Willem Janszoon (; ), sometimes abbreviated to Willem Jansz., was a
Dutch navigator and colonial governor. Janszoon served in the
Dutch East Indies in the periods 16031611 and 16121616, including as governor of Fort Henricus on the island of
Solor. He is the first European known to have seen the coast of
Australia during
his voyage of 16051606.
Early life
Willem Janszoon (Willem Jansz) was born around 1570, but nothing is known of his early life nor of his parents.
Janszoon is first recorded as entering into the service of the ''Oude compagnie'', one of the predecessors of the
Dutch East India Company (VOC), in 1598 as a mate aboard the , part of the
second fleet under
Jacob Cornelisz. van Neck, dispatched by the Dutch to the
Dutch East Indies.
[Mutch (1942), p13] On 5 May 1601, he again sailed for the
East Indies as master of the ''Lam'', one of three ships in the fleet of
Joris van Spilbergen.
Janszoon sailed from the Netherlands for the East Indies for the third time on 18 December 1603, as captain of the (or ''Duijfken'', meaning "Little Dove"), one of twelve ships of the great fleet of
Steven van der Hagen. When the other ships left
Java, Janszoon was sent to search for other outlets of trade, particularly in "the great land of New Guinea and other East and Southlands".
Exploration and discovery
First voyage to Australia
On 18 November 1605, the ''
Duyfken'' sailed from
Bantam to the coast of western
New Guinea. After that, Janszoon crossed the eastern end of the
Arafura Sea into the
Gulf of Carpentaria, without being aware of the existence of
Torres Strait. The ''Duyfken'' was actually in Torres Strait in February 1606, a few months before Spanish explorer
Luís Vaz de Torres sailed through it. On 26 February 1606, Janzoon made landfall at the
Pennefather River on the western shore of
Cape York in
Queensland, near what is now the town of
Weipa. This is the first recorded European landfall on the Australian continent. Janszoon proceeded to chart some of the coastline, which he thought was a southerly extension of New Guinea.
Finding the land swampy and the people inhospitable (ten of his men were killed on various shore expeditions), Janszoon decided to return at a place he named Cape Keerweer ("Turnabout"), south of Albatross Bay, and arrived back at Bantam in June 1606. He called the land he had discovered "Nieu Zeland", after the Dutch province of
Zeeland, but the name was not adopted, and was later used by Dutch cartographers for
New Zealand.
In 1607, Admiral
Cornelis Matelieff de Jonge sent Janzoon to
Ambon and
Banda. In 1611, Janzoon returned to the
Netherlands, believing that the south coast of New Guinea was joined to the land along which he had sailed, and Dutch maps reproduced that error for many years. Though there have been suggestions that earlier navigators from
China,
France or
Portugal may have discovered parts of Australia earlier, the ''Duyfken'' is the first European vessel definitely known to have done so.
Second voyage to Australia
Janszoon reported that on 31 July 1618, he had landed on an island at 22° South with a length of 22 miles and 240 miles SSE of the
Sunda Strait. This is generally interpreted as a description of the peninsula from
Point Cloates () to
North West Cape () on the
Western Australian coast, which Janszoon presumed was an island, without fully circumnavigating it.
Political life

Around 1617/18 he was back in the Netherlands and was appointed as a member of the Council of the Indies. He served as admiral of the Dutch Defence fleet. Janszoon was awarded a gold chain worth 1,000
guilders in 1619 for his part in capturing four ships of the
British East India Company near
Tiku on
West Sumatra, which had aided the
Javanese in their defence of the town of
Jakarta against the Dutch. In 1620 he was one of the negotiators with the English. In a combined fleet they sailed to Manila to prevent Chinese merchants dealing with the Spanish. Janszoon became vice-admiral, and the year later admiral. Near the end of his life, Janszoon served as governor of Banda (16231627). He returned to
Batavia in June 1627 and soon afterwards, as admiral of a fleet of eight vessels, went on a diplomatic mission to India.
[Mutch (1942), p51] On 4 December 1628, he sailed for Holland and on 16 July 1629, reported on the state of the Indies at The Hague.
He was now probably about sixty years old and ready to retire from his strenuous and successful career in the service of his country. Nothing is known of his last days, but he is thought to have died in 1630.
Records
The original journal and log made during Janszoon’s 1606 voyage have been lost. The Duyfken chart, which shows the location of the first landfall in Australia by the ''Duyfken'', had a better fate. It was still in existence in Amsterdam when
Hessel Gerritszoon made his Map of the Pacific in 1622, and placed the Duyfken geography upon it, thus providing us with the first map to contain any part of Australia. The chart was still in existence around 1670, when a copy was made. This eventually went to the
Imperial Library in
Vienna and remained forgotten for two hundred years. The map is part of the ''
Atlas Blaeu Van der Hem'', brought to Vienna in 1730 by
Prince Eugene of Savoy. The information from his charts was included in the marble and copper maps of the
hemispheres on the floor of The Citizens’ Hall of the
Royal Palace in
Amsterdam.
[http://www.historychannel.com.au/tv-shows/showDetails.aspx?show=617]
Notes
References
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Janszoon, Willem
Category:1570s births
Category:1630 deaths
Category:16th-century Dutch people
Category:17th-century explorers
Category:17th-century Dutch explorers
Category:Admirals of the navy of the Dutch Republic
Category:Explorers of Australia
J
Category:Maritime exploration of Australia
Category:Sailors on ships of the Dutch East India Company
Category:17th-century Dutch colonial governors
Category:People from Amsterdam
Category:Maritime history of the Dutch East India Company
Category:Early modern Netherlandish cartography