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Frederick Coyett

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Frederick Coyett
Bust of Coyett in Tainan
12th Governor of Formosa
In office
30 June 1656 – 1 February 1662
Preceded byCornelis Caesar
Succeeded bynone
14th Opperhoofd at Dejima
In office
4 November 1652 – 10 November 1653
9th Opperhoofd at Dejima
In office
3 November 1647 – 9 December 1648
Personal details
Bornc. 1615 or 1620
Stockholm, Swedish Empire
Died17 October 1687 (aged 67-72)
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic
NationalitySwedish
Spouse(s)Susanna Boudaens (1645–1656)
Helena de Sterke (1658–?)[1]
G.M. Gossens (1687-1687)[2]
ChildrenBalthasar Coyett

Frederick Coyett (Chinese: 揆一; pinyin: Kuíyī; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Kûi-it), born in Stockholm c. 1615 or 1620, buried in Amsterdam on 17 October 1687, was a Swedish nobleman and the last colonial governor for the Dutch colony of Formosa. He was the first Swede to travel to Japan and China and became the last governor of Dutch-occupied Taiwan (1656–1662).[3]

Name

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In common with many people of the time,[citation needed] Coyett's name was spelled differently at different times and by different people. Frederick could also be Fredrik or Fredrick, and Coyett was also spelled Coyet, Coignet or Coijet.

Early career

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It is supposed Coyett was born in Stockholm, Sweden, in a family with Dutch/Flemish roots that migrated from Brabant to Sweden in c. 1569. His father, a goldsmith, died in 1634 in Moscow. The prominent Swedish diplomat Peter Julius Coyet was his brother. From 1643 he worked for the Dutch East India Company.[4] Coyett served twice as the VOC Opperhoofd in Japan,[5] serving as the chief officer in Dejima first between 3 November 1647 and 9 December 1648[6] and then between 4 November 1652 and 10 November 1653.

Deshima

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Frederick Coyett was the brother-in-law of François Caron, both involved in releasing ten Dutch prisoners. Their discussion centered on the Nambu affair of 1643, when the skipper Hendrick Cornelisz Schaep and nine members of the crew of the Breskens were captured in Yamada in Iwate Prefecture.

The Breskens and her sister ship the Castricum (under Maarten Gerritsz Vries) had been sent by order of the Governor General in the Dutch East Indies, Anthonio van Diemen, to search for the Gold and Silver Islands that were said to lie somewhere northeast off the coast of Japan. They were also to investigate a route to northern Asia. In June 1643 the Breskens, which had been separated from the Castricum in a storm, entered the bay of Yamada in Nanbu domain in the northeast of Honshu. While searching for fresh water and food, ten crewmembers under Captain Schaep were apprehended and brought to the domain capital of Morioka. They were later sent to Edo. Unhappily for the Breskens' crew, a group of four Jesuits intent on infiltrating into Japan had been caught at around the same time in a different part of Japan. As a result, bakufu officials were extremely anxious about the problem of coastal defenses. However after it was understood that the crew were Dutch and not Catholics, bakufu fears were calmed and the problem to be solved became one of deciding by which procedure the Dutch should be released.[7]

Coyett's superiors in Batavia considered his service as Opperhoofd satisfactory. He was able to maintain an optimal diplomatic stance vis-à-vis the bakufu in the face of several difficulties and provocations. His status was also enhanced when he and his brother Peter Julius were ennobled by Queen Christina of Sweden in 1649.[8]

Governor of Formosa

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Coyett is mostly known as the last Dutch East India Company (Dutch: Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie, VOC) governor of Taiwan.

On 10 February 1662 he was forced to surrender Fort Zeelandia after a nine-month siege from a large Chinese force of 25,000 men and 1,000 ships under Koxinga.[9] Coyett said that Chinese were "little better than poor specimens of very effeminate men", when he believed that there was no plan to invade Taiwan. The Dutch then changed their tune to "Formosa is lost" once the invasion was underway.[10] With his army decisively crushed by the Chinese under Koxinga, Coyett left Taiwan after the Siege of Fort Zeelandia with enough supply to reach Batavia. After three years imprisonment he was tried for high treason, due to his failure to hold Taiwan or preserve vital commercial interests. Coyett was pardoned and exiled to Rosengain, the most eastern of the Banda Islands, before he was released in 1674. In 1684 he bought a house on Keizersgracht, on a spot where the Hemony brothers used to have their foundry.

