Dan Snow's History Hit - The Mysteries of Easter Island
Episode Date: June 19, 2025In the heart of the Pacific Ocean, over 2,000 miles from the nearest continent, lies one of the world’s most iconic archaeological treasure troves - Rapa Nui, known to the outside world as Easter Is...land. Famed for the towering stone faces of the moai, the island has undergone extraordinary transformations since it was first settled.Joining us to explain the island's fascinating history is James Grant-Peterkin, a cultural historian and someone who has lived and worked on the island for over 20 years.Produced by James Hickmann and edited by Tim Arstall.You can now find Dan Snow's History Hit on YouTube! Watch episodes every Friday (including this one) here.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.We'd love to hear your feedback - you can take part in our podcast survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on.You can also email the podcast directly at ds.hh@historyhit.com.
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In the heart of the Pacific Ocean, over 2,000 miles from the nearest continental landmass,
lies one of the world's most iconic archaeological treasure troves.
They're on Rapa Nui, known to the outside world as Easter Island.
Now, most of us are familiar with the towering stone faces of the Moai
that gaze inland across that windswept volcanic landscape.
These giant monolithic figures are the last sentinels of a once thriving society.
Rapa Nui was first settled by Polynesians about a thousand years ago,
after one of the greatest voyages of discovery in history.
But it then became isolated from the rest of the world.
And in isolation, those settlers built a rich and complex culture.
It was rooted in ancestor worship, astronomy and ritual.
But then something happened.
The forests vanished.
The Moai were toppled.
And for centuries, the collapse of the society
has been the subject of really fierce debate.
Was it an ecological catastrophe brought on by the people,
by deforestation, by overpopulation?
Or is there a more nuanced story of resilience and adaptation
in the face of outside interference, contact with the rest of the world?
Joining me today on Dan Snow's History Hit
to explore the island's extraordinary past,
we've got James Grant Peterking.
He's a cultural historian, someone who's lived and worked on the island
for over 20 years.
You can watch this episode on our YouTube channel.
Every Friday, we release a new filmed episode.
You can find the link in our show notes.
But for those of you sticking with audio only,
this is a story of discovery and human ingenuity
and survival and adaptation
in one of the most remote places on earth.
Enjoy.
T-minus 10.
Atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima.
God save the king.
No black-white unity till there is first and black unity.
Never to go to war with one another again.
And liftoff, and the shuttle has cleared the tower.
James, thanks so much for coming on.
Thank you for having me.
Shockingly, given this is a history podcast, we're going to start with some geography.
Give us a sense of just how remote this island is.
So Easter Island, or Rapa Nui to give it its Polynesian name,
it's one of the most isolated inhabited islands anywhere on the planet.
Two and a half thousand miles off the west coast of South America,
halfway between Chile and French Polynesia.
But perhaps to put it in real terms,
it takes five and a half hours to fly there from the nearest international airport.
Okay. And is it significant, apart from the statues, but is it significant because it's
sort of at the end, people might think about the Pacific as this long spray of islands going right
across it. But Easter Island is right at the end of that, is it?
It is. So it's the easternmost point of the Polynesian Triangle. So Easter Island is really
the culmination of this incredible human settlement that took place over at least 5,000 years,
that meant that humans ultimately settled pretty much every habitable island in the Pacific.
And okay, we're going to come on to that voyaging, but does that mean they inhabited it sort of last?
Did it take the longest time to get there? Yes. So the generally accepted theory is
that New Zealand was the very last one, Aotearoa, when the Maori eventually arrived in about 1200.
But it seems that prior to that, and just shortly before then, humans also reached Easter Island
as well. Okay, so you spent a long time there. I spent more than 20 years living there. I love it.
I love it. I love it.
Just tell me the story of how you arrived there in the first place.
So I was on a year between school and university.
I needed to learn Spanish.
So I went to Chile.
People took one look at me and spoke to me in English.
I couldn't get any Spanish.
I can't imagine why.
I thought you just looked like a local.
I know.
And then suddenly this opportunity came to go to Easter Island to work.
And I thought, this is it. It was a place I'd been fascinated by as a child. And I suddenly thought this is
the opportunity to actually go and not just visit, but to live there. And so I spent four months
there, I think, and I was absolutely captivated. And when you were there, I'm not suggesting you're
very old, but was it perhaps not super developed for tourism and visiting?
It wasn't. I mean, this was 1996, so it was a while back.
And no, I couldn't believe it.
The island was surprisingly underdeveloped for tourism.
And it just seemed there was this absolute goldmine in terms of archaeology, history, culture,
and no one was coming to see it.
I couldn't believe it.
