Bismarck Archipelago
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The Bismarck Archipelago is a group of islands off the coast of New Guinea in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, named in honour of the German chancellor Otto von Bismarck and belonging to Papua New Guinea.
The archipelago includes mostly volcanic islands, the most important of which are:
- Admiralty Islands
- Duke of York Islands
- Mussau Islands
- New Britain
- New Hanover
- New Ireland
- Vitu Islands
The first inhabitants of the Archipelago were the Lapita people.
The first European to find the islands was Dutch explorer Willem Schouten in 1616, but they remained unsettled by Europeans until they became part of the German protectorate of German New Guinea in 1884.
Following the outbreak of World War I, the Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force seized the islands in 1914 and Australia later received a League of Nations mandate for the islands. They remained under Australian control — interrupted only by Japanese occupation during World War II — until Papua New Guinea became independent in 1975.de:Bismarck-Archipel ja:ビスマルク諸島 nl:Bismarckarchipel pl:Archipelag Bismarcka