Lifuka is an island in the Kingdom of Tonga . It is located within the Haʻapai Group in the centre of the country, to northeast of the national capital of Nukuʻalofa .
5-488: Holopeka is a settlement in Lifuka island, Tonga . The population is 132. Holopeka met international acclaim in the mid-1990s, as the ancestral home of New Zealand rugby player Jonah Lomu . Lomu came to be regarded as one of the greatest rugby players of all time. 19°47′02″S 174°20′28″W / 19.784°S 174.341°W / -19.784; -174.341 ( Holopeka ) This Tongan location article
10-659: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Lifuka It is the administrative centre of the Haʻapai group of islands with Pangai being the administrative capital village. Lifuka is the place where Captain James Cook dubbed Tonga "The Friendly Islands". Tofua is where the mutiny on the Bounty occurred in 1789; this active volcanic island lies approximately 40 nautical miles west of Lifuka. The Captain Bligh voyage stands as
15-697: The Kingdom of Tonga . The anchor of the Port au Prince was rediscovered in 2009 by a dive operator based on Lifuka. In August 2012, the wreck of the ship was discovered off the coast of Foa Island , in Tonga. It has a population of 2,968 and an area of 11.42 km . There is an airport, the Lifuka Island Airport . 19°47′56″S 174°21′24″W / 19.79889°S 174.35667°W / -19.79889; -174.35667 This Tongan location article
20-577: The attack, William Mariner , was befriended by the King and spent the next four years in the Kingdom before being allowed to return to England. A chance meeting with the author John Martin upon his return resulted in a collaboration that eventually documented the experiences of Mariner in the book An account of the natives of the Tongan Islands , a now highly respected anthropological study of early civilisation in
25-510: The longest known successful passage ever recorded in an open boat without modern navigational aids. It was successfully recreated in 2009 by the Talisker Bounty team. Lifuka Island was the final anchorage of the ill-fated Port au Prince . In 1806 the natives off the northwest coast attacked the British privateer and whaler , slaughtering the majority of the crew. One of the few survivors of
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