
400 YEARS ABEL JANSZ TASMAN
born at Lutjegast, Groningen, The Netherlands. Discoverer of Tasmania, New Zealand, the Tonga and
Fiji Islands, and the first to circumnavigate Australia.
Exhibition about the life and voyages of Abel Tasman,
August 16th – September 13th
Abel Tasman was born at Lutjegast, a small village in the north of
Holland, in 1603. He probably was the third son of a gentleman-farmer. In the
17th century Lutjegast was situated close to the Waddenzee. Tasman’s
first wife Claesge Hendricks died after the birth of their daughter, also named
Claesge. When he married for the second
time in Amsterdam in 1631 (to Jannetie Tjaers), he gave as his profession
'sailor'. Two years later he was employed by the Dutch East Indie Company and
soon commanded several of their ships. During the mid 1630s he made several
trips to the East Indies. He returned to Holland in 1637 and it is resumed this
was the last time he visited his birthplace Lutjegast. He went back to the East
Indies in 1638. This time he took his wife and daughter with him.
On 2 June 1639, he was dispatched by Antonio van Diemen,
Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies (1636-1645), on a voyage to the
north-western Pacific, in search of certain 'Islands of gold and silver', east
of Japan. On this voyage Tasman visited the Philippines and improved Dutch
knowledge of the east coast of Luzon. He also discovered and mapped various
islands to the north. After this voyage he anchored at the Dutch fortress of
Zeelandia in Formosa on 24 November 1639.
Tasman was also engaged in several other trips, sailing to Formosa,
Japan, Cambodia and Palembang as a merchant captain until 1642. In 1642 he set
out on his first great 'South Land' expedition. The expedition left Batavia on
14 August 1642 with two vessels, the Heemskerk with sixty men and the Zeehaan
with fifty men on board. They first called at Mauritius, where they stayed for
a month long repair to both ships, and sighted Tasmania on 24 November 1642. Tasman
named the island after the governor of East Indie, Antonio van Diemen. The
first two mountains they sighted on the island were named Mount Zeehan and
Mount Heemskirk, after their ships.
From here Tasman sailed further east until they again sighted unknown
land on 13 December. It was named Statenland, but later changed to New Zealand.
The Dutch were not made very welcome by the locals who killed four crewmembers
of the Zeehan. The ships continued to the north along the west coast of New
Zealand to its northern most point which Tasman named Cape Maria van Diemen,
after the Governor's wife.
On 21 January they sailed into the Tonga Archipelago where the reception
was much better and the crew was able to obtain fresh supplies. The two island
were named Amsterdam and Rotterdam. Eventually, Tasman and his ships returned
to Batavia along a route north of New Guinea on 15 June 1643. In 1644, he was
sent out again with three ships, the Limmen, Zeemeeuw and Brak, on a not well
documented expedition which took him along Australia's north coast. He explored
and named the Gulf of Carpentaria, but failed to find Torres Strait.
Although Van Diemen was disappointed Tasman did not discover a good way
to find gold or silver, his contract was still extended for another three years
with increased salary. In 1648 he left Batavia in charge of eight ships to
attack the Spanish. This was Tasman's last trip as commander as the whole
affair resulted in one great debacle. Tasman was dismissed from the Company's
service in 1649, reinstated in 1850 but resigned from active service a year
later. He died in Batavia, October 1659.
Hours of opening: 7 days / week 13.00-17.00. By appointment morning and evening. 0594 - 613576 /
614687. GSM: 06-25291756. Access is free but your donation is appreciated. Nice
childrens corner. Information:
Abel Tasman Kabinet: http://www.abeltasman.org. Email: info@abeltasman.org. Mailing address:
mrs. T.Algra, Abel Tasmanweg 17, 9866 TA Lutjegast. Exhibition: dorpshuis “t
Kompas”, Kompasstraat 1, Lutjegast.
September 8-13: exhibition Dutch Reformed Church. Artiste Yvonne Struys. Painting on canvas and works of art with nature materials, some based on
Tasman’s Journal.