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- Official Tourism Site of The Falkland Islands
- CRW Flags - Flag of Falkland Islands, United Kingdom
- Central Intelligence Agency - The World Factbook - Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas)
- History World - History of Falkland Islands
- NERC Open Research Archive - The Geology of the Falkland Islands (PDF)
- University of Prince Edward Island - Institute of Island Studies - Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas) (PDF)
History of the Falkland Islands
The English navigatorJohn Davis in theDesire may have been the first person to sight the Falklands, in 1592, but it was the Dutchman Sebald de Weerdt who made the first undisputed sighting of them about 1600. The English captainJohn Strong made the first recorded landing in the Falklands, in 1690, and named the sound between the two main islands after ViscountFalkland, a British naval official. The name was later applied to the whole island group. TheFrench navigatorLouis-Antoine de Bougainville founded the islands’ first settlement, onEast Falkland, in 1764, and he named the islands the Malovines. TheBritish, in 1765, were the first to settleWest Falkland, but they were driven off in 1770 by theSpanish, who had bought out the French settlement about 1767. The British outpost on West Falkland was restored in 1771 after threat of war, but then the Britishwithdrew from the island in 1774 for reasons of economy, without renouncing their claim to the Falklands. Spain maintained a settlement on East Falkland (which it called Soledad Island) until 1811.
In 1820 theBuenos Aires government, which had declared its independence from Spain in 1816, proclaimed itssovereignty over the Falklands. In 1831 the U.S. warshipLexington destroyed the Argentine settlement on East Falkland in reprisal for the arrest of three U.S. ships that had been hunting seals in the area. In early 1833 a British force expelled the few remaining Argentine officials from the island without firing a shot. In 1841 a British civilian lieutenant governor was appointed for the Falklands, and by 1885 a Britishcommunity of some 1,800 people on the islands was self-supporting. Argentina regularly protestedBritain’s occupation of the islands.
AfterWorld War II the issue ofsovereignty over the Falkland Islands shifted to theUnited Nations when, in 1964, the islands’ status was debated by the UN committee on decolonization.Argentina based its claim to the Falklands on papal bulls of 1493 modified by theTreaty of Tordesillas (1494), by whichSpain andPortugal had divided the New World between themselves; on succession from Spain; on the islands’ proximity toSouth America; and on the need to end a colonial situation. Britain based its claim on its “open, continuous, effective possession, occupation, and administration” of the islands since 1833 and its determination to apply to the Falklanders the principle of self-determination as recognized in the United Nations Charter. Britainasserted that, far from ending a colonial situation, Argentine rule and control of the lives of the Falklanders against their wishes would in fact create one.
In 1965 the UN General Assembly approved a resolution inviting Britain and Argentina to hold discussions to find a peaceful solution to the dispute. These protracted discussions were still proceeding in February 1982, but on April 2 Argentina’smilitary government invaded the Falklands. This act started theFalkland Islands War, which ended 10 weeks later with the surrender of the Argentine forces atStanley to British troops who had forcibly reoccupied the islands. Although Britain and Argentina reestablished full diplomatic relations in 1990, the issue of sovereignty remained a point ofcontention. In the early 21st century Britain continued to maintain some 2,000 troops on the islands. In January 2009 a new constitution came into effect that strengthened the Falklands’ local democratic government and reserved for the islanders their right to determine the territory’s political status. In a referendum held in March 2013, islanders voted nearly unanimously to remain a British overseas territory.


