European navigators have visited New Guinea's islands …

Years: 1883 - 1883

European navigators have visited New Guinea's islands and explored its coastlines in the sixteenth through the nineteenth centuries, but Europeans know little of the inhabitants until the 1870s, when Russian anthropologist Nicholai Miklukho-Maklai makes a number of expeditions to New Guinea, spending several years living among native tribes, and describes their way of life in a comprehensive treatise on their way of life and customs.

He has also visited the Philippines and Indonesia on a number of occasions.

In 1883, Sir Thomas McIlwraith, the Premier of Queensland, orders Henry Chester (1832–1914), the Police Magistrate on Thursday Island to proceed to Port Moresby and annex New Guinea and adjacent islands in the name of the British government.

Chester makes the proclamation on April 4, 1883, but the British government repudiates the action.

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