Everything about Cornelis De Houtman totally explained
Cornelis de Houtman (
April 2 1565,
Gouda - August
1599,
Atjeh), brother of
Frederick de Houtman, was a
Dutch explorer who discovered a new sea route from
Europe to
Indonesia and managed to begin the Dutch spice trade. At the time, the
Portuguese Empire held a monopoly on the spice trade, and the voyage was a symbolic victory for the Dutch, even though the voyage itself was a disaster.
The voyage
In
1592 Cornelis de Houtman was sent by
Amsterdam merchants to
Lisbon (Lissabon) to discover as much information on the
Spice Islands as he could. At the same time as he returned to Amsterdam,
Jan Huygen van Linschoten returned from India. The merchants determined that
Bantam (
Banten) provided the best opportunity to buy spices. In 1594 the merchants founded the company 'compagnie van Verre' (meaning "the long-distance company"), and on
April 2 1595 four ships left Amsterdam:
Amsterdam,
Hollandia,
Mauritius and
Duyfken.
The voyage was beset with trouble from the beginning.
Scurvy broke out after only a few weeks due to insufficient provisions. Due to quarrels among the captains and traders, several were killed or imprisoned onboard. At
Madagascar, where a brief stop was planned, further complications led to many more deaths, and the boat remained there for six months on a deathwatch. (The Madagascan bay where they were anchored is now known as the "Dutch Cemetery".) On
June 27, the ships finally arrived at
Banten, a northwestern port in
Java. Only around a hundred of the original 249 men had survived the voyage.
The local Portuguese traders introduced de Houtman to the Banten
sultan, who promptly entered into an optimistic treaty with the Dutch, writing "We are well content to have a permanent league of alliance and friendship with His Highness the Prince
Maurice of Nassau, of the Netherlands and with you, gentlemen." Unfortunately, de Houtman was undiplomatic and insulting to the sultan, and was turned away for "rude behaviour" without being able to buy any spices at all.
The ships then sailed east to
Madura, but were attacked by pirates on the way. In Madura, they were received peacefully, but de Houtman ordered his men to brutally attack and rape the civilian population in revenge for the unrelated earlier piracy.
The ships then sailed for
Bali, and met with the region's king. They finally managed to obtain a few pots of peppercorns on
February 26 1597.
Portuguese ships prevented them from taking in water and supplies at
St. Helena. Out of the 249 man crew, only 87 returned, too weak to moor their ships themselves.
Repercussions
Though the trip was a humanitarian disaster and financially probably just broke even, it was a symbolic victory. It may be regarded as the start of the Dutch colonisation of
Indonesia. Within five years, sixty-five more Dutch ships had gone East to trade. Soon, the Dutch would fully take over the spice trade in and around the
Indian Ocean.
Further Information
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