The westernmost Leeward Islands comprise a three atoll group: Manuae (also known as Scilly Atoll); Motu One atoll (also known as Bellinghausen), the most northerly of the Leeward Islands; and Maupihaa atoll (also known as Mopelia) to the southeast.
Geography
The islands are mountainous, consisting of volcanic rock. They are formed of trachyte, dolerite and basalt. There are raised coral beds high up the mountains, and lava occurs in a variety of forms, even in solid flows. Volcanic activity ceased so long ago that the craters have been almost entirely obliterated by erosion.
The Leeward Islands that lie more to the east are a mainly volcanic island cluster:
Raiatea (Tahitian names: Hava'i, or Ioretea), the largest island in the group; the archipelago's administrative center (Uturoa) and tallest point (Mount Tefatua) are located there
Taha'a (Tahitian name: Uporu), which lies just north of Uturoa
Huahine (Tahitian name: Mata'irea), the easternmost island of the group; split at high tide into the northern Huahine Nui ("big Huahine") and southern Huahine Iti ("small Huahine")
Flora and fauna
Flora includes breadfruit, pandanus, and coconut palms. The limited terrestrial fauna includes feral pigs, rats, and small lizards. There are several species of freshwater fish inhabiting the small streams on the islands, and the fringing coral reefs around the islands contain a dazzling array of fish and other salt-water-dwelling species.
consists of the 4 associated communes of Fetuna, Tevaitoa (the location of the commune administration), Tehurui and Vaiaau, forming the west side of Raiatea Island.
consists of the 3 associated communes of Avera (the location of the commune administration), Opoa and Puohine, forming the east side of Raiatea Island.
consists of the 8 associated communes of Fare (the location of the commune administration), Faie, Fitii and Maeva, all on Huahine Nui; and Haapu, Maroe, Parea and Tefarerii on Huahine Iti.
TOTAL
'404.0
35,393
36,007
89.1
Notes: Uturoa. Tumaraa and Taputapuatea communes are all on Raiatea Island.
6 of the 7 communes (out of French Polynesia's 48 communes) have banded together in a "community of communes", (in French: communauté de communes Hava'i, or CCH), an indirectly elected intercommunal council formed in 2012 by all the communes in the administrative subdivision (circumscription) of the Leeward Islands, with the exception of Bora-Bora, which preferred to remain separate for financial reasons. Unlike in metropolitan France and its overseas regions, it is not mandatory for the communes in French Polynesia to join an intercommunal council. The three intercommunal councils in existence as of 2022 (including the CCH), all formed on a voluntary basis.
The first European to encounter the archipelago was British naval officer James Cook on 12 April 1769 during a British expedition the purpose of which was to observe the transit of Venus. He later revisited the islands twice more. It is a common misconception that he named the Leeward group of islands "Society" in honor of the Royal Society. However, Cook recorded in his journal that he named the islands “Society” because they lie close to each other.[2]
In 1840, France declared a protectorate over Tahiti. In 1847, the British and French signed the Jarnac Convention, agreeing that the kingdoms of Raiatea, Huahine, and Bora Bora would remain independent from either of the two European nations, and that they would not allow any single chief to control the entire archipelago. France eventually broke the agreement and annexed the islands. They became a colony of France in 1888 (eight years after the Windward Islands did). There were many native resistance movements and conflicts in reaction to this annexation, known as the Leewards War, which continued until 1897.[3][4]
Raiatea (largest island of the group); Tahitian names: Hava'i, Ioretea
Huahine, which at high tide is divided into two islands: Huahine Nui ("big Huahine") to the north and Huahine Iti ("small Huahine") to the south; Tahitian name: Mata'irea