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'''Eendrachtsland''' or '''Eendraghtsland''' was derived from '''T Landt van d'Eendracht''' or '''Land van de Eendracht''' and was one of the earliest names given for [[Australia]], being in use for 28 years, from 1616 until 1644 <ref name="Heeres-1899">{{cite book
'''Eendrachtsland''' was the one of the earliest names given for [[Australia]], by [[Dirk Hartog]], sailing in the [[Dutch East India Company]] ship ''[[Eendracht (1615 ship)|Eendracht]]'', meaning "Unity", in 1616.<ref>{{Citation | author1=Heeres, J. E. (Jan Ernst), 1858-1932 | author2=Project Gutenberg | title=The Part Borne by the Dutch in the Discovery of Australia 1606-1765 | url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/8134084 | accessdate=28 January 2012 }} </ref> <ref>{{Citation | author1=Gregory, Jenny | author2=Gothard, Janice | title=[[Historical Encyclopedia of Western Australia]] | publication-date=2009 | publisher=University of Western Australia Press | isbn=978-1-921401-15-2 |page=289 }} - Nonja Peters entry for ''Dutch'' - 'Hartog ...called the country ''Het Landt van de Eendracht (Harmony Land) after his ship </ref>
| last = Heeres
| first = Jan Ernst
| authormask = Jan Ernst Heeres LL. D. Professor at the Dutch Colonial Institute Delft
| title = The Part Borne by the Dutch in the Discovery of Australia 1606-1765
| edition = 1
| url = http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks05/0501231.txt
| format = txt
| accessdate = 2012-01-28
| type = A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook - Latin-1(ISO-8859-1)--8 bit
| origyear = 1899-01-01
| publisher = The Royal Dutch Geographical Society in Commemoration of the XXVth Anniversary of its Foundation
| printer = Luzac & Co
| location = 46 Great Russell Street W. C.
| language = English
| id = 0501231.txt
}}</ref>, (Two years after Columbus sailed to America)!
{{tocright}}
[[File:De_Eendracht_onderschept_een_Catamaran,_Willem_Cornelisz_Schouten_van_Hoor_(1615_-_1617).png‎|right|thumb|alt=The Dutch ship De Eendracht attacks a catamaran in the Southern Pacific.|The Dutch ship De Eendracht attacks a catamaran in the Southern Pacific, an artwork by Willem Cornelisz Schouten van Hoor (1615 - 1617).|300px]]


Hartog encountered the Western side of the Australian mainland, meeting it close to the [[26th parallel south]] [[latitude]] (26º south), near what is now known as [[Dirk Hartog Island]] in [[Western Australia]].
In 1616 [[Dirk Hartog]] or Dirk Hartogs sailing from the west, in the [[Dutch East India Company]] ship ''Eendracht'', encountered the west coast of the Australian mainland, meeting it close to the [[26th parallel south]] [[latitude]] (26º south), near what is now known as [[Dirk Hartog Island]] in [[Western Australia]]<ref name="Heeres-1899" />.


==Eendrachtsland named by Hartog==
The earliest known appearance of that name on the charts was eleven years later in 1627 on, [[Caert van't Landt van d'Eendracht]] ("Chart of the Land of Eendracht"), by [[Hessel Gerritsz]].
After leaving the island, the ''Eendracht'' sailed in a north-west direction along the West Australian coastline, Hartog [[Nautical chart|charting]] as he went.<ref name="Heeres-1899" /> He gave this land the name ''T'Landt van d'Eendracht'' or "Eendrachtsland", after his ship, the ''[[Eendracht (1615 ship)|Eendracht]]'', meaning "Unity"<ref name="Heeres-1899" />.


* [[#toc|Contents]]
The chart shows that the knowledge held by the Dutch, of the West Australian coastline, was increasing, as the chart was based on a number of voyages, beginning with this 1616 voyage of Dirk Hartog. The name Eendrachtsland appeared on subsequent charts, to replace the name ''[[Terra Australis|Terra Australis Incognita]]'' (South Land), until it was replaced with ''[[New Holland (Australia)|Nova Hollandia (New Holland)]]'' by [[Abel Tasman]] in 1644.

