Reunion Island

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Capital City Saint Denis
Tipping 10%
Electricity 220 volts
Weights and Measurements Metric system

Reunion Island

Sneak Preview

A bird’s eye view of the Île de la Réunion presents a picture of emerald green mountains rising up from the aquamarine water of the Indian Ocean. Réunion can be summed up as a tropical paradise with all the ingredients necessary for a fantastic island holiday. The Reunion Island has one of the world’s most active volcanoes, a harmonious society, lush, primeval tropical forests, vast natural amphitheatres, golden beaches and pounding waves tailor-made for surfing.

A perfect destination for a leisure vacation or an action packed one- golden beaches, active volcanoes and multicultural society with a distinct French character, a very active nightlife and wonderful food. What else could you ask for!

Historically Speaking

Though Arab and Malay mariners had been to the island long before, the 16th century Portuguese navigator Tristao da Cunha was the first European to make landfall on Réunion, thus ‘discovering’ the island he named Santa Apolonia in 1507. A few years down the line and the three islands in the region, including Mauritius and Rodriguez came to be referred to as the Islas Mascarenhas (Mascarene Islands) by the Portuguese.

The island remained lost in the vastness of the ocean as the Portuguese sailors bypassed it enroute to the far more lucrative Indies. The first French sailors arrived here on the French ship ‘Le Saint-Louis’ more than a hundred years later. The French had already established themselves on the nearby island of Madagascar, from where twelve mutineers were dispatched to Santa Apolonia under sentence of exile in 1646. Two years later, the twelve men were found to be in surprisingly good health and the authorities did a re-think on the potential of the island. In 1649, the island was officially claimed by the French in the name of the King of France and named Île Bourbon. Under its first French governor, Etienne Régnault, the island became part of the Compagnie des Indes and St Paul, its first capital. The French East India Company brought in slaves and indented labour to work on the newly established coffee plantations. Despite an official ban on slavery, the French brought in many slaves and treated them in a manner designed to make them revolt. A series of uprisings and minor rebellions later, the island’s governance passed directly to France in 1764.

The island came by its present name in 1792 when it was renamed Île de la Réunion in memory of the union of the Marseilles with the National Guard for the assault on the Tuilleries during the French revolution. As the French Republics went back and forth, so too did the island, and with the return of the monarchy in France, it again became the Île Bonaparte in 1806. Anglo-French rivalry culminated in the Napoleonic Wars and after Waterloo, the ownership of the Mascarenes passed into British hands in 1810. During their time, the British forcibly introduced the cultivation of sugarcane to the islands, making even the marginal farmers change to the new crop. As farmers abandoned their lands and fled, a labour crisis occurred forcing the British to bring in labour from India to work on these plantations.

Mauritius and Rodriguez remained with the British but Réunion returned to the French five years later under the Treaty of Paris. The islands were an important port of call for ships traversing the Indian Ocean between Asia and Europe till the opening of the Suez Canal in 1870. Competition from Cuba and Europe caused economic stagnation in the sugar industry, falling prices pushed out most players resulting in a concentration of land and capital in the hands of the French elite. As a consequence of this marginalisation, the left wing Comite’d’Action Democratique et Sociale was founded in 1936 with the primary intention of integration with France. Ten years later, in 1946, the Réunion Island became an Overseas Department of France, under direct rule and administered by France as an overseas territory. In the last few decades the left has been trying for greater autonomy and improvements in the working conditions and wages of the islanders.

Habitat

Réunion is an island in the Indian Ocean, lying about 800 km east of Madagascar in the southern hemisphere. It is largest of the Mascarene Island group made up of the islands of Mauritius and Rodriguez. Volcanic in origin, the island rose from the sea following an eruption and even now, a diagonal chain of volcanic peaks runs across the island. This chain separates a green humid eastern zone (Le Vent) from a dry, sheltered south and west (Sous le Vent). The terrain is mostly rugged and mountainous with fertile lowlands along the coast, where a majority of the people live. The east coast is humid, with verdant, tropical vegetation and wild, black volcanic beaches, whereas the west coast is generally dry, hot and sunny. The mountainous region has two main zones; the highest peak is the Piton des Neiges (3,069m ASL) and the Piton de la Fournaise is the world’s most volatile volcano. It most recently erupted in 1986, and again in 1992 and its frequent eruptions continue to build the island's coastline. The first volcano to appear was higher than the existing peaks, though it has disappeared over a period of time. Years of wind and rain have eroded the volcanic massifs into three cirques or amphitheatres, the Cirques of Cilaos, Salazie and Mafate.

Flora & Fauna

Réunion was once covered by a thick tropical forest that has since been ruthlessly cleared to make place for the plantations of sugarcane, coffee, tobacco and tropical fruits. This, combined with the introduction of new species and new plant diseases brought in by the settlers led to the extinction of many of the native species of flora and fauna. The 20,000 hectares Bébourg-Bélouve forest is one of the last remaining primary forests. The endemic species include many cacti and succulents, ferns and tree ferns, native flowers and orchids as well as tamarind and wild fig trees. Species introduced by the Europeans includes sugarcane, coffee, tea, vanilla bean, geranium and vetivier and a whole range of tropical fruits.There are no natural predators in Réunion and only a few species of reptiles. The chameleon attracts attention in an effort not to do so as it changes its colour and appearance to blend into the background. Turtles are being re-introduced into the island through breeding programmes and for commercial purposes. The aquatic fauna present in the Réunion waters is exotic in both color and variety with over 15 species found in the reefs around the island. Trout, present in the water bodies on Réunion were introduced 1940 from Madagascar. There are many birds in La Réunion has many species of birds like the virgin’s bird, martins, puffins, petrels, cardinals and the most famous paille-en-queue.


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