Society Islands

archipelago, French Polynesia
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Also known as: Îles de la Société
French:
Îles de la Société

Society Islands, archipelago within French Polynesia in the central South Pacific Ocean. Extending some 450 miles (725 km) in length, it is divided into two island clusters, the Îles du Vent (Windward Islands) and the Îles Sous le Vent (Leeward Islands). The largest and best known of the Society Islands is Tahiti, in the Îles du Vent; Moorea is another notable island in the group. Raiatea is the principal island in the Îles Sous le Vent group, which also includes Bora-Bora.

Claimed for Britain by Capt. Samuel Wallis (1767) and for France by Louis-Antoine de Bougainville (1768), the islands were also visited (1769) by Capt. James Cook with a scientific expedition of the Royal Society (whence their name). The islands became first a French protectorate (1842), then a colony (1881), and eventually a part of French Oceania (1903). The Îles du Vent and the Îles Sous le Vent became administrative divisions of French Polynesia in 1946. Pop. (2017) 242,726.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.