Pohnpei (also spelled Ponape and earlier Bonabee) is the name of one of the states in the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM), and one of the Senyavin Islands. The FSM's capital Palikir is located on Pohnpei.
History
First sighted by the Russian navigator
Fyodor Litke in 1828, the island was a
Japanese territory in
World War II, Japan having acquired Ponape along with the rest of the
Carolines, the
Marshalls, and the
Marianas (less American-owned
Guam) as
war reparations from
Germany. However, the island was one of those bypassed by the
US Navy during the amphibious campaigns of 1943-1945. The military facilities were shelled on several occasions, including by the
battleships
USS Massachusetts (BB-59) and
Iowa (BB-61), and by the
aircraft of
Cowpens (CVL-25).
The Federated States of Micronesia achieved independence in 1986.
Nearby islands
- The atoll of Pingelap, located several hundred miles to the east of Pohnpei, but part of Pohnpei State, is notable for the prevalence of the extreme form of color blindness known as maskun. Maskun is relatively rare but often shows up in communities with small gene-pools. Pingelap was featured in the book, The Island of the Colorblind, by neurologist Oliver Sacks.
- The ancient artificial islands of Nan Madol are near to Pohnpei.
Pohnpei in fiction
Pohnpei plays a central role in the fictional
Cthulhu Mythos, in which it is only about ten days journey by fast ship from the fictional island of
R'lyeh, the place where the
fictional character Cthulhu currently resides. Several stories by
H. P. Lovecraft,
August Derleth and others use this island as a setting or contain references to it.
Pohnpei's role in the Mythos was inspired by the ruins of Nan Madol (see above), which had already been used as the setting for a lost race story by Abraham Merritt, The Moon Pool, in which the islands are called Nan-Tauach. Some Occultists see Nan Madol as connected to the lost continent of Lemuria.
External links
Geography of the Federated States of Micronesia
Понпей | Pohnpei | Pohnpei | Ponape | Ponape | Pohnpei | ポンペイ島 | Pohnpei | Pohnpei | Pohnpei