Rare Books & Special Collections. Part II: Resources for Central Pacific Islands history. Back to Maude Contents Summary. Group . Gilbert Islands (General): from. Western Pacific High Commission Archives & other sources to. Islands: from Western Pacific High Commission Archives.
Beru und jene Damen Italy Che casino, ragazzi! World-wide (English title) Beru and These Women See also Full Cast and Crew One of the first actions black families took was to withdraw women's labor from fieldwork. The Freedmen's Bureau: Reconstructing the American South after the Civil War (2005) Cimbala, Paul A.
Cook Islands (general), Northern Cook Islands, Palmerston Island. Suwarrow Island, Tokelau Islands, Marshall Islands, Caroline.
Islands, Tikopia Island. Subject filings (1): from Western Pacific High Commission. Archives & other sources.
Labour Trade, Hawaiian- Fiji relations, Western Pacific High. Commission (General), Native Laws: Central Pacific Islands, Naval. Matters (General), Biographical Data (by person). Trade. Whaling, Beche- de- mer, Pearling,see also. Islands (by Groups)Ellice Islands, Phoenix Islands, Nauru Island, miscellaneous. Guano Islandssee also. The Tahitian Pork Trade 1.
Beru And These Women Other Resources: Other information Total number of members who have this title in their: Collection: 0 Wish list: 1 There is 1 label for this title. Things you can do: Update this title Add new label to Barclay 71 308 Country France EP. TED Talk Subtitles and Transcript: When Colin Stokes' 3-year-old son caught a glimpse of 'Star Wars,' he was instantly obsessed. 6:39 And do these women talk to each other at any point in the movie? 6:44 And is their conversation about something other. Beru's Secret Life Chapter One: The Stranger Beru knew the feelings she felt were wrong. But how could she deny them when she knew they were there. She did love Owen Lars. She loved him enough to marry him but her heart would always belong to the.
The Tahitian Pork Trade 1. Pitcairn Island: references & bibliographical. Pitcairn Islands. General)From the Mutiny to the landing (1. Landing to the. death of John Adams (1.
Naval Correspondence on the. Guano Islands and the Peruvian Slave Trade (transcribed from. Ward's thesis on . Subject Filing (2) from miscellaneous sources.
Discoveries, Peruvian Labour Trade, Boki's Expedition to the New. Hebrides, Hawaiian Protectorate over the Gilbert Islands. Peruvian Labour Trade section removed to separate file. Boston Mission Correspondence: from A. Whittle as Surgeon of the USS. Vincennes & Peacock 1.
Le. Hunte, Judicial Commissioner for the Western Pacific. Sandalwood. General, Fiji, Marquesas, New Hebrides, other localities. Early Trade. General, Traders & ship owners, Shipping, List of ships' logs. Ships'. Captains. Polynesia - Eastern.
Tahiti & the Windward Islands of the Society Group, the Leeward. Islands of the Society Group, the Marquesas Islands, the Tuamotu. Islands. 2. 0. Flags of the Pacific. Islands. General, Hawaii, Tahiti, Society Islands, Mangareva, Austral.
Islands, Tonga, Cook Islands, Samoa, Niue, Fiji, Gilbert Islands. Elllice Islands, Tokelau Islands, New Zealand.
Indexes, microfilm contents lists & special. Newspapers & periodicals, microfilms, bibliographic lists on special. Charles St Julian, John Webster. Sikaiana. Sections III and IV of Benjamin Boyd and the South Sea Islandssee also no. Gilbert Islands (General): from.
Western Pacific High Commission Archives & other sources. Pitcairn Island. (General)From the death of John Adams (1.
Fiji, Tonga & Samoa. Subject Filings (3): from miscellaneous sources. O'Connell and the discovery of Ponape, Bligh and the breadfruit. Alexander Mackonochie. Kuoko'a. Translations from the Hawaiian mission periodical 1. Articles & papers: published & unpublished typescripts. Sabatier, Sous I'equateur du.
Pacifique: Les iles Gilbert et la Mission Catholique, 1. Hawaii, Ostmikronesien, Samoa by Augustin Kramer. Notes on the Line Islands. Addresses & reports: personal .
Source material in United Kingdom Libraries: notes. Guano Islands: biography of J. D. Arundel by Aimee. Bright. 36. London Missionary Society Archives. Abstracts & excerpts from the material relating to the Gilbert. Islands, compiled by Dr. Gilbert Islands (General): from.
