Pitcairn Islanders

Pitcairn Islanders
Pitkern Ailena
Total population
800–1,000 worldwide
Regions with significant populations
 Pitcairn Islands47 (2021)
 Norfolk Island484 (2016)
 Australia262 (2016)
 New Zealand48 (2018 birthplace)
 United Kingdom30
Languages
Religion
Christianity (Seventh-day Adventist Church)
Related ethnic groups

Pitcairn Islanders, also referred to as Pitkerners and Pitcairnese, are the native inhabitants of the Pitcairn Islands, a British Overseas Territory including people whose families were previously inhabitants and maintaining cultural connections. Most Pitcairn Islanders are descendants of the Bounty mutineers and Tahitians.

The mainstream Pitcairn culture is a mixture of British (specifically English, Manx and Scottish) and Polynesian (specifically Tahitian) cultures derived from the traditions of the settlers that landed in 1790, plus a few that settled afterwards. As of 2021, there are a total of 47 people inhabiting the island.

There is also a Pitcairnese diaspora, particularly in Norfolk Island, New Zealand and mainland Australia. Fearing overcrowding, in 1856 all 194 Pitkerners immigrated to Norfolk Island aboard the Morayshire (including a baby Anna Christian born en route) but 16 of them returned to Pitcairn on the Mary Ann in 1858, followed by a further four families in 1864.