 174.65 M. and a superficies of 28.82 sq. m . Only ten of them have any appreciable
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size, and these are named—commencing from the north—Muko-shima (Bridegroom Island), Nakadachi-shima (Go-between Islands), Yome-shima (Bride Island), Ototo-jima (Younger-
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brother Island), Ani-shima (Elder-brother Island), Chichi-jima (
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Father Island), Haha-jima (
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Mother Island), Mei-jima (Niece Island), Ani-jima (Elder-
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sister Island) and Imoto-jima (Younger-sister Island) .
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European geographers have been accustomed to
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divide the islands into three groups for purposes of nomenclature, calling the
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northern
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group the Parry Islands, the central the Beechey Islands and the
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southern the Coffin or Bailey Islands . The second largest of all, Chichi-jima, in Japanese cartography was called Peel Island in 1827 by Captain Beechey, and the same officer gave the name of Stapleton Island to the Ototo-jima of the Japanese, and that of Buckland Island to their Ani-jima . To
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complete this account of Captain Beechey's nomenclature, it may be added that he called a large
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bay on the south of Peel Island Fitton Bay, and a bay on the south-west of Buckland Island Walker Bay ?
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Port Lloyd, the chief anchorage (situated on Peel Island), is considered by Commodore Perry—who visited the islands in 1853 and strongly urged the establishment of a
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United States coaling station there —to have been formerly the
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crater of a
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volcano from which the surrounding hills were thrown up, the entrance to the harbour being a fissure through which
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lava used to pour into the sea . The islands are, indeed, plainly volcanic in their nature .
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History.—The diversity of nomenclature indicated above Referring to the Japanese custom of employing a go-between to arrange a
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marriage . 2 These details are taken from The Bonin Islands by Russell Robertson, formerly H.B.M. consul in
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Yokohama, who visited the islands in 1875.suggests that the ownership of the islands was for some time doubtful . According to Japanese annals they were discovered towards the close of the 16th century, and added to the
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fief of a Daimyo, Ogasawa Sadayori, whence the name Ogasawarajima . They were also called Bonin Jima (corrupted by foreigners into Bonin) because of their being without (bu) inhabitants (nin) .

Effective occupation did not take

place, however, and communications with the islands ceased altogether in 1635, as was a natural consequence of the Japanese government's veto against the construction of sea-going vessels . In 1728 fitful communication was restored by the then representative of the Ogasawara
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family, only to be again interrupted until 1861, when an unsuccessful attempt was made to establish a Japanese colony at Port Lloyd . Meanwhile, Captain Beechey visited the islands in the " Blossom," assigned names to some of them, and published a description of their features . Next a small party consisting of two
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British subjects, two
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American citizens, and a Dane, sailed from the Sandwich Islands for Port Lloyd in 183o, taking with them some Hawaiian natives . These colonists hoisted the British flag on Peel Island (Chichi-jima), and settled there . When Commodore Perry arrived in 1853, there were on Peel Island
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thirty-one inhabitants, four being
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English, four American, one Portuguese and the rest natives of the Sandwich Islands, the Ladrones, &c.; and when Mr Russell Robertson visited the place in 1875, the colony had grown to sixty-nine, of whom only five were pure whites . Mr Robertson found them without
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education, without religion, without
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laws and without any
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system of government, but living comfortably on clearings of cultivated
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land . English was the language of the settlers, and they regarded themselves as a British colony . But in 1861 the British government renounced all claim to the islands in recognition of Japan's right of possession . There is now
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regular steam communication; the affairs of the islands are duly administered, and the population has grown to about 4500 . There are no mountains of any considerable height in the Ogasawara Islands, but the scenery is hilly with occasional bold crags . The vegetation is almost tropically luxuriant—palms, wild pineapples, and ferns growing profusely, and the valleys being filled with wild beans and patches of taro .

Mr Robertson catalogues a number of valuable timbers that are obtained there, among them being Tremana,

cedar, rose-wood, iron-wood (red and white), box-wood, sandal and white oak . The kekop tree, the orange, the
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laurel, the
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juniper, the wild
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cactus, the
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curry plant, wild sage and celery flourish . No minerals have been discovered . The shores are covered with
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coral; earthquakes and tidal waves are frequent, the latter not taking the form of bores, but of a sudden steady rise and equally sudden fall in the level of the sea; the
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climate is rather tropical than temperate, but sickness is almost unknown among the residents . (F .

End of Article: BONIN ISLANDS
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