Draft:Bauro Timon

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Tem Bauro
File:KingPaulOfAbemama.png
The Graphic, 10 September 1892
Uea of Abemama, Kuria and Aranuka
PredecessorBinoka
SuccessorTokatake
RegentTimon
Born1882
State of Abemama
Died1903–1906
Gilbert and Ellice Islands
KaingaTuangaona
FatherTimon (biological)
Binoka (adoptive)
MotherTaeia (biological)
ReligionCatholicism

Tem[a] Bauro[b] (fl. 1882[c] – c. 1903) was the fourth uea (Gilbertese 'king, high chief') of Abemama, Kuria and Aranuka. He was the last ruler of the State of Abemama, a sovereign state in the Gilbert Islands, before the British annexed the archipelago in 1892.

Shortly after his birth in 1882 Bauro was adopted by his uncle Binoka, the third and most infamous uea. After Binoka died without issue in 1891 Bauro's father Timon served as his son's regent until dying of drink several months later. Bauro was therefore only 10 years old and in want of a regent when Captain E. H. M. Davis of HMS Royalist arrived to hoist the Union Jack on Abemama, bringing an end to his family's sovereignty. Under the British protectorate Bauro continued to rule in a customary capacity. His reign was uneventful. He married a commoner and died between 1903 and 1906. Like his uncle Bauro had no children and was succeeded by his nephew.

Background

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File:State of Abemama location map.svg
The State of Abemama was composed of Abemama, Kuria and Aranuka in the Gilbert Islands, now part of Kiribati.

The Gilbert Islands are a remote archipelago in the Central Pacific. Annexed into the British Empire in 1892, the islands achieved independence in 1979 when the Republic of Kiribati was founded. In the precolonial period, indigenous polities included chieftainships headed by a uea (king, high chief). On Abemama, Kuria and Aranuka, uea from the kainga (clan hamlet) of Tuangaona have reigned since the late 18th century. The historian H. E. Maude referred to this absolute hereditary monarchy as the State of Abemama, writers such as R. L. Stevenson and Louis Becke called it the Kingdom of Abemama.

Early life

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File:BinokaAndBauro.png
"King of Apemama and adopted son" (Robert Louis Stevenson, 1889)

Binoka was the third uea of Abemama, Kuria and Aranuka, made famous by Stevenson's In The South Seas (1896). Despite having dozens of wives, he never bore a child.[d] Bauro — the son of Timon, his younger brother,[e] and Taeia, a commoner,[f] — was born in 1882,[c] and Binoka decided to take his nephew up as his heir instead. After the adoption ceremony, Binoka cut Bauro's feet to let out his commoner blood, which Binoka made the nobles dab on their foreheads.[g] With a minute amount of his blood, the nobles were rendered inferior to Bauro, silencing any potential opposition to him succeeding Binoka. Bauro was no more than six years old when this happened.

Reign

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Binoka died on 10 November 1891, and Timon served as Bauro's regent for four and a half months before dying of drink. On 27 May 1892, Captain Edward H. M. Davis of HMS Royalist arrived on Abemama to declare that a British protectorate had been established over the Gilbert and Ellice Islands. Bauro was only 10 years old at the time and had no power to resist. He was reportedly cooperative and curious about what life was like in Great Britain. H

After Binoka died, Timon served as his son's regent for four and a half months before he 'died of drink.' In 1892, Captain Edward H. M. Davis of HMS Royalist sailed around the Gilbert and Ellice Islands to proclaim the establishment of a British protectorate. On Abemama, the first island he went to,

According to R. G. Roberts, Bauro 'reigned for a brief an uneventful period, and then died without issue.' Although he was still ruling in 1903, he had been succeeded by Tokatake — the son of Rita, his only recorded sibling — by 1906.

Footnotes

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Vol. 37, No. 10 ( Oct. 1, 1966)

  1. ^ Tem is a Gilbertese male prefix.
  2. ^ Bauro is the Gilbertese borrowing of Paul, and many sources refer to Bauro as Paul. One source refers to Bauro as Bauro Timon. Another source gives a full name: Paul Ienibaro Simon.
  3. ^ a b In Stevenson's In The South Seas, Bauro is described as 'the heir-apparent, Paul, his [Binoka's] nephew and adopted son, six years old, stark naked, and a model of young human beauty.' Stevenson stayed on Abemama in September and November 1889, so Bauro was born in 1881 or 1882. When he visited Abemama in November 1892, Captain Edward H. M. Davis wrote that Bauro was 10 years old, placing his birth in 1882.
  4. ^ There were rumours that Binoka was impotent, and Stevenson reported that his relationships with the women of his household might have been strictly platonic.
  5. ^ According to Stevenson: '[One brother of Binoka], detected in private trading, was banished, then forgiven, lives to this day in the island, and is the father of the heir-apparent, Paul.'
  6. ^ Baiteke (r. 1850–1878), the father of Binoka and Timon, established a strict system of social stratification when he was the second uea. Of the five social classes he created, Taeia's (Rang) was the third; the lowest landed class. Timon had disgraced his royal (Ba n uea, lit.'family of uea') blood by marrying into the Rang class.
  7. ^ After the Ba n uea, the Inaomata were the second-highest social class. They were landowners who owned their high status to the uea.