Western Pacific High Commission. Archives & other sources 1. Maiden Island. 4.
Articles & papers: published. Part 3. 4. 2.* Bibliographies. Bibliographies. & reference lists: part 2. Gilbert & Ellice Islands.
A/1 Gilbert Islands (general)A/2 Ellice Islands (general)A/3 Makin & Butaritari. A/4 Marakei & Abaiang. A/5 Tarawa & Maiana. A/6 Abemama, Kuria & Aranuka.
A/7 Nonouti . Phoenix Islands. B/1 Phoenix Islands (general)B/2 Canton & Enderbury. B/3 Phoenix, Birnie & Mc. Kean. . Line Islands.
C/l Line Islands (general)C/2 Palmyra & Kingman Reef. C/3 Fanning & Washington. C/4 Christmas. C/5 Caroline, Vostok & Flint. C/6 Maiden, Starbuck & Jarvis. D. Other Groups & Islands.
D/1 Tokelau Islands (general)D/2 Cook Islands (general)D/3 Nassau. D/4 Pitcairn. D/5 Henderson, Oeno & Ducie.
D/6 Wake & Johnston. D/7 Ocean Island & Nauru . Walkup on. Butaritari, 2.
November 1. 90. 0 and 2. August 1. 90. 1. Subject Files. E/l Cruise of the . History of the Central Pacific. F/l Discovery of the Islands (general)F/la Spanish discoveries.
F/lb Russian discoveries. F/lc Discovery of the Phoenix Islands. F/2 Castaways & beachcombers. F/3 Whaling. F/4 Wrecks & attacks on ships. F/5 Traders *F/6 Trading vessels *F/7 Trading firms. F/8 Mission (Boston)F/9 Mission (L. M. S.)F/1. 0 Mission (R.
C.) *F/l 1 Labour Trade. F/l. 2 The Guano industry.
F/l. 3 American claims to the Islands* initially these listed. Group . Bibliographies of the Central Pacific. F2. Items on the Gilbert and Ellice. Islands. F3. Pacific History: bibliographies, indexes and courses. F4. Miscellaneous papers relating to Pacific History. F5. Miscellaneous material on the Pacific Islands. F6. Bibliographies and indexes of the Gilbert and Ellice.
Islands. F7. Miscellaneous papers relating to Pitcairn Islandconsists of typescript and mss drafts of Maude's . Gilbert Islands: oral history. Detailed listing by Maude held with the Series. Notebooks and other. Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony, Pitcairn.
Tonga and other islands. Note that these files do. Beru; rather they were created by. Maude while District Officer based on Beru. Gardens and vitamins, (empty folder, title crossed. Polynesian Society.
Native Co- operative Societies. Gilbertese cross- words, undated( 6) Honolulu Conference on Education. Notices and announcements. Line Islands Settlement Scheme. Revised Island Regulations.
Medical Reports . Gilbertese words for Dictionary. Personnel - Transfer to Zanzibar & re- transfer.
Gilbert and Ellice Islands. Maude, with some un- numbered files added.
Maneaba plans, Clan Lists and Kainga. Maps. 4. The Maneaba - Miscellaneous Notes. Banaba Part I includes letter from T.
Population and Vital Statistics - Part I. Population and Vital Statistics - Part II. Social Anthropology - Miscellaneous Notes. Includes notes on partition of lands, justice, dances (Beru). Nonouti chant. 13. Games - including Banaban games. Material Culture - Miscellaneous Notes.
Fishing, Fish Hooks and Fish Lures . Bibliography of Works on the Colony . Gilbert and Ellice Islands. Numbered notebooks on Gilbertese material culture, tradition. In English and Gilbertese. Relationship and Rites de Passage (on tinaba, eiriki, marriage. Two Banaban stories (dated May 1.
Ngai Nei Beteua). Gilbertese myths and legends Book III8. Banaban fishing methods (undated, unknown hand)9. Miscellaneous Banaban notes - Ete(includes nine Banaban words with Gilbertese equivalents)1. Nikunau Island - Nei- n Riiki and the coming from Samoa. Notes on Banaban ethnography(on the terraces of Tabwewa and Tabiang; also scraps .
