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Tahiti History and Culture

Culture

The Tahitians of the modern era have inherited a rich culture from their Maohi ancestors. Oral history recounts the adventures of gods and warriors in colorful legends where javelin throwing throwing was the sport of the gods, surf riding was favored by the kings, and strongmen competed in canoe races and stone lifting as a show of pure strength.


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Marae
The open-air sanctuaries called marae were once the center of power in ancient Polynesia. These stone religious sites, akin to temples, hosted the important events of the times such as the worship of the gods, peace treaties, celebrations of war, and the launch of voyages to colonize distant lands.

Heiva i Tahiti

The greatest Polynesian cultural event in the world. This celebration ancient traditions and competitions has been the most important event in Tahiti for over 125 years. Visitors are encouraged to join in the celebration from late June to late July every year and discover daily and nightly events and displays. Tahitians gather in Papeete from many islands to display their crafts and compete in traditional sporting and musical events.


Marae
 
Heiva i Tahiti

Tattoo
The word tatau originated in Tahiti. The legend of Tohu, the god of tattoo, describes painting all the oceans’ fish in colors and patterns. In Polynesian culture, tattoos have long been considered signs of beauty, and in earlier times were an important part of the culture in signaling adolescence.

Music and Dance
The beauty of today’s Tahitian dance testifies to its resilience in Polynesian culture. In ancient times, dances were linked with all aspects of life. One would dance to welcome a visitor, pray, challenge an enemy, and seduce a mate. Today's dance is still accompanied by traditional  instruments such as thunderous drums and conch shells. Modern Tahitian music is popular worldwide with a sound that blends Polynesian rhythm and Western melody.

Handcrafts
The skills of the ancestors’ artistry are kept sacred and passed on by both the “mamas” - guardians of tradition and matriarchs of Tahitian society - and by the skilled craftsmen. Items include weaving, quilting, wooden sculptures and bowls, drums, tapa, carvings, and hand-dyed pareu.


Tahiti Handcraft
 
Tahiti Music and Dance

Canoes
Aboard massive, double-hulled outrigger canoes called tipairua, Polynesians navigated the vast ocean by stars and winds and creates new civilizations in their wake. Today, the canoe continue to play an important role in everyday Tahitian life and is honored in colorful races and festivals throughout the islands.

Flowers
Tropical flowers seem to be everywhere on the islands, particularly in the hair of Tahitians. The Tiare Tahiti flower is used in leis for greeting arriving visitors and returning family. Tradition holds that, if taken, women and men wear a flower behind their left ear.


Tahiti Canoe
 
Tahiti Pareu

History
Around 4000 BC, a great migration began from Southeast Asia across open ocean to settle the Pacific Islands. Many researchers conclude that Tonga and Samoa were settled around 1300 BC and from here, colonization voyages were launched to the Marquesas Islands in about 200 BC. Over the next several centuries, great migrations to colonize all the Tahitian islands and virtually the entire South Pacific took place.

This area is now called the “Polynesian Triangle” and includes Hawaii to the north, Easter Island to the southeast, and New Zealand to the southwest. As a result of these migrations, the native Hawaiians and the Maoris of New Zealand all originate from common ancestors and speak a similar language collectively known as Maohi.

 

The era of European exploration began in the 1500s when “ships without outriggers” began to arrive. In 1521, Magellan spotted the atoll of Pukapuka in what is now the Tuamotu Atolls and, in 1595, the Spanish explorer Mendaña visited Fatu Hiva Island in the Marquesas. More than 170 years later, Captain Samuel Wallis aboard the H.M.S. Dolphin was the first to visit the island of Tahiti during his journey to discover terra australis incognita, a mythical landmass below the equator thought to balance the northern hemisphere. Wallis named the island of Tahiti “King George III Island” and claimed it for England. Soon after and unaware of Wallis’ arrival, French navigator Louis-Antoine de Bougainville, landed on the opposite side of Tahiti and claimed it for the King of France.

European fascination with the islands grew as news spread of both the mutiny of Capt. William Bligh’s crew aboard the H.M.S. Bounty and of tales of the beauty and nature of the Tahitian people. Knowledge of Tahiti and the South Pacific continued to grow as Capt. James Cook brought back illustrations of Tahitian flora and fauna and the first map of the islands of the Pacific. In the 1800s, the arrival of whalers, British missionaries, and French military expeditions forever changed the way of life on Tahiti and created a French-British rivalry for control of the islands.

The Pomare Dynasty ruled Tahiti until 1847 when Queen Pomare finally accepted French protection of the islands of Tahiti and Moorea.
Following the queen’s death, King Pomare V was persuaded to cede Tahiti and most of its dependencies to France. In 1957, all the islands of of Tahiti were reconstituted as the overseas French territory called French Polynesia. French Polynesia is now a French Overseas Country with self-governing powers and a mission to provide for her people though commerce and investments. 
Useful Links

 
Tahitian Tattoo
Moorea
- James Samuela's Moorea Tattoo - The Art of Polynesian Tattooing
 




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