Spain formally annexes the Caroline Islands in …

Years: 1896 - 1896

Spain formally annexes the Caroline Islands in 1896.

The Spanish colonel Coello had suggested to the Spanish government in 1852 that the effective occupation of the Caroline Islands provided trade advantages between the Philippines and Australia, New Guinea and the Americas, but Spain would ignore his suggestions until 1885.

In that year, the Spanish representative Butron and the kings of Koror and Artingal had signed an act that recognized the sovereignty of the king of Spain on the Carolines.

Having secured the territory, Spain had attempted to establish custom duties in the region in 1875, but Germany and the United Kingdom had protested because Spain's previous abandonment of the islands had allowed the arrival of German and British missions there.

A conflict had arisen, leading to the submission of these facts for arbitration by Pope Leo XIII, who recognized Spanish rights on the islands west of the 164th meridian east; he assigned to Germany the Marshall Islands and the right to maintain a naval station in one of the Caroline Islands, a right that Germany has never exercised.

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