Notes on the ethnography of Nui island. Notes on the ethnography of Onotoa island. See also Grimble notebooks in Part. I, Series L4. Un- numbered notebooks - . Language and culture. Gilbertese words and meanings not found in Bingham's.
Gilbertese words and phrases. Unidentified notebooks (mostly in Gilbertese, one Tuvaluan?, and.
Maude's hand, re clans, maneaba, genealogy, oral. Notebooks and files - . Administrative and Lands matters. Reference notes on administrative matters. Ditto on people, places, protocol, services . Administrative record, including draft copies of reports. January. 1. 93. 4- 1.
April 1. 93. 8. Administrative record (mainly legal matters), 6- 2. June. 1. 93. 4 . Charge book, September 1. October 1. 93. 5.
Notes in Gilbertese in. Native government officials: records of service. Administrative notebooks, primarily on land matters. Untitled - also on lands to be partitioned . Includes. genealogies, notes on adoption as nati; also notes on tattooing on.
Banaba. 4. Untitled - complaints and depositions, land claims . At. back of volume, evidence of witnesses in trial of Koru for. Untitled - notes on inspection of villages and houses ? Also (in Maude's hand) notes on Pitcairn Island. Untitled - includes land disputes .
Lands Commission minutes . Lake. May- July 1.
Bibliography of Banaba 1. Documents relating to the Japanese occupation/administration of. Ocean Island October 1.
May 1. 94. 3: circular notices issued in. Japanese and Gilbertese, and translation of these in 1. Reid. Cowell. 3. Tabwewa account of the coming of the Beru settlers. Miscellaneous notes on Banaban social organisation and. Published and typescript material on the archaeology and history.
Ocean Island c 1. Short history of the Banabans by Stacey M. Issues of Bwanaan Rabi no. September 1. 99. 3 and.
Banaba/Ocean Island News no. Includes two original letters from Anetipa to Grimble, March. Anetipa by A. K. Raine Island. Correspondence re history and restoration of the. Raine Island Beacon, historical sources and notes on the Island's.
George and Ann(i. Eliza Ellis and J. T. 1. 98. 8- 8. 9. Source materials - .
Photographic copies of records and manuscripts. Beechey. see also. Part 1 Series A file. Paper negatives of photographs (from the 1. Part II Section 1. Photographic. copies of records and manuscripts (un- numbered items). Proceedings of a meeting to establish The NSW Society for.
South Sea islands.. Campbell Macquarie in Fiji 1. March 1. 81. 5; trip of ship Endeavour 5. October 1. 81. 6); extract from Camille de Roquefeuil A voyage round. Shipley Sketches. Pacific 1. 85. 1; extract from the journal of John A. Plank, commander of barque Maria.
Items on Gilbert and Ellice Islands 1. Gilbert Islands and. WPHCunidentified cuttings book; extract from Viaggio di. Caracciolo 1. 88. German and Russian printed sources on Nauru 1.
P in Samoan. Herald June- Sept. Extracts from journal of Edward Robarts New Zealand. Herald 3 January 1. Samuel Marsden Sydney Morning Herald 2.
August. 1. 97. 7 Bully Hayes Wellington School Journal 1.
Beru - Republic of Kiribati. BERU ISLANDKIRIBATIINTRODUCTIONBeru is. Republic of Kiribati. It is the cradle for many. Kiribati culture. This includes the first mwaneaba.
Tabontebike, and the Kiribati ancestor Nareau who is said to have originated from Beru. Beru is a. reef at 1 degree 2. S latitude and is 1. NE- SE) and 4. 7.
NE- SE). The centre of the reef is a shallow depression, Nuka Lagoon. Aranuka in being between a reef island and a true atoll. As part of the. Southern group of the Gilberts (Kiribati) with Tabiteuea (9. Nikunau. either side, and 4. Southeast of Tarawa Atoll. The land mass. occupies fully a third or more of the shallow reef structure and is positioned mostly. Northeast edge of the reef.
The lagoon which is mostly towards the north end. A small lagoon or. A 3 kilometre long barachois with extensive. Nuka lagoon. A causeway is present across the.
The 1. 99. 0 census shows there are nine. Beru; shown below with their population: Autukia 2. Tabiang 5. 18. Aoniman 1. Rongorongo 4. 20. Nuka 4. 20. Teteirio 6.