==Eendrachtsland on the charts==
[[File:Caert van't Landt van d'Eendracht (detail showing Eendrachtsland).jpg|right|thumb|alt=''Caert van't Landt van d'Eendracht'' (detail showing Eendrachtsland) - Chart by Hessel Gerritsz, also written "Hessel Gerritszoon".|''Caert van't Landt van d'Eendracht'' (detail showing [[Eendrachtsland]]) by [[Hessel Gerritsz]], also written "Hessel Gerritszoon". [This is a cropped version and does not show the entire map.] |400px]]

The earliest known appearance of that name on the charts was eleven years later in 1627 on, ''[[Caert van't Landt van d'Eendracht]]'' ("Chart of the Land of Eendracht"), by [[Hessel Gerritsz]], however the name was in use as early as 1619<ref name="Heeres-1899" />.

* [[#toc|Contents]]

==Eendrachtsland coastline knowledge==
The chart shows that the knowledge held by the Dutch, of the West Australian coastline, was increasing, as the chart was based on a number of voyages, beginning with this 1616 voyage of Dirk Hartog<ref name="Heeres-1899" />.

The 1627 chart, broken here and there by unexplored openings, extends from the Ashburton River almost to [[Albany, Western Australia]], spanning the West Australian coastline for a distance of around 1,900km. It is worth reproducing here what Heeres wrote in 1899, about the increase of Dutch knowledge of the West Australian coastline, as follows.

<blockquote>From this point [Willems River] then the
Eendrachtsland of the old Dutch navigators begins to extend southward. To
the question, how far it was held to extend, I answer that in the widest
sense of the term ('t Land van Eendracht or the South-land, it reached as
far as the South-coast, at all events past the Perth of our day)
<br/>
<br/>
[...]
<br/>
<br/>
More to southward we find in the chart of 1627 I. d'Edels landt, made in
July 1619 by the ships Dordrecht and Amsterdam, commanded by Frederik De
Houtman and Jacob Dedel [*]. To the north of Dedelsland the coast is
rendered difficult of access by reefs, the so-called (Frederik De)
Houtmans-Abrolhos (now known as the Houtman Rocks), also discovered on
this occasion [**]. To the south, in about 32° S. Lat. [***] Dedelsland
is bounded by the Landt van de Leeuwin, surveyed in 1622 [****]. Looking
at the coast more closely still, we find in about 29° 30, S. Lat. the
name Tortelduyff (Turtle Dove Island), to the south of Houtmans Abrolhos,
an addition to the chart dating from about 1624 [*****].
<br/>
<br/>
[...]
<br/>
<br/>
So much for the highly interesting chart of Hessel Gerritsz of the year
1627. If we compare with it the revised edition of the 1618 chart, we are
struck by the increase of our forefathers' knowledge of the south-west
coast. This revised edition gives the entire coast-line down to the
islands of St. François and St. Pieter (133° 30' E. Long. Greenwich),
still figuring in the maps of our day: the Land of Pieter Nuyts,
discovered by the ship het Gulden Zeepaard in 1627 [*].
<br/>
<br/>
[...]
<br/>
<br/>
North of Willems rivier, this so-called 1618 chart [with additions] has still another addition, _viz_. G. F. De Witsland, discovered in 1628 by the ship Vianen commanded by G. F. De Witt<ref name="Heeres-1899" />.
</blockquote>

* [[#toc|Contents]]

==Breaks in the Eendrachtsland coast==
From this writing we can see that by the mid to late 1620s the Dutch had gathered a good deal of information, enabling them to chart the west coast of what had become known by then as Eendrachtsland with some accuracy. Heeres then goes on to say that the coastline showed breaks in various places, due to unexplored openings such as Exmouth Gulf.<ref name="Heeres-1899" />. These gaps are clearly visible on the full sized 1627 chart image.

