The island has been inhabited by humans for some eight thousand years. By the late 1700s, the primary Indian nations there were the Nuu-Chah-Nulth[?] (Nootka) on the west coast, Salish[?] on the south and east coasts, and the Kwakiutl in the centre of the island and the north.
Europe began to encroach on the island in 1774, when rumours of Russian fur traders caused the Spanish to send a ship, the Santiago north under the command of Juan Josef Pérez Hernández[?]. In 1775 a second Spanish expedition, under Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra[?], was sent. Neither actually landed.
After these first peeks, Vancouver Island came to the attention of the wider world after the third voyage of Captain James Cook, who landed at Nootka Sound[?] of the Island's western shore on March 31, 1778 and claimed it for the United Kingdom. The island's rich fur trading potential led the British East India Company to set up a single-building trading post in the native village of Yuquot[?] on Nootka Island[?] (a small island in the Sound).
The island was further explored by Spain in 1789 by Esteban José Martínez[?], who built Fort San Miguel[?] on one of Vancouver Island's small offshore islets in the Sound near Yuquot. This was to be the only Spanish settlement in what would later be Canada. The Spanish began seizing British ships and the two nations came close to war, but the issues were resolved peacefully in favour of the British with 1792's Nootka Convention[?]. Coordinating the handover was Captain George Vancouver from King's Lynn in England, who had sailed as a midshipman with Cook, and from whom the island gained its name.
The first British settlement on the island was a Hudson's Bay Company post, Fort Camosun, founded in 1843. This became the centre of an important base during the Fraser Gold Rush[?], and the burgeoning town was incorporated as Victoria in 1862. Victoria became the capital of the colony of Vancouver Island, then retained that status when the island was amalgamated with the mainland nearby. Though long since passed in population by the city of Vancouver (which, confusingly, is not on Vancouver Island), Victoria remains the capital of British Columbia.
A British naval base was established at Esquimalt, British Columbia[?] (now amalgamated with Victoria) in 1865, and eventually taken over by the Canadian military. It is the second largest Canadian military base after that at Halifax, Nova Scotia.
As of 2002, Vancouver Island had an estimated population of 750,000. Slightly less than half of these -- 326,000 as of 2002 -- live in Victoria.
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