Hoorn Islands
The Hoorn Islands are one of two island groups that make up the French [overseas departments and territories|French overseas collectivity] of Wallis and Futuna. They consist of two volcanic islands, Futuna and Alofi, located in the South Pacific Ocean. The islands maintain traditional Polynesian governance structures under the French administration. With an aggregate area of, they had a population of 3,226 in 2018.
History
The first settlers on the islands came in 8th century BCE. In the early 16th century CE, Tongans attempted to settle the Futuna Island but were repelled. Samoans settled in the 17th century, with the Dutch explorers arriving in 1616. The archipelago was named by the Dutch navigators Willem Schouten and Jacob Le Maire, who, in 1616, became the first Europeans to visit the islands. They named them after the Dutch city of Hoorn, from which their expedition had started. They had previously rounded and named Cape Horn on the same voyage; Schouten had been born in Hoorn.French Catholic missionaries were the first Europeans to permanently settle in 1837, who converted the population to Catholicism by 1846. The islands became part of a French protectorate after the king Lavelua asked for them in 1842. Until 1961, they were part of a French protectorate administered from New Caledonia, after which they were part of the French overseas territory of Wallis and Futuna, which became a French overseas collectivity in 2003.