Coyett's son Balthasar Coyett, born to his first wife Susanna Boudaens in 1650, followed his father into service with the Dutch East India Company, eventually rising to become the Governor of Ambon.[11]

Inheritance in Batavia

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Coyett was a member of the Council of the Indies. Before serving as Commander for trading in the VOC, in 1704, Coyett was the Secretary of the Landraad (court of the first instance). On 8 December 1658 Coyett remarried to Helena de Stereke, a widow of Pieter van Alphen's senior merchant. In 1736 he built a country house in a large field southeast of the walled city of Batavia. Coyett was known as a collector for Hindu and Buddhist art, and known to decorate his country house with these objects. One of his collection is the statue of Hindu god Kubera which is currently displayed in the National Museum of Indonesia.[2]

Coyett remarried to G.M. Gossens (widow of Westpalm) a few days before his death, thus Gossens became the sole heir of Coyett's entire inheritance. In 1762, the country house was converted into a Chinese temple (klenteng). Some of Coyett's sculptures are still displayed in the building, currently the Vihara Buddhayana in Jakarta.[2]

Published works

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In 1675 he published Neglected Formosa (Dutch: 't Verwaerloosde Formosa). In the book he accused the Dutch East India Company of ignorance and refusing to send backup, which caused him to lose Taiwan. The work was first published in Dutch and German. A Japanese translation was released in 1939, followed by a Chinese version in the 1950s. A complete English translation was not finished until 1975, though parts of Coyett's book were translated in William Campbell's Formosa Under the Dutch, published in 1903.[12]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Molhuysen, P. C.; Blok, P. J., eds. (1930). "Coyett, Frederik". Nieuw Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek [New Dutch Biographical Dictionary] (in Dutch). Vol. 8. Leiden: A.W. Sijthoff – via Digitale Bibliotheek voor de Nederlandse Letteren.
  2. ^ a b c "Frederik Julius Coyett". Ensiklopedi Jakarta. Dinas Komunikasi, Informatika dan Statistik Pemprov DKI Jakarta. 2017. Retrieved June 11, 2018.
  3. ^ Müllern, Gunnar (1963) Förste svensken i Japan. Han som miste Formosa. Stockholm: Saxon & Lindstöms förlag.
  4. ^ Müllern, Gunnar (1963) Förste svensken i Japan. Han som miste Formosa. Stockholm: Saxon & Lindstöms förlag, p. 28, 33.
  5. ^ "Nederlanders in Japan" (in Dutch). Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  6. ^ Historigraphical Institute (Shiryō hensan-jo), University of Tokyo, "Diary of Frederick Coyet" Archived 2011-06-05 at the Wayback Machine; retrieved 2013-2-1.
  7. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2009-06-28.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^ Müllern, Gunnar (1963) Förste svensken i Japan. Han som miste Formosa. Stockholm: Saxon & Lindstöms förlag, p. 69, 74.
  9. ^ "Ilha Formosa: the Emergence of Taiwan on the World Scene in the 17th Century". www.npm.gov.tw. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2009-07-17.
  10. ^ Macabe Keliher; Yonghe Yu (2003). Out of China or Yu Yonghe's tale of Formosa: a history of seventeenth-century Taiwan (illustrated ed.). SMC Pub. p. 55. ISBN 957-638-608-X. Retrieved Dec 20, 2011. Coyett, declaring the news of an attack unfounded, and the Chinese soldiers "little better than poor specimens of very effeminate men." However, when Zheng and his epicine soldiers' ineluctable invasion became clear to the Dutch, the Batavia Council, and even the administrators in Holland, began to cry that "Formosa is lost."
  11. ^ "Indonesia". WorldStatesmen.org.
  12. ^ Han Cheung (28 January 2018). "Taiwan in Time: The Swede who lost Formosa". Taipei Times. Retrieved 28 January 2018.

Bibliography

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Political offices
Preceded by Opperhoofd at Dejima
3 November 1647 – 9 December 1648
Succeeded by
Preceded by Opperhoofd at Dejima
4 November 1652 – 10 November 1653
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Formosa
1656–1662
Colony surrendered