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Between Batavia and the Cape: Shipping Patterns of the Dutch East India Company
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 August 2009
Extract
The Dutch East India Company (VOC) maintained a vast network of shipping connections with Asia during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The extent of these connections was determined by the quantity of goods which was to be transported from Asia to Holland, and through the demand for ships in the inter-Asian trade. The periods of time and the ways in which the Holland-to-Asia connections were maintained did not necessarily depend upon commercial considerations. Considerations of safety, prevention of smuggling and above all the wind and current systems played an equally important role. Only recently has a survey become available of all journeys made to and from Asia during the Company's existence. It takes into account 4,730 outward-bound voyages and 3,358 homeward-bound voyages in the years 1602 to 1795. For the greatest portion of voyages, Batavia was both the destination and the port of departure. Columns I and II in Tables 1 and 2 will give one an overview. The preponderance of journeys from Batavia tapered off in time, mostly because of direct voyages made to Holland from other parts of Asia, such as Ceylon, Bengal, and China. Yet Batavia remained the metropolis, and where, at its zenith from around 1720 to 1740, an average of 33 ships per year arrived and 23 to 24 departed for the mother country. In the years thereafter, only the frequency of the return journeys diminished appreciably.
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References
1 Bruijn, J.R., Gaastra, F.S., Schoffer, I., and van Eyck van Heslinga, E.S., Dutch-Asiatic Shipping in the 17th and 18th Centuries, vols. 2 and 3, Rijks Geschiedkundige Publicatiën (RGP) 166 and 167 (The Hague, 1979)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Vol. I (RGP 165) will be published in 1981.
2 van Dam, Pieter, Beschryvinge van de Oostindische Compagnie, RGP 63, pp. 660–61 and 665Google Scholar; Colenbrander, H.T., Jan Pietersz. Coen. Bescheiden omtrent zijn bedrijf in Indië, vol. V (The Hague, 1923), p. 19Google Scholar; Heeres, J.E., “De ‘Consideratien’ van Van Imhoff”, Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde van Nederlandsch-Indië, vol. 66 (1912), pp. 565–66Google Scholar.
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4 Van Dam, , Beschryvinge, RGP 68, p. 42Google Scholar, and RGP 87, pp. 494–99 and 504.
5 Van Dam, , Beschryvinge, RGP 87, pp. 499–512Google Scholar; Parkinson, C. Northcote, Trade in the Eastern Seas, 1793–1813 (London, 1937), pp. 98 and 111–12Google Scholar.
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11 The Hague, State Archive, Colonial Archive 1040, f. 1455–457 (1639), 1452, f. 524–46 (1696), and 439420. Van Dam, , Beschryvinge, RGP 68, pp. 42–43Google Scholar, and RGP 87, p. 588, and also Nederlandsch-lndisch Plakaatboek, vol. 6, p. 748.
12 Heeres, “De ‘Consideratiën’ ”, p. 569.
13 Upon my request, the Department of Naval History of the Ministry of Defence (Royal Navy) at The Hague calculated these distances.
14 Veltschow, T., “Voyages of the Danish Asiatic Company to India and China, 1772–1792”, Scandinavian Economic History Review 20 (1972): pp. 139 and 147Google Scholar.
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17 See the Memoir, written by Capt. Maarten Schaap. This manuscript is in the possession of the Historical Society of Katwijk (Holland) and will shortly be published. Dr. F.J.A. Broeze (University of Western Australia) drew my attention to the figures of 1802.
18 The French East India Company lost 177 out of 762 ships between 1725 and 1771. Most of this loss must be accounted for by shipwrecks and capture according to Furber, H., Rival Empires of Trade in the Orient, 1600–1800 (Minneapolis, 1976), pp. 209–10Google Scholar.
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