Palau Islands

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Palau Islands
Topographic map
Topographic map
Waters Pacific Ocean
archipelago Carolines
Geographical location 7 ° 28 '  N , 134 ° 32'  E Coordinates: 7 ° 28 '  N , 134 ° 32'  E
Palau Islands (Palau)
Palau Islands
Number of islands over 300
Main island Babelthuap
Total land area approx. 440 km²
Residents 19,850 (2005)

The Palau Islands , formerly Pelew Islands , the westernmost group of islands in the archipelago of Karolinen and lie in the Pacific Ocean between 2 ° 35 'and 9 ° 0' north latitude and between 130 ° 4 'and 134 ° 40' east longitude, 880 km east of the Philippines and 400 kilometers southwest of the Federated States of Micronesia belonging Yap Islands .

geography

The Palau Islands consist of over 300 islands , some of which are very small , of which only a few are inhabited or would be habitable due to insufficient space. The largest island with an area of ​​409 square kilometers is Babelthuap . With the exception of the Kayangel Atoll in the north and the island of Angaur in the south, all of the Palau Islands are surrounded by a dense coral reef that is interrupted in several places .

history

The archipelago was spotted by the Spanish explorer Ruy López de Villalobos in 1543 and was originally called Arrecifos . In 1899 the Spaniards colonized the islands and later sold them to the German Empire after their defeat in the Spanish-American War (→  German-Spanish Treaty 1899 ). During the First World War , the islands were occupied by Japan . The city of Koror on the island of the same name became the seat of government of the Japanese South Sea Mandate . In 1944, during World War II , the southern Palau Islands were the scene of a battle between the Japanese and the Americans. The island of Peleliu was particularly hard fought. Since 1994, the Paulau Islands together with some remote islets southwest of the main group have formed the independent island state of Palau .

literature

Franz Hernsheim (first German consul and leisure
painter ):
Palao (around 1880)