The Maholian Way - Part Three: The history of Maholia & relationalism
Until the 1980s, the history of Maholia – or Telenesia as it was previously called – was similar to that of its neighbours New Zealand and Australia and, to a lesser extent, the history of other industrialised settler societies.
The first people of Maholia are the Latuans, who are ethnically similar to the New Zealand Maoris and other indigenous peoples of the South Pacific. It’s estimated that there were about half a million Latuans at the time of first European settlement. Evidence also suggests that, like the Maoris, they migrated from
Then in 1769, Captain James Cook and his crew were heading northwest from Cape Horn when they sighted the east coast of what is now
The name ‘Telenesia’ was suggested by one of Cook’s officers, Augustus Hemming, an amateur classical scholar. In ancient Greek ‘tele’ means ‘distant’ and ‘nesos’ means ‘island’. Of course, from the perspective of the country’s residents the islands are not distant, and so for years the name was a source of disquiet, until in 1979 a national plebiscite approved the change to ‘Maholia’. This is derived from the word ‘maholi’ which in several Latuan languages means ‘our world’ or ‘our land’. (For simplicity’s sake I will only refer to the country as Maholia, even when discussing the pre-1979 era.)
Maholia consists of four main islands. There is New Galloway in the south,
Europeans have inhabited the country since the early nineteenth century. First came whalers and sealers, traders and missionaries, who between them established a series of small coastal outposts on
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