Taubukiniberu 1. 30. Eriko 2. 80. Taboiaki 5. There is a. total area of 1.
Republic of Kiribati's citizens. There were 5. 39 households with 1,5. Most islanders are. Protestant (2,1. 30) and Catholics are the next largest religious group (7. At the time. of census there were 4 Tuvaluans, 5 Europeans, and 3 of other nationality. Islanders. were employed and 4.
Beru is represented by two elected. Members of Parliament. The population. seems to have been a fairly static. Maude considers that the estimate given by trader. Handy to the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions in 1.
He reported Beru with a population of 2,5. In 1. 90. 1, Captain Tupper of HMS Pylades gave the population as 2,2. MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF BERUAccording to. Tabuariki, and his. Beru. However, he is. Beru his home island in his later life and many claim that Beru.
In a. traditional story of the creation, Nareau having created Samoa then created people. Beru represented by Taburimai and Riki who were the first man and his wife. Settlement. of Beru could have sprung from the disastrous war in the 3rd century AD when. Savea, a great Samoan chief drove out the navigators and migrants who had settled there in. They scattered across the Pacific, some along the old migration route. Gilberts told in the story of the 'Tree of Life'. The story implies the migrants.
Gilberts were inhabited at the. Traditionally told story of the coming of Tematawarebwe to Beru in.
AD 1. 40 was related by the elders of Beru. Very large. numbers of families in the Gilberts can trace ancestry from Beru. It was from this island.
Kaitu set out on a mission of blatant conquest sometime around 1. He. took his strategist and divinator Uakeia from Nikunau and an army of 6. This canoe was described as. Tabiteuea. There, the islanders. Kaitu consulted Uakeia who consulted his. These were probably 3. Uakeia was clever and advised a strategy that put the battleground at the gap.
Then Kaitu's army spent an entire day and night. As dawn came, Kaitu's army made as much of a. Tabiteueans could see the terrifying sights of the Beru. They fled to their canoes and Kaitu continued his advance up the.
One of the Beru chiefs, Kourabi, had a grandfather and uncle who lived at Temanoku. Tekabwebwe and these two northern villages were left undisturbed.
Another man from. Beru named Tabora had his land and the place where he caught crabs untouched.
Next the. invaders went to Nonouti where rumours of the Beru giants had preceded them. Tabiria. queen of the southern part welcomed the invaders and was spared any plunderings. Further. north, people fled in terror and the army took what they wanted. Within a few weeks, Kaitu. Uakeia and his men took every island as far north as Abaiang and Marakei without.
The story is. told that the northernmost atolls of Butaritari and Makin combined forces and made. Such a united force might well have defeated Kaitu but.
Mangkia, a young man of Butaritari, got tired of waiting and took a. Marakei only. to find that Kaitu had returned to Tarawa. Mangkia continued onwards and found Kaitu's.
Taratai. Gilbertese formality meant that. Kaitu meant to war. Butaritari and if the matter could be settled . The men at. Beru could see they were surrounded by Mangkia's hand- picked companions standing just.
They did not wish to see a victory celebration. Mangkia, they agreed not to invade. On the conquered islands, a large percentage.
Kaitu and his chiefs. This invasion. may account for the uniformity in tradition and the social organization throughout the. Kaitu is also credited with conquering Nui in the Ellice Group. Tuvalu) and may account for a Gilbertese . There lived. Nei Anginimaeao, the child of Nareau, at Tabiang on the northen end of this land. Auriaria lay with Nei. Anginimaeao: two children were born.
The first- born was called Te Antimaomata (the half. Na Boborau (the Traveller). After those children were. Auriaria said to his wife, 'Woman, let us go to my kainga (house- place). Banaba'. She prevented him not: they arose and got up on their canoe named. Tabera- ni- kai- ni- buti- ni- Beru (Summit- of- tree- of- swiftness- of- Beru). When they arrived at Banaba.
Nan Tebubu, Kouteba, Namakaina, Nang. Kabutia, Nei Teborata, Na Manenimate; and their leader (mataniwi) was Nei Anginimaeao. It. was these who portioned out the land, and lived in the three places Tabiang, Uma and. Buakonikai. Their children live there to this day; and the fourth place is Tabwewa, where. Tabakea and Tituabine, who remained on Banaba when Auriaria and. Nareau went voyaging. The first child of Nei.