<blockquote>
''De Witt's land is not connected with the coast of Willems-rivier; the coast-line of Eendrachtsland does not run on; there is uncertainty as regards what is now called Shark-bay; the coast facing Houtmans Abrolhos is a conjectural one only; the coast-line facing Tortelduyf is even altogether wanting; Dedelsland and 't Land van de Leeuwin are not marked by unbroken lines''<ref name="Heeres-1899" />.
</blockquote>

* [[#toc|Contents]]

==True nature of Eendrachtsland==
Heeres then suggests that the mid seventeenth century navigators were constantly faced by the problem of the true character of this South-land, asking themselves the question<ref name="Heeres-1899" />...

<blockquote>
...''was it one vast continent or a complex of islands? And the question would not have been so repeatedly asked, if the line of the west-coast had been more accurately known''<ref name="Heeres-1899" />.
</blockquote>

* [[#toc|Contents]]

==End of Eendrachtsland==
By 1644 most of these problems of gaps in the coastline were solved, spelling the end of the name ''Eendrachtsland'', in favour of a name, which for the Dutch, was much closer to the heart.

<blockquote>
Tasman and Visscher [*] did a great deal towards the solution of this
problem, since in their voyage of 1644 they also skirted and mapped out
the entire line of the West-coast of what since 1644 has borne the name
of Nieuw-Nederland, Nova Hollandia, or New Holland, [charting] from Bathurst Island to a point south of the Tropic of Capricorn<ref name="Heeres-1899" />.
</blockquote>

{{wide image|Aert Anthonisz. - Het schip 'De Eendraght' voor IJsselmonde, 1618.jpg|700px|alt=''The ‘Eendraght’ off IJsselmonde, 1618'' - Artwork by Aert Anthonisz.|''The ‘Eendraght’ off IJsselmonde, 1618'' - Artwork by Aert Anthonisz. }}

* [[#toc|Contents]]


==Notes==
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


{{WesternAustralia-geo-stub}}
<!-- REMOVED WesternAustralia-geo-stub ~~~~ -->


[[Category:Exploration of Western Australia]]
[[Category:Exploration of Western Australia]]

Revision as of 06:16, 30 January 2012

Eendrachtsland or Eendraghtsland was derived from T Landt van d'Eendracht or Land van de Eendracht and was one of the earliest names given for Australia, being in use for 28 years, from 1616 until 1644 [1], (Two years after Columbus sailed to America)!

The Dutch ship De Eendracht attacks a catamaran in the Southern Pacific.
The Dutch ship De Eendracht attacks a catamaran in the Southern Pacific, an artwork by Willem Cornelisz Schouten van Hoor (1615 - 1617).

In 1616 Dirk Hartog or Dirk Hartogs sailing from the west, in the Dutch East India Company ship Eendracht, encountered the west coast of the Australian mainland, meeting it close to the 26th parallel south latitude (26º south), near what is now known as Dirk Hartog Island in Western Australia[1].

Eendrachtsland named by Hartog

After leaving the island, the Eendracht sailed in a north-west direction along the West Australian coastline, Hartog charting as he went.[1] He gave this land the name T'Landt van d'Eendracht or "Eendrachtsland", after his ship, the Eendracht, meaning "Unity"[1].

Eendrachtsland on the charts

Caert van't Landt van d'Eendracht (detail showing Eendrachtsland) - Chart by Hessel Gerritsz, also written "Hessel Gerritszoon".
Caert van't Landt van d'Eendracht (detail showing Eendrachtsland) by Hessel Gerritsz, also written "Hessel Gerritszoon". [This is a cropped version and does not show the entire map.]

The earliest known appearance of that name on the charts was eleven years later in 1627 on, Caert van't Landt van d'Eendracht ("Chart of the Land of Eendracht"), by Hessel Gerritsz, however the name was in use as early as 1619[1].

Eendrachtsland coastline knowledge

The chart shows that the knowledge held by the Dutch, of the West Australian coastline, was increasing, as the chart was based on a number of voyages, beginning with this 1616 voyage of Dirk Hartog[1].

The 1627 chart, broken here and there by unexplored openings, extends from the Ashburton River almost to Albany, Western Australia, spanning the West Australian coastline for a distance of around 1,900km. It is worth reproducing here what Heeres wrote in 1899, about the increase of Dutch knowledge of the West Australian coastline, as follows.