Okay, we're going to get onto the island itself.
And so one of my favourite topics in world history
is the maritime expansion of the Polynesian people.
Yeah, their navigation, their technology. These people spread across. These islands
are uninhabited until fairly recently. Where did the Polynesians come from?
So the general consensus is that they came from Taiwan.
Oh, interesting, isn't it?
And that about 6,000 years ago, a seafaring people embarked from Taiwan on their canoes
and slowly, gradually began
exploring the islands to the east of there. So 6,000 years, that's when passage tombs were
being built around Britain, for example. Stonehenge is not far off. And yet until that point,
there's no human settlement on these islands at all. No, the entire Pacific, as far as we know,
is uninhabited. And therefore they had an absolutely blank canvas to go out there and explore and settle.
And what were the technological hacks that they had?
The boat building, the astronomy, how did they do that?
So it seems to be obviously a mix of an enormous number of factors.
They introduced the outrigger, this idea of stabilising these large canoes.
Right, so a canoe with outriggers like a bit that sort of sticks off the side.
On one side or sometimes on both sides.
And so that gives you greater stability.
With a sort of almost like a mini canoe
at either side.
Exactly.
So if you think of a trimaran today,
but it's actually much smaller on either side.
It's where you stick your young kids
when you're on holiday.
Exactly.
And they sort of cling on.
Exactly.
But it was more than that.
It was the understanding of the constellations
of the environment around them
that enabled them to really carve
these almost sort of highways down the ocean
that meant that by using the stars,
by using certain particular constellations or the sun and the moon,
they were able to actually mark routes down which they could navigate down
but also come home as well.
And they had these techniques.
They could tell when a wave had hit a seashore
and then was like reflecting back.
So even if you couldn't see the shore, you sort of went, hang on a second, I think we're near an island.
All these little things that they were able to notice.
So it's the ability to sense changes in swell and in current and things like that.
So if you think you've got an obstacle in the water far ahead of you, but long before you can see it,
that obstacle will actually create the way in which the water moves around it.
And to an experienced Polynesian
navigator, he or she will be able to actually sense that. They couldn't see it, but they could
apparently feel it so that they would lie in the middle of the canoe and actually with their body
feel the motion of the ocean. And by that, they would know that there was something or possibly
something up ahead that was changing the shape of that swell. I mean, that's just one example of the dozens of techniques that they had that helped them to
therefore find these islands. And what I love about it is because of the relative lateness of
European exploitation into that world, we've actually been able to save some of those oral
traditions and those stories. We sort of modern scholarship has been able to write them down. So
we do have that connection with the past.
We actually know, which isn't, say, true of the Vikings.
We actually really do know how they were able to use the stars.
Well, exactly.
So having had this prolonged period of isolation from the rest of the world,
you ended up with this incredibly robust oral history.
It meant that when the Europeans did arrive,
sort of 17th, 18th century onwards,
that they'd already found very established societies, established communities
who had these traditions very much inherent in their practice, in their upbringing.
Okay, talk to me about some of these distances.
Once they'd gone to these places, did they then become sort of isolated,
or were they cruising about between Hawaii and Papua New Guinea?
Is this a real trading and exchange system in this Pacific?
I think to a certain degree, yes. I mean, unlikely to have been from one corner of the
Polynesian Triangle to the other. But if you think of, for example, the Hawaiian islands,
of which you've got at least half a dozen sizable islands, they, of course, would all be trading with
each other. And so if you were missing, say, obsidian or wood or gene pool or something you
needed to acquire, then of course you could do it from a neighbouring island. And that's why when
you look at the map of the Pacific, you can actually almost kind of group it together into
these clusters of islands. The big exception to all of this is Easter Island, where there is
nothing else around it. And that's why it becomes this exception, even in Polynesia.
So it takes five hours to fly there, even today, if there are human beings there. So someone got
on a boat and just took off into the horizon and arrived at Easter Island. I mean, extraordinarily,
does that imply that lots of people went off in all sorts of different directions and never came
back? I think we have to assume that this was needle in a haystack stuff.
And of course, you never hear about the ones that failed.
Yes, they had a system where they would sail up to the halfway point.
It's believed of their food and water and things like that.
If they hadn't then found land by then, they could turn around.
And by having gone against the prevailing winds and currents,
generally in this easterly direction,
they could turn around and then get home.
As long as their map reading was fine, they could get home in a faster time so they're sending
out these scouting parties exactly over hundreds of miles of ocean because i think common sense
says you wouldn't load up an enormous great canoe with women and children and plants and animals and
everything you need to begin a new society if you don't already know that there is definitely
an island that you're going to that you've pinpointed and marked. And so these scouts,
and these are the unsung heroes of Polynesia, if you like, because these were the people that
were going out and having to try and find these remote islands.
