Nan madol, for article on Nan Madol construction

Pohnpeians begin building Nan Madol, the Venice of the Pacific

In the lagoon off the eastern shore of Pohnpei, something remarkable was taking shape. Beginning around the 8th or 9th century C.E., the people of this Pacific island started filling a coral reef flat with stone and rubble, laying the foundations for one of the most extraordinary urban complexes the ancient world ever produced. They called it Soun Nan-leng — “Reef of Heaven.” We know it today as Nan Madol.

What the evidence shows

  • Nan Madol construction: Radiocarbon dating confirms human activity at Pohnpei as early as 80–200 C.E., with islet construction beginning by the 8th or 9th century C.E. — around 850 C.E. — and the more distinctive megalithic phase starting around 1180–1200 C.E.
  • Artificial island network: The completed complex eventually included 92 stone-and-coral fill platforms covering a core area roughly 1.5 by 0.5 kilometers, all linked by tidal canals — earning the city its enduring nickname, the “Venice of the Pacific.”
  • Saudeleur dynasty: Nan Madol served as the ceremonial and political capital of the Saudeleur rulers, who unified Pohnpei’s estimated population of 25,000 people and presided over the city until roughly 1628 C.E.

Building a city on open water

There is no fresh water at Nan Madol. No food grows there. Every drop of drinking water had to be collected or brought by canoe from the main island. Every meal arrived by boat. And yet, over centuries, Pohnpeians built and sustained a functioning city in the middle of a lagoon.

The name Nan Madol means “within the intervals” — a reference to the canals that thread between the islets like streets in a floating city. Each platform was built up from the reef using basalt and coral fill. The largest construction stones, used during the later megalithic phase, were massive basalt columns quarried from a volcanic plug on the opposite side of Pohnpei and transported by sea. How exactly they were moved remains one of archaeology’s open questions. Pohnpeian oral tradition credits twin sorcerers, Olisihpa and Olosohpa, who arrived from a mythical western land and levitated the stones with the help of a flying dragon.

The practical ingenuity behind the construction is no less impressive than the legend. The builders understood tidal patterns, reef structures, and the logistics of sustained maritime supply. They were not just architects — they were engineers of a living ocean system.

A city of power, ritual, and control

Nan Madol was never a city in the conventional sense. Its population likely never exceeded 1,000 people, possibly far fewer. But what it lacked in population density, it made up for in political and ceremonial weight.

The complex was divided into two main sectors. Madol Powe, in the northeast, was the mortuary sector — home to priests, ritual islets, and royal tombs. The most prominent of these is Nandauwas, the royal mortuary islet, where walls 5.5 to 7.5 meters high surround a central tomb enclosure. It was built, tradition says, for the very first Saudeleur.

The southern sector, Madol Pah, served administrative functions. Saudeleur chiefs used Nan Madol partly as a tool of governance: by requiring potential rivals to live at the site rather than in their home districts, they kept watch over them. The city was beautiful. It was also a gilded cage.

Commoners, not just elites, lived and worked at Nan Madol. Dedicated islets handled food preparation, canoe construction, and the production of coconut oil. The city ran on the labor of people whose names history did not record — a pattern common to monumental construction across the ancient world.

Pacific crossroads of knowledge

Nan Madol does not exist in isolation. Pohnpeian tradition holds that the builders of Leluh, a similarly ambitious stone complex on the neighboring island of Kosrae, migrated to Pohnpei and contributed their skills to the project. Radiocarbon dating complicates this story — it suggests Nan Madol actually predates Leluh, making influence more likely to have flowed in the other direction.

Either way, the picture that emerges is one of sustained knowledge exchange across the Pacific — seafaring peoples sharing techniques, moving between islands, and building traditions that drew on generations of accumulated skill. The great stone cities of Micronesia were not isolated achievements. They were the product of a connected world.

In 2016 C.E., UNESCO inscribed Nan Madol as a World Heritage Site, recognizing its outstanding universal value as a unique example of human settlement on open water and as a window into the political and ceremonial life of pre-colonial Micronesia.

