The term was first coined as Mar de Sur, or “South Sea,” by Spanish conquistadorVasco Núñez de Balboa in 1513 and was applied to the entire area of today's Pacific Ocean. In 1520, Ferdinand Magellan named the same ocean the Pacific Ocean, and over time Magellan's name became more well-known.
Núñez de Balboa and his soldiers attempted to travel to the peak of the mountain to see the sea, but when they arrived at the foot of the mountain only 69 out of 190 soldiers had survived the journey. Balboa did not want to share the experience of being the first to see the unknown ocean and so he commanded his crew to remain at the foot of the mountain and wait. He then became the first European to see the Pacific Ocean on 25 September 1513. After looking at the ocean alone for some time, he told his crew to come up to join him. [3][4]
After he set foot into the ocean, at the opening of the Saban river he declared the South Sea, and all adjoining lands to be property of his king.[4]
Literature and film
A genre of literature and film has developed around the South Seas because it is often seen as an idealized and romanticized region of the world.
Paul Gauguin, a French artist, contributed to the idea of a Garden of Eden by creating paintings of exotic paradises rather than as they really were.
The German writer Erich Scheurmann also utilized this imagery when he created fictional travel reports of a South Seas chief that were published between 1915 and 1920 under the title The Papalagi. The book gained popularity fifty years after it was published and sold more than 1.7 million copies in German alone.
Drawings and paintings
Joseph Banks hired Sydney Parkinson, a nature draftsman, and Alexander Buchan, landscape painter, to accompany James Cook's first expedition to the Pacific (1768 –1771) and to record the discoveries that were made. Parkinson and Buchan depicted the people living on the Society Islands, the coasts of New Zealand, and on Easter Island and their environments in drawings and paintings. The painter William Hodges accompanied Captain Cook on his second expedition to the South Seas, New Zealand, Tonga, the Society Islands, Melanesia, and Easter Island among others. During Cook's third expedition to the South Seas, John Webber painted South Sea motifs on the Cook Islands, Tahiti and Hawaii, among other places.
Ingo Kühl: The Sea IV, Oil on canvas, 2012, painted in Vanuatu
Paul Gauguin reached Tahiti in April 1891 and painted 66 paintings during his time there. He left the island in early 1892 due to health problems and brief difficulties and later returned to Paris to travel to Papeete in September 1895. He died in 1903 on the Marquesas.
The "South Seas trade" was a term used in Britain in the nineteenth century to denote sealing, whaling, island trading and other commercial ship-based activities in the Pacific.
^ abcPolk, Dora Beale (1991). The Island of California: A History of The Myth (1995 reprint ed.). Spokane, Washington: Arthur H. Clark Company. pp. 67–76. ISBN0-8032-8741-0.