How did their culture, how does their religion, music, culture sort of underpin the sort of
bravery and professionalism needed to sustain those expeditions? Well, certainly on Easter Island, I mean, they still have, certainly in the songs
that they sing, vivid accounts of that first voyage of the first king that set foot on the
island. And so there is certainly a recognition that these voyages were absolutely pioneering in
their nature. I think the scouts are the one group that perhaps don't get the recognition
that they deserve, because like a lot of things, you only remember the winners. And we talk about this
drive to discover new islands. Is that because population grows, everything just gets a bit
young and bored, men and women go, let's go and start our own thing somewhere else. And is there
just a culture of expansion or are they being forced off by shortages of food and resource?
I think it's a real mix. I think in some cases, yes, you've got overpopulation on small islands,
lack of resources, you need to move on to a new island.
Intertribal warfare features a lot in Polynesian oral history.
So if two factions are fighting,
clearly the losing faction probably has to find a new home to live in.
But what's amazing is that even on islands
where seemingly they were living in relative harmony
and lack of diseases, things like that, there is still this human drive, which is wonderful because we see it even today.
This human drive to get out there and discover what's over the horizon and the fact that you could be living happily on your island.
inherent curiosity to get out there and see whether it's to go and travel to another country as we're fortunate enough to do today, or in the case of the Polynesians, to get out there and
literally go and discover what was beyond what they could see.
It's just wild. So Rapa Nui, Easter Island, it's the furthest end of the chain. So what
date do we think people arrived there?
About 1000 AD, so about 1000 years ago.
Okay. And are there traditions of names, people that arrived?
They know the first king, Hotumatu'a, who was the first king to apparently lead this party of people to the island.
But what's so interesting about Easter Island is you don't then hear about subsequent voyages.
And so it seems to be almost this closing of the door behind them when this first group arrived.
So they do get quite isolated after that.
them when this first group arrived. So they do get quite isolated after that.
Yes. And that's why if we take it to the extreme, it's perhaps 700 years of isolation until the Europeans arrive and discover for Europe, this particular island in the South Pacific.
And so it must be so fascinating for you as a historian to look at how Easter Island culture,
Rapa Nui culture differs from the Maori in New Zealand or other islands. Do they branch
away quite rapidly?
Well, it's one of these things where you've got this sort of common ancestor and so you've got the culture has a centre to it in modern day,
say, French Polynesia.
And then as you go to the other islands in the region,
you start to see bits that, of course, look identical
and then you see bits that are completely different.
And I was always interested in the language.
I mean, my studies were in the linguistics of the island.
And so it was fascinating to go to, say, New Zealand and work out that if you changed certain letters, the Rapa Nui that you speak on Easter Island was still remarkably
similar to New Zealand Maori. And just how far away is that? We're talking?
6,000 miles away or something. So, I mean, it's distances that are just unfathomable in any other
part of the world, if it wasn't the Pacific Ocean, where the scale is just, you know,
everything is off the scale. You mentioned earlier that they're taking women, children,
this is a community on the move, about plants and are they stocking ponds with fish? I mean,
is there a whole suite of tools and resources they need to sustain themselves?
So it seems that much of the expertise of the scouts wasn't solely in finding these islands,
it was working out what was there and what was missing. And so with this information,
they would come back to the homeland, wherever that was, and then load up these large double
hulled ocean voyaging canoes with not just a genetically viable human population, but also
actually then plants that they felt they would need,
and also species of animals that they thought would be beneficial for their survival
on this new virgin land, because it's untouched.
Speaking of genetics and things, have they done the DNA
and worked out how many mating pairs of humans arrived on that island?
The oral history says two large ocean-going canoes,
and that's possibly maybe a maximum of 80 people on each one. It's enough to get us started. It's enough to start.
But clearly, and this is where again, other islands had the benefit that if your gene pool
is starting to get a bit thin, you can then go on date nights to other islands. One of the many
amazing success stories of Easter Island is the fact that they seemingly didn't have this contact with any other island and therefore just how strict they had to be in keeping families separate first
cousins from you know oh there were protocols I'm sure there were because there are even to this day
you have sometimes have young couples that will get together and then suddenly a grandparent will
come along and say actually you can't go out with that person because yeah, yeah. So on a small island, you can control these things.
In a larger community, it would be much more difficult.
Grandparents always get a grandparent.
Exactly.
So what's the soil like on the island?
It's surprisingly good because it's volcanic soil.
