<P> The murder of Bishop John Coleridge Patteson of the Melanesian Mission at Nukapu in the Reef Islands had provoked public outrage, which was compounded by the massacre by crew members of more than 150 Fijians on board the brig Carl . Two British commissioners were sent to Fiji to investigate the possibility of an annexation . The question was complicated by manoeuvrings for power between Cakobau and his old rival, Ma'afu, with both men vacillating for many months . </P> <P> On 21 March 1874, Cakobau made a final offer, which the British accepted . On 23 September, Sir Hercules Robinson, soon to be appointed the British Governor of Fiji, arrived on HMS Dido and received Cakobau with a royal 21 - gun salute . After some vacillation, Cakobau agreed to renounce his Tui Viti title . </P> <P> The formal cession took place on 10 October 1874, when Cakobau, Ma'afu, and some of the senior Chiefs of Fiji signed two copies of the Deed of Cession . Thus the Colony of Fiji was founded; 96 years of British rule followed . </P>

Why was the deed of cession important to fijis history