An Account of the Natives of the Tonga Islands, in the South Pacific Ocean
In November 1806, the damaged Port-au-Prince arrived at what Captain Cook had called the Friendly Islands. William Charles Mariner (1791–1853) was among the few crew members spared by the native inhabitants. He lived there for four years. Published in 1818, this two-volume second edition offers an important early insight into Tongan customs and language. As editor John Martin (1789–1869) explains, the structure of a nation's language is vital to the consideration of its history. So successful was the first edition of 1817 - expanded upon here to include 'generally corroborative, and in a few instances somewhat corrective' information from another erstwhile inhabitant - that within months of its publication a French translation appeared; German and American editions soon followed. Volume 2 covers diverse aspects of Tongan society, from its music to notions of the soul, and includes a detailed grammar of the language and 2,000 words of vocabulary.
Product details
November 2012Paperback
9781108057554
502 pages
216 × 140 × 28 mm
0.63kg
7 music examples
Available
Table of Contents
- 15. The king annihilates the divine chiefdom of Tooitonga
- 16. Anecdote of the late king, character of the present king
- 17. Rank in society
- 18. Enumeration of the principal notions on which the religion of Tonga is founded
- 19. Farther particulars respecting the divine chiefs
- 20. Cava root ceremony
- 21. The state of the healing art in these islands
- 22. General observations on the principal arts and manufactures
- 23. General habits of chiefs, matabooles, mooas, women and children
- A grammar of the Tonga language
- A vocabulary, Tonga and English
- A vocabulary, English and Tonga.