But it's volcanic soil that, I mean, the island, parts of it are three million years old.
So it's this great eruption from the sea floor.
The island is therefore just the top of a volcano,
really. And so once that soil, as long as it's not overused, that soil is relatively good.
The problem, of course, is if you use it too intensively in a short period of time,
then of course then... And they had the fishing, they could sustain themselves with the sea as
well. Yes. So I mean, that's really why it's believed that the first Polynesians that arrived
there would have seen this island as almost a kind of Polynesian Garden of Eden. And for that reason, perhaps raised the drawbridge
behind them because they thought, you know, we've got everything we need here. And in a way,
we almost don't therefore either need to go home again, or we don't want others arriving here.
So it was this almost well-kept secret in the corner of the Pacific.
And did it remain homogenous? I mean, there was a king,
was there a succession? Do you see different tribes and groups? Does it become fractured?
So it fractures off into family groups, which I think is normal. So they divide the island up into
10, the equivalent of pieces of cake, so that everyone gets a bit of coastline. Everyone has
perhaps the agricultural land in the center of the island. And by that system, over generations and over
centuries, they maintain this idea of different tribes. But of course, it's highly cooperative.
They're all working with each other. They share the one quarry where the iconic statues were
carved. So it's not certainly at that point in the history, this idea of sort of tribes,
it sometimes sounds a bit, it was really distinct family groups.
Is this a good time to come onto the statues?. Is this a good time to come onto the statues?
There's never a better time to come onto the statues.
So these, the Rapa Nui statues, Easter Island statues that are so iconic. First of all,
I've never seen them. What are they like in the flesh?
They're amazing. I mean, it sounds a bit cliched, but there's an incredible energy when you
wander around, particularly the quarry where they were all carved. Because the treat on
Easter Island, it's not just the end product that you get to see. So you don't just get to see the sort of
end of production. You can still to this day, go to the quarry and see literally etchings onto the
rock, half finished carvings. Some Moai is the name of the statues, some Moai that have been
completed, but haven't yet been transported. And so you can really follow the whole process
from start to finish.
So it's like they just put their tools down and walked away.
So it's literally as if someone pulled the plug out of the factory floor and everything
stopped at that point.
Actually, so you've got the quarry with all these Moai and different levels of completeness.
How many other of these giants actually are there around the island?
So there's about a thousand.
A thousand!
So people often underestimate the scale that the Moai production took on Easter Island,
because it's easy to think that it might have just been a few slightly crazed carvers who wanted to do something different.
But in fact, you realise that this was an island-wide obsession,
and the entire community would have been involved either directly in the carving,
or in being the backup to actually making sure that the carvers had stone and food and
everything else. And you've got to move them around. And the transportation becomes an enormous
undertaking as well. And how far do they move? What distance are we talking? So, I mean, the
island isn't particularly large. It takes about one hour to drive around the island today. But
to transport a Moai, you're probably looking at a maximum of 20 miles, which is not insignificant.
Because they weigh
up to 100 tons what are you talking about the ones that have been moved yeah 100 tons yeah
and no horses or elephants i mean this was all done by human power human power and this is why
you get the ufo stuff coming in because people can't bear the fact that humans might at one day
have been capable of doing this and did they roll them logs? Do they know about wheels and logs and things?
So there's really, there's two schools of thought.
One is basically the rolling, which is the idea of placing it onto some kind of sled
and then dragging it over rollers to therefore reduce the friction.
Or that they might have been rocked in a way that if you think of, you know, at home, if
you're moving a heavy piece of furniture, you might get it onto its corners and kind
of waddle it from side to side.
And it probably was a combination of both techniques, if not others as well, that archaeologists still haven't quite worked out.
But this is one of the many mysteries on Easter Island that's still very much being argued about by archaeologists.
And why?
Well, because this is the deep-rooted belief in Polynesia, and it's not just in Easter Island,
but it's across the entire Polynesian Triangle, that important people possessed manna. So this
was a spiritual power that was bestowed on them by the gods. And that therefore,
when an important person like that died, what you wanted was a physical representation of them
in order that this manna would still exist after their death. So it's
actually a fairly human idea. But the idea was that because on Easter Island, there was this
incredible stone quarry, they had all of the raw materials needed. This culture of carving
representations or idols to represent these important ancestors, it developed in a way that
it couldn't possibly have developed anywhere else in the Pacific. So do you think they are all of actual individuals, or are they all a reflection of those
mythical founders? No, no, I think real people. Because when, for example, when Cook came in 1774,
people actually told him the names of some of the statues that he was standing in front of,
in the same way that you or I might in our homes or in our offices
have the portrait of an ancestor, the founding, you know.