From this point [Willems River] then the

Eendrachtsland of the old Dutch navigators begins to extend southward. To the question, how far it was held to extend, I answer that in the widest sense of the term ('t Land van Eendracht or the South-land, it reached as far as the South-coast, at all events past the Perth of our day)

[...]

More to southward we find in the chart of 1627 I. d'Edels landt, made in July 1619 by the ships Dordrecht and Amsterdam, commanded by Frederik De Houtman and Jacob Dedel [*]. To the north of Dedelsland the coast is rendered difficult of access by reefs, the so-called (Frederik De) Houtmans-Abrolhos (now known as the Houtman Rocks), also discovered on this occasion [**]. To the south, in about 32° S. Lat. [***] Dedelsland is bounded by the Landt van de Leeuwin, surveyed in 1622 [****]. Looking at the coast more closely still, we find in about 29° 30, S. Lat. the name Tortelduyff (Turtle Dove Island), to the south of Houtmans Abrolhos, an addition to the chart dating from about 1624 [*****].

[...]

So much for the highly interesting chart of Hessel Gerritsz of the year 1627. If we compare with it the revised edition of the 1618 chart, we are struck by the increase of our forefathers' knowledge of the south-west coast. This revised edition gives the entire coast-line down to the islands of St. François and St. Pieter (133° 30' E. Long. Greenwich), still figuring in the maps of our day: the Land of Pieter Nuyts, discovered by the ship het Gulden Zeepaard in 1627 [*].

[...]

North of Willems rivier, this so-called 1618 chart [with additions] has still another addition, _viz_. G. F. De Witsland, discovered in 1628 by the ship Vianen commanded by G. F. De Witt[1].

Breaks in the Eendrachtsland coast

From this writing we can see that by the mid to late 1620s the Dutch had gathered a good deal of information, enabling them to chart the west coast of what had become known by then as Eendrachtsland with some accuracy. Heeres then goes on to say that the coastline showed breaks in various places, due to unexplored openings such as Exmouth Gulf.[1]. These gaps are clearly visible on the full sized 1627 chart image.

De Witt's land is not connected with the coast of Willems-rivier; the coast-line of Eendrachtsland does not run on; there is uncertainty as regards what is now called Shark-bay; the coast facing Houtmans Abrolhos is a conjectural one only; the coast-line facing Tortelduyf is even altogether wanting; Dedelsland and 't Land van de Leeuwin are not marked by unbroken lines[1].

True nature of Eendrachtsland

Heeres then suggests that the mid seventeenth century navigators were constantly faced by the problem of the true character of this South-land, asking themselves the question[1]...

...was it one vast continent or a complex of islands? And the question would not have been so repeatedly asked, if the line of the west-coast had been more accurately known[1].

End of Eendrachtsland

By 1644 most of these problems of gaps in the coastline were solved, spelling the end of the name Eendrachtsland, in favour of a name, which for the Dutch, was much closer to the heart.

Tasman and Visscher [*] did a great deal towards the solution of this problem, since in their voyage of 1644 they also skirted and mapped out the entire line of the West-coast of what since 1644 has borne the name of Nieuw-Nederland, Nova Hollandia, or New Holland, [charting] from Bathurst Island to a point south of the Tropic of Capricorn[1].

The ‘Eendraght’ off IJsselmonde, 1618 - Artwork by Aert Anthonisz.
The ‘Eendraght’ off IJsselmonde, 1618 - Artwork by Aert Anthonisz.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Heeres, Jan Ernst. The Part Borne by the Dutch in the Discovery of Australia 1606-1765 (txt) (A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook - Latin-1(ISO-8859-1)--8 bit) (1 ed.). 46 Great Russell Street W. C.: The Royal Dutch Geographical Society in Commemoration of the XXVth Anniversary of its Foundation. 0501231.txt. Retrieved 2012-01-28. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |authormask= ignored (|author-mask= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |printer= ignored (help)CS1 maint: location (link)