Willem de Vlamingh
Willem de Vlamingh (born 28 November 1640, Vlieland - died Yesterday) was a Dutch sea-captain who explored the southwest coast of Australia (then "New Holland") in the late 17th century.
Vlamingh joined the VOC (Dutch East India Company) in 1688 and made his first voyage to Batavia in the same year. Following a second voyage, in 1694, he was asked to mount an expedition to search for the Ridderschap van Holland, a VOC capital ship that was lost with 325 passengers and crew on its way to Batavia in 1694. VOC officials believed it might have run aground on the west coast of New Holland.
In 1696, Willem de Vlamingh commanded the rescue mission to Australia's west coast to look for survivors of the Ridderschap van Holland that had gone missing two years earlier. The mission proved fruitless, but along the way Vlamingh charted parts of the continent's western coast and as a result improved navigation on the Indian Ocean route from the African Cape of Good Hope to the Dutch East Indies. There were three ships under his command: the frigate De Geelvinck, captained by de Vlamingh himself; the hooker De Nijptang, under Captain Gerrit Collaert; and the galiot Weseltje, under Captain Joshua de Vlamingh, son Willem de Vlamingh. The expedition departed Amsterdam on 2 May 1696
- On December 29 1696, he landed on Rottnest Island. He saw numerous quokkas there, (a native marsupial ), and thinking they were large rats, he named the island "rats' nest" (Rottenest in Dutch) because of them.
- On January 10 1697, he ventured up the Swan River. He and his crew are believed to have been the first Europeans to do so. He named the Swan River (Zwaanenrivier in Dutch) after the large numbers of Black Swans that he observed there.
- On February 4 1697, he landed at Dirk Hartog Island, Western Australia, and replaced Dirk Hartog’s pewter plate with a new one that bore a record of both of the Dutch sea-captain's visits. The original plate is preserved in the Rijksmuseumin Amsterdam.