School children all over the world
(Australia included) think that Captain Cook ‘discovered’ Australia. He did not – as he was the first to admit –
but the myth persists. However, the
Western Australian Government is doing its best to put the record straight.
There were other, much earlier, discoveries
and they will be celebrated, big time, next year.
THE DUYFKEN
The Duyfken
(Little Dove) was a fast, lightly armed ship probably intended for shallow
water, small valuable cargoes, bringing messages, sending provisions, or
privateering. Her tonnage was between 50
and 60 tons.
In 1601 the Duyfken sailed from Texel as the jacht (scout) to accompany the first Dutch fleet to the Spice
Islands. When the fleet reached Bantam (then the most important port in Java)
they drove away a blockading Portuguese fleet thus ending the dominance of the
Iberians in the spice trade.
After that, Duyfken had an exciting few years. On the voyage home from the
Indies she was separated from the rest of the fleet in a storm but made it back
before the others. On the next journey out to the Indies, in 1603, the fleet
captured a Portuguese ship in Mozambique Channel and in 1605 she took part in
the recapture of the fort of Van Verre at Ambon Island (part of the Maluku
Islands of Indonesia).
So Duyfken
had already had many adventures before the Dutch East India Company (VOC)
sent her, in 1605, captained by Willem Janszoon, to search for trade
opportunities in the ‘south and east lands’ beyond the furthest reaches of the
known world.
Janszoon took the ship along the south
coast of New Guinea, continued east-southeast and, in early 1606, encountered
and then charted the shores of Australia’s Cape York Peninsula. The ship made landfall
at the Pennefather River in the Gulf of Carpentaria – the first authenticated
landing on Australian soil.
Such was the importance of this little ship
that, after many years of lobbying, the Duyfken Replica Project was formed and
a full sized reproduction was launched on 24th January 1999 in
Fremantle, Western Australia. Since then
she’s made goodwill tours all over Australia and to Sri Lanka, Mauritis, South
Africa and the Netherlands.
And in October 2016, she will sail up the
coast from Perth, WA, to take part in an event to commemorate another
significant date in Australia’s history.
DIRK
HARTOG
In 1616, Dirk Hartog was employed by the
Dutch East India Company (VOC) and appointed master of the Eendracht (Concord) in a fleet going out to the Dutch East Indies.
The Eendracht
became separated from the rest of the fleet in a storm and continued the
journey to Java alone. On October 25th
1616, he and his crew came unexpectedly upon ‘various islands, which were,
however, found uninhabited’. He made
landfall at an island off the coast of Shark Bay, Western Australia, which now
bears his name.
He spent three days examining the coast and nearby islands and when he left he fixed a pewter plate to a post. On the plate he had scratched a record of his visit. Its inscription (translated from the Dutch) reads:
He spent three days examining the coast and nearby islands and when he left he fixed a pewter plate to a post. On the plate he had scratched a record of his visit. Its inscription (translated from the Dutch) reads:
‘1616
On 25 October arrived the ship Eendracht, of Amsterdam: Supercargo Gilles
Miebais of Liege, skipper Dirch Hatichs of Amsterdam. On 27 ditto she set sail
again for Bantam. Deputy supercargo Jan Stins, upper steersman Pieter Doores of
Bil. In the year 1616.’
Finding nothing of interest, Hartog
continued sailing northwards along this previously undiscovered coastline of
Western Australia, making nautical charts up to about 22 degrees latitude
south. He then left the coast and continued on the Batavia (present day Java)
eventually arriving safely in December 1616, some five months after his expected
arrival.
These 17th century mariners must
have been incredibly brave, sailing in uncharted waters without any way of
measuring longitude.
To commemorate the 400th
anniversary of Dirk Hartog’s landing, the Western Australian Government and
others are funding some major regeneration in and around Dirk Hartog Island,
educational projects to raise awareness of the State’s early European history
and a huge programme of celebrations.
Celebrations which I hope to be
attending. Watch this space!
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