Hendrik Brouwer

Hendrik Brouwer ([ˈbrʌu̯ər]; 1581 – 7 August 1643) was a Dutch explorer and governor of the Dutch East Indies.

Hendrik Brouwer
8th Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies
In office
18 April 1632 (1632-04-18)  1 January 1636 (1636-01-01)
Preceded byJacques Specx
Succeeded byAntonio van Diemen
Personal details
BornUnknown date, c.1581
Spanish Netherlands
Died (aged 62)
Puerto Inglés, Chiloé

East Indies

Brouwer is thought to first have sailed to the Dutch East Indies for the Dutch East India Company in 1606. In 1610, he left again to the Indies, now as commander of three ships. On this trip he devised the Brouwer Route, a route from South Africa to Java that reduced voyage duration from a year to about six months by taking advantage of the strong westerly winds in the Roaring Forties – latitudes between 40° and 50° south.

Up to that point, the Dutch had followed a route copied from the Portuguese via the coast of Africa, Mauritius and Ceylon. By 1617, the VOC required all their ships to take the Brouwer route.[1]

After his arrival in 1611 in the East Indies, he was sent to Japan to replace Jacques Specx temporarily as opperhoofd at Dejima from 28 August 1612 to 6 August 1614.[2] During that time he made a visit to the Japanese court at Edo. In 1613, he made a trip to Siam that laid the foundation for the Dutch trade with Siam.

Early in 1632, he was part of a delegation sent to London to solve trade disagreements between the Honourable East India Company and Dutch East India companies. Afterwards he left for the Indies, and on 18 April of that same year he was appointed Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies, again following Jacques Specx, a position which he held until 1 January 1636. Anthony van Diemen was his assistant during this entire period, and many of the Dutch explorations into the Pacific carried out under Van Diemen's command were suggested in writing by Brouwer before he left.

Chile

In 1642, the VOC joined the Dutch West India Company in organizing an expedition to Chile to establish a base for trading gold at the abandoned ruins of Valdivia. The fleet sailed from Dutch Brazil where John Maurice of Nassau provided them with supplies. While rounding Cape Horn, the expedition established that Isla de los Estados was not part of the unknown southern land.[3]

After making landfall on Chiloé Island, Brouwer made a pact with native Huilliches to aid in establishing a resettlement at Valdivia. However, on 7 August 1643, at the age of 62, Hendrik died in Puerto Inglés before his arrival at Valdivia, and was succeeded by his vice-admiral, Elias Herckmans, who landed at the ruins on 24 August. The embalmed body of Brouwer was buried in Valdivia, by then renamed Brouwershaven, on September 16.[4][3] Brouwershaven remained occupied by Herckmans and his men until 28 October.

Having been told that the Dutch had plans to return to the location, the Spanish viceroy in Peru sent 1,000 men in 20 ships in 1644, to resettle Valdivia and fortify it. The viceroy also sent 2,000 men by land, who never made it. The Spanish soldiers in the new garrison disinterred and burned Brouwer's body.[5]

Footnotes

  1. "The Seynbrief: Sailing Toward Destiny". South Land to New Holland: Dutch Charting of Australia 1606–1756. National Library of Australia. Archived from the original on 21 March 2011. Retrieved 8 January 2012.
  2. ""Opperhoofds" and Medical Staff at the Dutch Factories Hirado and Dejima, Japan". Professor Wolfgang Michel-Zaitsu. Archived from the original on 2 June 2006. Retrieved 16 July 2008.
  3. Kock, Robbert (13 May 2012). "Dutch in Chile: Hendrick Brouwer's Expedition to Valdivia". Colonial Voyage. English text revision by Dietrich Köster. Marco Ramerini. Archived from the original on 22 September 2020. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  4. de la Rosa P., Armin Marcelo (3 January 2017). Antecedentes históricos de la Bahía de Corral (PDF) (in Spanish). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2019. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  5. Lane, K. E. (1998). Pillaging the Empire: Piracy in the Americas, 1500–1700. Armonk: M. E. Sharpe. pp. 88–92. ISBN 0-7656-0257-1.
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