Mauritius was first discovered
by the Arabs in the 10th century and was named Dina Robin.
In 1510 the Portuguese led by navigator Pedro Mascarenhas
visited the island and called it Cirné. Just like the
Arabs before them, they only used it as a port of call and
never established any permanent settlement.
In 1598, the Dutch on their way to the East fortuitously landed
at Vieux Grand Port, in the south east of the island, and
named it after their Prince “ Mauritius Van Nassau ”,
the younger son of Guillaume de Nassau, Prince Orange and
Stadholder of Holland. Unlike the Portuguese who had little
influence in the Indian Ocean, the Dutch were much more powerful
in the region. They had already several counters in the East
and established a first settlement under the Dutch East India
Company. The Dutch however showed more interest with the Far
East and the peopling of Mauritius remained very unstable.
In 1712, they finally withdrew from Mauritius because of the
difficult climatic conditions prevailing on the island and
because it was more worthwhile to consolidate their already
established base in Capetown (South Africa).
Their withdrawal allowed the French in 1715, who were already
operating in the Indian Ocean, to move in. They named the
island Isle de France. True colonisation and peopling of the
island started under the French in 1722 and they would control
the island until 1810. For almost 100 years the Isle de France
was developed and built up with the objective of conquering
Madras and other Indian counters from the British. Under the
French, colonisation was successful because they were prepared
to settle and develop the infrastructure, agriculture and
economy and use it as a trading post rather than just a port
of call.
After the defeat of the French in India, Britain became the
most important land based power in the Indian Ocean. Finally
in 1810 the British moved in and took over the island six
months after having been vanquished by the same French during
the naval battle of Vieux Grand Port. It was to be the one
and only victory of the navy of Napoleon in the world.
It was during British rule that slavery was abolished in 1835
and Indentured labourers were contracted from India. The 19th
Century was a time of great change in the population structure
of the island. The coloured people and immigrants greatly
modified the political of the island. The 20th Century saw
a continuation of the political struggle started in the 19th
Century. Political Parties were formed and the distribution
of power was reformed to accommodate the different emerging
segment of the population. In 1936 the Mauritian Labour Party
was created and in 1968 the island became an independent country.
The second half of the 20th Century is marked by reforms brought
to the economy which led to the economic boom after 1982 and
to the transformation of the island from an underdeveloped,
third world country into a developing country.
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