I thought you'd been statue of Nelson, which I do have in my home.
Right.
But okay.
So, you know, we'll have prominent figures, whether it's in our family or in our history.
But there was this belief that these statues were more than just a representation.
They actually were the spiritual embodiment of this
person. And so that's why, this is really why, and this is going off on a bit of a tangent,
but this is why the whole repatriation of Moai that has been in the news recently,
particularly with the British Museum and things like that. This is why for the Rapa Nui,
the people of Easter Island today, this is much more than just a statue. This is much more than just part of their history. For them, this is a living ancestor. And so this is why it's
always been quite difficult acting as kind of intermediary between sometimes the island and
organisations such as the British Museum to sometimes convey this idea that what we might
see as simply a piece of rock that is an important part of one island's history,
that for the islanders that might have a much more significant meaning to them.
Listen to Dan Snow's history. Talk about Rapa Nui, Easter Island. More coming up.
I'm Matt Lewis. And I'm Dr. Alan Orjanaga. And in Gone Medieval, we get into the greatest mysteries. To be continued... of friends, murder, rebellions, and crusades. Find out who we really were by subscribing to
Gone Medieval from History Hit, wherever you get your podcasts.
Now, there's been a really interesting, quite exciting sort of historical debate,
historiographical debate about Rapa Nui, about whether it was sort of torn apart by civil wars,
that it'll topple the statues, and whether that was when the Europeans arrived or after or before.
Try and give me a timeline here. What do you think was going on in the culture of Rapa Nui
in, say, 1700, before Europeans were even dreamed of?
So I think we have probably in 700 years of complete isolation, which is why it's such an
interesting experiment really in the way in which humans behave in such an unusual set of
circumstances. So by 1700, it seems that you've had this enormous rise in production of statues,
population has grown, no threats or attacks from
outside, no diseases brought in from any outsiders. So you've got a population that's thriving,
if not getting almost too large for the island. But of course, when they've had the wood to build
canoes, they've carried on searching for new islands around Easter Island. It's just that
we know today from looking at a map that there aren't any.
But they would have believed that over the horizon,
there would have been other islands for them to settle.
So they wouldn't have therefore been perhaps overly concerned
by this rising population, lack of resources.
They clearly weren't stupid.
They weren't ignorant of what was going on on their island.
But they must have always thought there was going to be this escape route.
You think scouts were going out and coming back?
I'm sure they were,
because there's no reason for them to believe
they'd reached the end of what today we call
the Polynesian Triangle.
And was there enough wood for those canoes?
Did you start to get deforestation?
Well, deforestation clearly happens,
yes, at the beginning,
when they need to clear land to plant on,
and subsequently with the moving of statues
that weigh upwards of 100 tons,
you need some kind of wood, you need fiber for ropes. Carving a statue is incredibly resource
heavy, if you like. And so this was not something that unless you had a very active
management of the resources, this was clearly something that was going to put pressure
on those finite resources. And so there is a school of thought that says the whole thing sort of collapses because of
that overpopulation. Where are we now? Where's scholarship now on this?
The jury is still very much out over this. But clearly, at one time, the population was
notably higher than then when the Europeans found it from 1722 onwards, which is the first
contact with any outsiders, seemingly, that the Rapa Nui have in the best part of 700 years.
So we think that even before the Europeans arrived, there had been some sort of population crash, but the population got smaller.
I think so, because it depends who you read.
But we have to therefore go by the accounts of the first Europeans who describe an impoverished island, a deforested island. And we know that that couldn't have been the case in a society that several hundred years prior had created up to a thousand statues of enormous
proportions. So your impression is that that quarry, for example, that's abandoned seemingly
sort of overnight, that's probably not the European topsails appearing over their eyes,
and that was probably some event on the island. The dating suggests that the abandonment of the
quarry took place at least 50
years before the Europeans arrived. This is an internal strife. This is an internal problem.
And for some reason, someone's come along and said, we're not carving a single another Moai
statue out of this quarry. Tools are downed. They walk out of there and never come back.
And that's why it's this incredible vestige of human achievement.
And when the Europeans arrived, are you sure that's not just Europeans just being dismissive of every culture they come across, but they're saying it's impoverished,
that they specifically aren't seeing evidence of healthy, thriving sort of agricultural communities?
I mean, Captain Cook, who was, I think we can generally accept had understood the Pacific,
he understood Polynesia. He wrote that it was the least attractive island and the
least beneficial island to ships that he'd ever come across in that part of the world.