Anginimaeao was Te Antimaomata. His seed was Te Bunanti (the Breed of Spirits) who had. These spirits. are forever at variance between themselves, and thus it is that sometimes the rain wins. Banaba and sometimes it is conquered by the drought. From the Breed of Spirits. Breed of Birds, which live in the branches of the Kanawa tree (Cordia. From the Breed of Birds sprang the Breed of Men.
TABWEWA ACCOUNT OF THE COMING OF THE BERU. SETTLERSNei Teotintake of Banaba.
Auriaria was. about to rest upon his land of Banaba, so he began to set it in order. He overturned it. Tamana. And after. Auriaria set a fence around his land (i.
Not a strange canoe must come near the land; if one appeared, it. But after a. time, a canoe from Beru appeared, and the people on it were Na Kouteba, and Na Manenimate. Nei Anginimaeao, and Nei Teborata. That canoe did allow Auriaria to.
And at the. first coming of the people of that canoe, they had no wives. They were able to marry only. Auriaria, even the Bun Anti (the Breed of Spirits), on. Banaba. And the man Na Kouteba got his wife from Tabwewa from among the people of.
Auriaria, after he had fixed a date to meet them on the marae of Tabwewa. And this was. what the canoe from Beru did, when first it came to Banaba from over the sea; it came to. And while they were busy measuring out the foreshore. Auriaria watched them encircling the island. Then he parted from them and went to his own.
Tabwewa; and they came ashore, and they sought their wives from among the. Banaba. And afterwards, they again met together with Auriaria at the place. Aurakeia, and they made a council with him. And this was. the judgment made in that council. Each man who came from over the sea should be master. But as for those of Tabwewa, the first people of Banaba. HISTORY OF BERUOn July 1.
Pedro Fernandez de Quiros discovered Makin. About this time, shipwrecked or a fugitive. He is credited with fathering twenty- three children on. Beru. Certainly this Atoll is among the last noted by European explorers and whalers. The. first European credited with calling at Beru was Captain J. Clerk of the English whaler. John Palmer sometime in 1.
Maria Island. A Samoan pastor arrived in. Another European, Louis Becke, became a prominent novelist in the 1. South Pacific Islands. He lived on Beru for a time after he was shipwrecked in. He also wrote non- fiction including a book about the fauna of Beru. Captain. Davis of the HMS Royalist visited in connection with the Protectorate proclamation. June 2). Louis Becke.
In the late. 1. 87. Islanders from Beru had been at the French mission in Samoa and returned. Catholicism. A Gilbertese dictionary and grammar was. French around 1. 88. Catholic French fathers. Bomtemps and Leray, reached the area. Father Joseph Leray.
They were. given a tremendous welcome at Nonouti and Beru and visited each atoll in the group. Goward's women's school. Wives. students, Rongorongo, Beru, 1. Beru was. headquarters of the London Missionary Society from 1.
Tarawa. Early in the 2. Reverend G. H. Eastman headed for the . This mission has possessed a wireless set. Dispensary with staff and patients, Rongorongo, Beru. Beru served. as the administrative centre at various times for the Gilberts.
When the District Officer. Beru in 1. 92. 1, he found that the Government house had been dismantled and. He decided a traditionally built structure would be appropriate. The new house was completed and. Gilbertese weather but not the. Printing Press, Rongorongo, Beru. In 1. 93. 3, the.
Eastmans returning from fellow travelled on the John Williams with a young. Cambridge graduate, Alfred Sadd, who was joining the mission at Rongorongo. He was. involved in most activities, even operating a dispensary and doing minor surgery (his.
He studied Gilbertese but admitted he possessed only one. Carpenter's shop, Rongorongo, Beru. In 1. 94. 1 when.
Europeans were advised to evacuate, Alfred wrote to his brother saying that he had no. Board of the London Missionary Society told him to go or. Japanese took him by force. In the end, it was the Japanese that acted. His last. letter bears the date of June 1. England until August 1.
BERU AND WORLD WAR 2. Early in. 1. 94. 2, bombs were dropped on Rongorongo and the Church was destroyed but the tower. The Japanese made several visits to Beru.
Pastor Itaia in his letters described. August 1. 94. 2 when the Japanese came to Beru and took Alfred Sadd prisoner.