Lasting impact

Nan Madol’s influence extended well beyond its own shores. The Saudeleur dynasty’s model of centralized political authority — using a dedicated ceremonial capital to consolidate power and organize a dispersed island population — was genuinely novel in the Pacific context. It shaped the political structures of Pohnpei for centuries and likely influenced neighboring island polities.

The site also reshaped how archaeologists and historians understand the pre-colonial Pacific. For much of Western history, Pacific Island peoples were described through the lens of “discovery” narratives that systematically underestimated their organizational complexity, engineering capacity, and political sophistication. Nan Madol is a standing refutation of that framing. Its 92 artificial islets, built without metal tools or wheeled vehicles, represent one of the most ambitious feats of construction in the ancient world.

Today, Nan Madol remains a living part of Pohnpeian identity. It is not merely a ruin — it is an ancestor site, a place where the origins of the community’s political and spiritual traditions are embedded in stone.

Blindspots and limits

The archaeological record at Nan Madol is significant but incomplete. The site has faced ongoing threats from mangrove overgrowth and neglect, and UNESCO listed it as a World Heritage Site in danger at the time of inscription, citing deterioration of the stonework and inadequate management infrastructure. The oral histories that explain the site’s origins are rich and culturally authoritative, but the written record of Nan Madol’s early centuries — who built it, how decisions were made, what ordinary life looked like — remains thin. The people most responsible for constructing Nan Madol, the commoners and laborers who filled the reef platforms stone by stone, are largely invisible in both the archaeological and traditional record.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Nan Madol

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

About this article

  • 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
  • 🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
  • 💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
  • ✉️ One verified piece of good news, one insight from Antihero Project, every weekday morning. Subscribe free.

More Good News

  • Rows of solar panels in a Chinese desert reflecting China wind and solar capacity growth under the Five-Year Plan clean energy targets

    China plans to double its already massive clean energy supply by 2035

    China’s new climate pledge to the United Nations sets a target of 3,600 gigawatts of wind and solar power by 2035 — more than the entire electricity-generating capacity of the United States today, and roughly double what China has already built. The commitment is woven into the country’s next Five-Year Plan, which directs state banks, provinces, and manufacturers to move in the same direction. Because China makes about 80% of the world’s solar panels, every factory it scales up makes clean energy cheaper for buyers in Africa, Southeast Asia, Latin America, and everywhere else. That ripple effect is what makes…


  • Medical researcher in a lab examining vials related to asthma and COPD treatment and mRNA vaccine development, for article on benralizumab injection

    Doctors hail first breakthrough in asthma and COPD treatment in 50 years

    Benralizumab, a single injection given during an asthma or COPD attack, outperformed the steroid pills that have been the only emergency option since the 1970s. In a King’s College London trial of 158 patients, those who got the shot had four times fewer treatment failures over 90 days, along with easier breathing and fewer follow-up visits. Because steroids carry real risks with repeated use — diabetes, osteoporosis, and more — a genuine alternative could change daily life for millions of people who live in fear of the next flare-up. After a half-century of stalled progress on diseases that claim 3.8…


  • A nurse in a rural Mexican clinic checks a patient's blood pressure, for an article about Mexico universal healthcare

    Mexico launches universal healthcare for all 133 million citizens

    Mexico universal healthcare is now officially a reality, with the country launching a system designed to cover all 133 million citizens through the restructured IMSS-Bienestar network. Before this reform, an estimated 50 million Mexicans had no formal health insurance, with rural and Indigenous communities bearing the heaviest burden of untreated illness and medical debt. The new system severs the long-standing tie between employment and healthcare access, providing free consultations, medicines, and hospital services regardless of income. If implemented effectively, Mexico’s move could serve as a powerful model for other middle-income nations still navigating fragmented, inequitable health systems.



Coach, writer, and recovering hustle hero. I help purpose-driven humans do good in the world in dark times - without the burnout.