Roggeveen, who's the Dutch captain who arrives on Easter Sunday in 1722, hence the naming of
the island. His cook laments the fact that there's no wood on the island for him to even light a fire
with. So I mean, these are snippets of details that as long as we trust the authorship of them, we have to accept
that the island they came across was not this thriving island that had been the case one,
200 years prior to that. It's a reasonable assumption is that they had been denuded by
just over farming, over grazing, trees being cut down, too many humans.
Yes. It becomes this classic case of what Jared Diamond would then call the collapse,
this idea that societies will reach a breaking point, after which, if there hasn't been
successful management of resources, if populations aren't controlled, then it's simply the entire
society descends into ecocide, to this ecological suicide,
where you basically destroy the one environment that you have to live in.
And do you see any more evidence of this talk
about the Moai being toppled over and things?
Is there any other clues on the island
about what might have happened around that time?
Studies of skulls, in particular bone studies,
have shown that people were suddenly dying
from blunt instruments instead of natural causes.
The obsidian, which is the volcanic glass that used to be a key component in carving the statues suddenly becomes
shaped in spearheads and arrowheads and things like that so again that would suggest interesting
a collapse of this very quite suggestive quite suggestive things might have got um and mentioned
in the oral history of cannibalism so i mean
clearly there's been a shift and no one denies that that shift took place on easter island
i think what's interesting to study today is the exact time scale and the causes and that's really
where archaeologists are arguing about is the suggestion that the first european ships they
might have brought disease or there could be other they would have done i mean they would have brought
sailors will bring certain things with
them. And that would have been the case on Easter Island. You wouldn't have had any defences against
those kinds of diseases. I mean, even on Easter Island 50 years ago, there used to be such limited
contact with the outside world that when a ship would come to the island, people would say that
everyone got a cold for the next week or so, because that was just germs from outside that they didn't have any exposure to, and any defences against. And so the arrival of Roggeveen in 1722,
but then there's 50 years until the next Europeans arrive. So it's incredibly spread out. And
therefore, I find it difficult to believe people who think, put the blame entirely on Europeans,
who say that everything was perfect, the Europeans arrived,
and then everything just collapsed.
And I think that in that you've got three visitors in the first 60 years there,
that sounds slightly far-fetched.
Although in the 18th century, it appears to be a slightly more impoverished island,
people were still living there, even without wood.
So how were they surviving?
Well, so this is one of the great success stories,
that the human population on Easter Island never disappears,
as sometimes the slightly lazier literature about the island will say.
And so what they did was they made these dramatic changes in their lifestyle, really,
to ensure, first of all, that humans survived.
And the most notable of that is that they stopped carving the statues,
and that's why they abandoned that quarry overnight and never came back to it. And so they replaced their religious beliefs with a competition that focuses
on collecting birds' eggs. You can see that it would have taken a period of perhaps people not
all being convinced by this, but on a small island, changes can happen quickly. And so suddenly, if
the elders and the priests are all suddenly saying, no, manna now comes in the form of these
migratory birds that arrive once a year and lay an egg. And therefore we'll have a competition
between all the tribes. You'll each put your greatest sort of Olympian forward and he will
compete against the other tribes to become the person to obtain that first egg by swimming across,
you know, a mile and a half of open ocean, probably waiting in caves on that islet.
Watch a little offline islet.
Yes. And then as soon as someone gets the first sooty turn egg,
that person's chief becomes what we call the bird man. And he becomes the spiritual political
leader of the island for the next 12 months. And then we'll come back again next spring,
and we'll do the whole thing again. And for about 150 years, this system,
that is the dominant leadership election system. It's fascinating. That's amazing. So they start
foraging. I guess there's still fish in the sea, thank goodness for them, but it's focused less on
crops and more on what they can find on the seashore and in the ocean.
Yeah. So you've got now a diminished population in terms of its number. You've got one perhaps much more conscious of the fact that they now need to survive entirely by themselves, that they can't rely on neighboring islands or the arrival of outsiders. Yes, when you get the arrival of Europeans, you're going to get some trading and things like that.
resilience and but also this ability to look after itself and to that's why even something as recently as covid you know where the island closed down for two and a half years it was almost
like the islanders went back to 100 years ago where they suddenly had to be entirely self-sufficient
more on easter island more on rapanui coming up after this
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Let's talk more about those European arrivals.
A Dutch expedition in the 1720s, you mentioned?
Yep, so 1722, Jacob Roggeveen, and they site the island on Easter Sunday.
Right, hence the name Easter Island.
Stay for a while or get going?
No bad conditions in the sea.
Stay for the best part of a day, really.
So, and this is why these first contacts were so,
they were so brief
that again,
to believe that they might have had
an inherent,
they would of course
affected the islanders
in a profound way,
but to say that they would have
really...
