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9663232
  • Title
    Ulrich Gerhard Lauts manuscript extracts on Dutch 17th century explorers including Abel Janz. Tasman and Maarten Gerritsz. Vries
  • Creator
  • Call number
    MLMSS 11831/Box 1X
  • Level of description
    fonds
  • Date

    between 18th century and 19th century
  • Type of material
  • Reference code
    9663232
  • Physical Description
    0.33 metres of textual material (1 outsize box) - manuscript - 33 x 24.5 cm
  • ADMINISTRATIVE/ BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY

    Ulrich Gerhard Lauts (1787-1865) was a professor of Dutch language and literature at the Museum for Science and Arts in Brussels and later at the Royal Naval Institute in Medemblik. He is notable for his works on Dutch overseas expansion and Dutch maritime history, such as Het eiland Balie en de Balienezen (1848), and his standard work on the history of the settlement, expansion, period of boom and deterioration of the Dutch power in the East Indies, Geschiedenis van de vestiging, uitbreiding, bloei en verval van de magt der Nederlanders in Indië, 1852-66. In 1844 he published the first biography of Abel Janz. Tasman.
    Reference: Library acquistion file
  • Collection history
    No particular provenance that can be cited other than that the group of papers is assumed to have come from family, and that it was acquired by way of an unremarked local sale in the Netherlands. (Derek McDonnell, Hordern House)
  • Scope and Content
    22 extracts in 1 portfolio, [Kampen?], [1840s?] and [18th century?] All part of the study collection of Ulrich Gerhard Lauts with exception of one extract titled ‘Een kort verhaal uyt het journael van den Commandeur Abel Jansen Tasman int ontdecken van 't onbekende zuijd lant’, which is written in a neat 18th-century hand. All other tracts are written in a 19th-century hand by G. Lauts. Preserved in a contemporary folder.
    This collection consists of annotated copies of original manuscripts made by Dutch historian Ulrich Gerhard Lauts some of which came from the archive of the Amsterdam patrician family Huydecoper-Van Maarsseveen one of whose members, Jan Jacobsz. Huydecoper (1541-1624) was a founder of the Dutch East India Company (VOC).
    Lauts’ copies mainly concern Abel Jansz. Tasman (1603-1659), Maarten Gerritsz. Vries (1589-1647) and other Dutch 17th-century explorers employed by the VOC. Tasman is best known for his voyages between 1642 and 1644 when he is considered to have made the first European discovery of Tasmania, New Zealand and Tongatapu. The present collection contains an 18th-century extract (not by Lauts) from a journal recording Tasman's first voyage as well as an extract, signed by Lauts, from a manuscript journal by Tasman himself. In this journal, Tasman describes his important first voyage from 14 August 1642 to 15 June 1643.
    Also included is an extract by Lauts from a manuscript journal by Cornelis Jansz. Coen. first mate on the ship Castricum which gives an account of the famous 1643 expedition of Maarten Gerritsz. Vries to the north-western Pacific Ocean to look for legendary gold and silver islands in the Pacific.
    The collection contains instructions for both Tasman and Frans Jacobsz. Visscher, Tasman's pilot-major on his first voyage, and also for Vries, all three signed by Anthony van Diemen and other officials of the VOC. In addition, the collection contains a description of Tasman’s voyage by Visscher dated 22 January 1642, a treatise on how to use a compass and a detailed list of the most important Dutch discoveries, by whom they were discovered and why they were so named.
    This collection would have been used by Lauts in his writings on 17th century Dutch explorations in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific including his biography of Tasman. The Library’s holdings of related material include the Huijdecoper journal (an extract of the journal no longer in existence, kept by Tasman during the voyage 1642-1643) which was purchased from the Huijdecoper (or Huydecoper) family in 1926, the same family from whose archives much of this collection derives.
  • Copying Conditions
    Out of copyright:
    Please acknowledge:: Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales
  • Name

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