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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: FAT-FLA |
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FERNANDO PO, or FERNANDO Poo, a Spanish island on the west coast of Africa, in the Bight of Biafra, about 20 m. from the mainland, in 3 12' N. and 8 48' E. It is of volcanic origin, related to the Cameroon system of the adjacent mainland, is the largest island in the Gulf of Guinea, is 44 M. long from N.N.E. to S.S.W., about 20 M. broad, and has an area of about 78o sq. m. Fernando Po is noted for its beautiful aspect, seeming from a short distance to be a single mountain rising from the sea, its sides covered with luxuriant vegetation. The shores are steep and rocky and the coast plain narrow. This plain is succeeded by the slopes of the mountains which occupy the rest of the island and culminate in the magnificent cone
cotton
' The heights given by explorers vary from 9200 to ro,800 ft. lemurs, the civet
snakes
The inhabitants number about 25,000. In addition to about 500 Europeans, mostly Spaniards and Cubans, they are of two classes, the Bubis or Bube (formerly also called Ediya), who occupy the interior, and the coast dwellers, a mixed Negro race, largely descended from slave ancestors with an admixture of Portuguese and Spanish blood, and known to the Bubis as Portos "a corruption of Portuguese. The Bubis are of Bantu stock and early immigrants from the mainland. Physic-ally they are a finely developed race, extremely jealous of their independence and unwilling to take service of any kind with Europeans. They go unclothed, smearing their bodies with a kind of pomatum. They stick pieces of wood
wood
late
The principal settlement is Port Clarence (pop. 1500), called by the Spaniards Santa Isabel, a safe and commodious harbour on the north coast. In its graveyard are buried Richard Lander and several other explorers of West Africa. Port Clarence is unhealthy, and the seat of government has been removed to Basile, a small town 5 M. from-Port Clarence and over loco ft. above the sea. On the west coast are the bay and port of San Carlos, on the east coast Concepcion Bay and town. The chief
History.The island was discovered towards the close of the 15th century by a Portuguese navigator called Fernao do Po, who, struck by its beauty, named it Formosa, but it soon came to be called by the name of its discoverer' A Portuguese colony was established in the island, which together with Annobon was ceded to Spain in 1778. The first attempts of Spain to develop the island ended disastrously, and in 1827, with the consent of Spain, the administration of the island was taken over by Great Britain, the British " superintendent " having a Spanish commission as governor . By the British Fernando Po was used as a naval station for the ships engaged in the suppression of the slave trade. The British headquarters were named Port Clarence and the adjacent promontory Cape William, in honour of the duke of Clarence (William IV.). In 1844 the Spaniards reclaimed the island, refusing to sell their rights to Great Britain. They did no more at that time, however, than hoist the Spanish flag, appointing a British resident, John Beecroft, governor . Beecroft, who was made British consul
2 Some authorities maintain that another Portuguese seaman, Lopes Gonsalves, was the discoverer of the island. The years 1469, 1471 and 1486 are variously given as those of the date of the discovery. neighbouring mainland (see CAMEROON). The Jesuits who succeeded the Baptists were also expelled, but mission and educational work is now carried on by other Roman Catholic agencies, and (since 187o) by the Primitive Methodists. In 1879 the Spanish government recalled its officials, but a few years later, when the partition
The administration of the island is in the hands of a governor-general, assisted by a council, and responsible to the ministry of foreign affairs at Madrid. The governor-general has under his authority the sub-governors of the other Spanish possessions in the Gulf of Guinea, namely, the Muni River Settlement, Corisco and Annobon (see those articles). None of these possessions is self-supporting. See E. d'Almonte, " Someras Notas . . . de la isla de Fernando Poo y de la Guinea continental espaiiola," in Bol. Real. Soc. Geog. of Madrid (1902) ; and a further article in the Riv. Geog. Col. of Madrid (19o8); E. L. Vilches, " Fernando Poo y la Guinea espaiiola," in the Bol. Real. Soc. Geog. (1901); San Javier, Tres Alias en Fernando No (Madrid, 1875); O. Baumann, Eine africanische Tropeninsel: Fernando Poo and die Babe (Vienna, 1888) ; Sir H. H. Johnston, George Grenfell and the Congo . . . and Notes on Fernando Po (London, 1908); Mary H. Kingsley, Travels in West Africa, ch. iii. (London, 1897) ; T. J. Hutchinson, sometime British Consul
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