Totally collapsed civilization.
Exactly.
I think it's far-fetched.
Okay, then we get
a Spanish expedition.
In 1770.
And then Captain Cook
off the...
In 1774. And does that Cook off the... In 1774.
And does that...
Do things start to get more regular after that?
Is it on the map?
So it's now on the map because, of course,
these drawings and paintings of these colossal statues
find their way back to Europe.
People are very struck with those straight away,
are they?
This is something unusual.
The equivalent of a viral photograph today.
I think, you know, people are...
What on earth is it?
They, first of all, don't expect there to be an island there
in the first place.
When they find the island,
they're amazed that it's inhabited.
And of course,
then when they get up
close to the coastline
and see these enormous statues
dotted all around the coastline,
then Europeans don't know
what to make of Easter Island.
And hence, therefore,
a few more visitors come.
But again, it's so isolated
that unless you're in that part
of the Pacific,
it's not that you're going to make a side trip from New Zealand to go there.
So after Captain Cook, do we have a clear sense of the ships that passed, how much contact they were having with Europeans?
Well, so it seems to be a noteworthy stop for people that are crossing the Pacific if they do
call in. And that's why we're able to, at least in terms of population numbers, have an idea the number of inhabitants on Easter Island continues to decrease.
Oh, it continues to fall.
Yes.
Well, now they've got a whole influx of European diseases to cope with as well.
They've got diseases to deal with.
The culture's changing rapidly as well.
Perhaps the very structured family tribal organisation is breaking down as well.
Missionaries come along, move everyone into one place
because that makes conversion much easier. So they break up this idea of tribal lands. So things are in flux and
things are changing fast. So you've got quite radical reorganization, you've got disease,
you've got trade with the outside world. It must have been quite tumultuous decades,
the early part of the 19th century. No, they were. And sadly, perhaps less scrupulous outsiders also see the island as
an easy target, easy pickings. And so Peruvians in particular realize that the island is unprotected.
It doesn't come under the colonial protection of anyone and see that here's this Polynesian island
relatively close to South America. Peruvians suddenly start needing slaves or certainly workers. And so they start
these incredibly damaging raids on islands in the Pacific, but particularly to Easter Island,
where several thousand islanders get lured onto ships, taken away to go and work on guano mines
and things like that in Peru, in the mainland. Many of them don't survive the journey there,
but of course, very few of them ever make their way back to the island. And when eventually international outcry says you've got to repatriate
these Rapa Nui back to their island, they returned just 15, having taken thousands away.
What? And these 15 sadly bring smallpox with them. And so that smallpox then decimates much
of the remaining population. So it's very easy to malign the work of missionaries in the Pacific at that time.
But if it hadn't been perhaps for the Catholic missionaries on Easter Island,
then the population might have disappeared altogether.
So it's they that really raise the alarm and say,
look, this island needs outside help.
So by the mid-19th century, the numbers are really down to very low.
Do they say that it got as low as 110 people at once?
And there had been thousands of people living there.
Yeah, I mean, no one knows the exact high number,
but possibly 12,000, 14,000 people would have been required
to have the kind of society that was clearly living there at one point
to create this culture that Easter Island has become so famous for today.
Well, it does eventually fall under some sort of European yoke, does it?
Catholic missionaries arrive. And so when they come, they actually become the first people to
almost raise the alarm about what's happening on Easter Island and how the population continues to
decrease. And so it's they that actually request someone to take ownership of the island. And
through geographical, I suppose, proximity, it becomes a Chilean possession in 1888.
Really?
So before those missionaries,
there weren't any really Europeans living on there?
No, because there was nothing for them.
If there had been resources, if there had been precious metals,
or if there had been something, then Cook and others,
the message would have got back that this is somewhere we need to colonize.
But no one was interested in Easter Island.
It didn't offer anything except at this stage, hundreds of fallen over statues.
There wasn't even a single statue standing up at this point.
Okay. Now why is that? Why are the statues all fallen over?
So something has happened on the island that has caused a complete rejection of that former
culture. And people aren't quite sure whether it's this intertribal warfare, that if you know
that your neighboring tribe has their ancestors watching over them and protecting them, which is what those statues
used to do, then perhaps the first thing you do is when you take their land, because you want their
land and their resources, perhaps at the same time, you also then throw over their statues to
nullify the power of their ancestors. Or alternatively, it's an island-wide rejection
of a religious belief that you and your ancestors have put hundreds of years of work ancestors. Or alternatively, it's an island-wide rejection of a religious belief
that you and your ancestors have put hundreds of years of work into.
