Willem de Vlamingh

Portrait by Jan Verkolje and his son Nicolaas Verkolje, ca. 1690, thought to be of Willem de Vlamingh. Part of the ANMM collection

Willem Hesselsz de Vlamingh (28 November 1640, Oost-Vlieland – 1698 or later) was a Dutch sea-captain who explored the central west coast of Australia (then "New Holland") in the late 17th century. The mission proved fruitless, but Vlamingh charted parts of the continent's western coast.[1]

Early life

In 1664 De Vlamingh sailed to Nova Zembla and discovered Jelmerland.[2][3] In 1668 he married; his profession was skipper in whaling, and he still lived on the island Vlieland.[4] In 1687 he and his wife sold their "apartment" in the Jordaan.[5] De Vlamingh joined the VOC (Dutch East India Company) in 1688 and made his first voyage to Batavia in the same year. Following a second voyage, in 1694, he was asked, on request of Nicolaes Witsen, to mount an expedition to search for the Ridderschap van Holland, a VOC capital ship that was lost with 325 passengers and crew on its way to Batavia in 1694. VOC officials believed it might have run aground on the west coast of Terra Australis.

De Vlamingh's rescue mission

Willem de Vlamingh's ships, with black swans, at the entrance to the Swan River, Western Australia, coloured engraving (1796), derived from an earlier drawing (now lost) from the de Vlamingh expeditions of 1696–97.
Red Bluff
Entrance to Wittecarra Gully

In 1696 Willem de Vlamingh commanded the rescue mission to Australia's west coast to look for survivors of the Ridderschap van Holland that had gone missing two years earlier, and had admiral Sir James Couper on board .[6] There were three ships under his command: the frigate Geelvink, captained by de Vlamingh himself; the Nijptang, under Captain Gerrit Collaert; and the galiot Weseltje, under Captain Cornelis de Vlamingh, son of Willem de Vlamingh. The expedition departed Texel 'stricly incognito' on 3 May 1696[7] and, because of the Nine Years' War with France, sailed around the coast of Scotland to Tristan de Cunha. Early September the three ships arrived at Cape of Good Hope, where they stayed for seven weeks because of scurvy among the crew. (There Cornelis de Vlamingh took command after Laurens T. Zeeman died).[8] On 27 October they left, using the Brouwer Route on the Indian Ocean route from the African Cape of Good Hope to the Dutch East Indies. On their way east they checked Île Saint-Paul and Île Amsterdam, but no wreckage or survivors were found. On 5 December they sailed on.

De Vlamingh, with his son and Collaert, commanded a return fleet from the Indies on 3 or 11 February 1698,[13] which arrived in his hometown, Amsterdam, on 16 August. However, it is not certain that De Vlamingh was still alive at that point, and burial records from Vlieland around this time do not exist. On an earlier retourship, De Vlamingh had sent Witsen a box with seashells, fruits and vegetation from New Holland (Australia), as well as eleven drawings that Victor Victorsz had made on the expedition. De Vlamingh also included some black swans, but they died on the voyage. Witsen offered the drawings to Martin Lister.[14] Witsen, who had invested in the journey, was disappointed the men had been more interested in setting up trade than in exploring.[15] In 1699 William Dampier would explore the coast of Australia and New Guinea.

References

Dorpsstraat 176, Vlieland, where De Vlamingh was born.[16]
Statue of Willem de Vlamingh on Vlieland
  1. The original maps were found in 2006 in the National Library of Australia.
  2. Encyclopedia of the Arctic By Mark Nuttall
  3. http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/wits008noor02_01/wits008noor02_01_0174.php
  4. City Archives Amsterdam
  5. City Archives Amsterdam
  6. Phillip E. Playford, Voyage of Discovery to Terra Australis: by Willem De Vlamingh, 1696-97, Western Australian Museum, Perth, 1998, p. 4.
  7. http://www.vocsite.nl/schepen/detail.html?id=10355
  8. Phillip E. Playford, Voyage of Discovery to Terra Australis: by Willem De Vlamingh, 1696-97, Western Australian Museum, Perth, 1998, p. 5.
  9. Phillip E. Playford, Voyage of Discovery to Terra Australis: by Willem De Vlamingh, 1696-97, Western Australian Museum, Perth, 1998, p. 29, 84.
  10. "The Origin Of Life On Perth (1697)". LifeonPerth.com. Retrieved 2016-08-18.
  11. Phillip E. Playford, Voyage of Discovery to Terra Australis: by Willem De Vlamingh, 1696-97, Western Australian Museum, Perth, 1998, p. 36, 41.
  12. "Hartog & de Vlamingh Plates". Western Australian Museum. Retrieved 2010-05-18.
  13. http://www.vocsite.nl/schepen/detail.html?id=10363
  14. Smit, P & A.P.M. Sanders & J.P.F. van der Veen (1986) Hendrik Engel's Alphabetical List of Dutch Zoological Cabinets and Menageries, p. 306.
  15. Heeres, J.E. (1899) The part borne by the Dutch in the discovery of Australia 1606-1765, p. XVI, 83.
  16. http://www.vlieland-info.nl/vlamingh.html

Sources

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