It's like the Protestant Reformation.
You're told that larger and larger statues, suddenly life will get better for you,
and you're breaking your back building these things, and nothing's getting better,
life's getting worse on this island. And so it might be that there comes a point where
everyone just goes, you know what, we're done with this.
Birdman. Birdman's what we need.
Yeah, birdman comes to the fore.
And did the Catholic missionaries succeed in getting rid of the birdman theory
and replacing it with Christianity?
They did.
So they obviously didn't like the idea of people who were worshipping bird's eggs.
And so sadly, they came along and replaced it
and found actually the islanders fairly easy to convert to Christianity.
And so whether by that point the Birdman competition wasn't quite so deep-rooted as it had once been, who knows?
But there seems to have been a relatively smooth transition into Christianity.
And as a result of the Chilean takeover,
does Easter Island and its people get focused more towards Spanish-speaking Latin America
and away from their hereditary customary links, what would have been links with the rest of the Pacific world?
So to a certain degree, yes, except that Chile was, fortunately today, but Chile was so useless as a colonizing power that instead of imposing their culture heavily on it, they sent one cargo ship a year to the island.
And that was really their commitment.
So what you don't get, which you get in other parts of the Pacific, you don't get this dominance of an outside culture or language.
So today, most people are bilingual.
People speak Spanish on the island because it's the official language.
But people also speak Rapa Nui.
Whereas perhaps if another nation had come in and taken possession and control of Easter Island
you might have had that Rapa Nui ultimately being replaced entirely so it's something that we're
very grateful for today the fact that Chile has been perhaps I mean but again you're dealing with
something that's two and a half thousand miles away and has no economic value in the minds of
politicians no what it does actually have is quite important strategic value to Chile today because
it gives them an enormous part of the Pacific that they wouldn't otherwise have. And so in terms of things like shipping routes, air routes, and particularly now with marine protected areas and things like that, the island is suddenly becoming quite relevant. But this is all in the last 20 years or so.
When you went there, did you fly?
So I flew there.
There were two flights a week, I remember.
And it was really just a refueling stop between flights from Chile to Tahiti in French Polynesia.
But given the distances and the fact there's no other airstrip anywhere in that part of the Pacific,
they used to refuel on Easter Island and then carry on. But I remember the time I first went, I think there were about 30 of us that got off the plane and were actually staying on the island.
So I couldn't believe it, given what I thought was the attractions of Easter Island.
I just couldn't believe that no one else was.
And it's still just as remote.
If you go there now, are there lots of tourists?
Well, so, I mean, there's now a minimum of one flight a day.
So, I mean, really tourism is dictated by the amount of flights to the island,
occasional cruise ships, but very few.
So I think then the nice thing about the island today is it doesn't feel overrun,
but I think it's something that the island
does have to be careful of
because of course, as places grow in popularity
and we've all been to places,
say 20 years apart where you go once
and it feels very untouched,
you go back and it feels completely overrun
because these places can change quickly.
So hopefully, and I think they are very aware of it,
it will be protected
because you can give out a certain amount of passes to the island per year and things like that, and therefore
keep a cap on tourism. And it sounds like a very exciting place to be a historian or archaeologist
because there's so much at stake. There's still some really big questions that we're trying to
answer. It is. The frustrating part is that the islanders themselves, there's a slight reluctance
towards outside archaeologists, historians coming in and
particularly digging around and things like that. So I think 20, 30 years ago, speaking to
archaeologists who were digging then, they say this was absolute nirvana for them. I mean, this
was an untouched gold mine where they could come in and really make significant finds and come away
from each expedition, believing they'd understood more. Now I gather the paperwork
and the bureaucracy is so difficult that sadly it's becoming less the case. But on the good side,
more islanders themselves are now going to university to study archaeology and study history.
And so you've got this sudden emergence of a younger generation of island-born experts who
will hopefully take that forward. And so we won't
therefore need to rely quite so much on sort of outside input. And how many Rapa Nui's are there
today? So the island population is about, I think it's about 9,000 at the moment, of which just over
50% are considered Rapa Nui. So they're of Polynesian descent. The remainder are mainly
mainland Chileans that have settled there. And then a few
odd outsiders like myself. Like you, living in your tent.
Yeah, well, yes. It was an incredible experience. And obviously, I went there with no notion of that
I was going to live there at all. But it became obviously a life-changing decision when I did.
James, it's a pleasure to have you with us.
Thanks, Dan. Thanks for having me here.
It's a pleasure to have you with us.
Thanks, Dan.
Thanks for having me here.
Thank you so much for listening to this episode of Dan Snow's History Hit.
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