Dirk Hartog plate
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Dirk Hartog plate 1616. Courtesy Rijksmuseum, Netherlands
Collection
Rijksmuseum, Netherlands
Object Name
Dirk Hartog plate
Object Description
Dirk Hartog landed at Shark Bay, Western Australia in 1616 and left this
pewter plate with an inscription detailing their voyage and destination.
Another Dutch explorer, William de Vlamingh, landed at the same spot 1697
and put another plate there with the original inscription and added one
of his own. Vlamingh took the original plate back to the Netherlands.
The original Hartog plate is in the Rijksmuseum in the Netherlands. The
Vlamingh plate was later removed by French explorer, Lois de Freycinet
in 1827 and the French government presented the plate back to Australia
on the 28th of May 1947. Dimensions: 36.5mm.

Chart of Malay Archipelago showing the western coast
of Australia, Hessel Gerritsz, 1618. NLA
Shark Bay has a unique place within Australia's European history,
as it is the site of the first recorded European landing on Australian
soil. Captain Dirk Hartog arrived on the Eendracht on October the 25th
1616. Hartog acknowledged the landing by nailing an inscribed pewter plate
to a wooden post at the site now known as Cape Inscription. The inscription
read;
1616. On the 25th October the ship Eendracht of Amsterdam arrived
here. Upper merchant Gilles Miebais of Luick (Liege); skipper Dirck Hatichs
(Dirk Hartog) of Amsterdam. On the 27th ditto we sail for Bantum. Under
merchant Jan Stins; upper steerman Pieter Doores of Bil (Brielle). In
the year 1616.
In 1697 Dutch Captain William de Vlamingh landed at Cape Inscription and
found Dirk Hartog's plate, though the plate was badly weathered and the
post had almost rotted away. Vlamingh copied the record on to another
plate, added his own inscription and nailed the plate to a new post that
he erected. Vlamingh took the Hartog plate back to the Netherlands. Vlamingh's
inscription read.
1697 The 4th February is here arrived the ship The Geelvinck for Amsterdam.
The Commodore and Skipper William De Vlamingh of Vlielandt, Assistant
Joannes Bremer of Copenhagen Upper Steersman Michil Bloem of The Bishopric
of Bremen The Hooker The Nyptangh Skipper Gerrit Colaart of Amsterdam
Assit Theodoris Heirmans Ditto Upper Steersman Gerrit Geritson of Bremen
The Galliot The Weeseltie Commander Cornelis De Vlamingh of Vlielandt
Steerman Coert Gerritsen of Bremen Sailed from Here with our fleet the
also The Southland Further to Explore and Bound for Batavia.
In August 1699 Captain William Dampier anchored in Shark Bay and surveyed
the northern end of Dirk Hartog Island. He spent nine days in the Shark
Bay area before sailing north around North West Cape.
In 1801 Captain Hamelin on the Naturalist, a ship from a French
expedition led by Nicholas Baudin, entered Shark Bay and a party was sent
ashore. By chance the party found the Vlamingh memorial of Dirk Hartog's
previous visit, though the plate was almost buried in the sand. When the
party returned the plate to the ship, Hamelin ordered it to be returned,
considering it somewhat sacrilegious to have removed it. One of Hamelin's
officers, Louis de Freycinet, felt that this action was inappropriate
and that such a trophy should be taken and returned to Europe.
In 1818 Freycinet returned to Shark Bay, in command of his own vessel,
and was able to find the plate still in place at Cape Inscription. He
removed the plate and returned it to Europe where it was presented to
the French Academy in Paris.
The Vlamingh plate then disappeared for more than a century until it was
rediscovered in 1940 on the bottom shelf of a small room of the French
Academy mixed up with old copper engraving plates.
The Hartog Plate is historically significant as evidence of the first
landing of Europeans on the west coast of Australia. It sets the moment
in time when the existence of the speculated south land was realised.
The plate serves as a reminder to European and Aboriginal Australians
of the moment of first ever recorded landing by Europeans on the Australian
mainland and the arrival of the every expanding wave of knowledge and
understanding of the Enlightenment and the Age of Discovery to Australia
and the Pacific.
The Hartog Plate provides a research tool for historians to contextualise
the role of the Dutch in the Age of Discovery.
The Hartog Plate provenance is strong. After it was removed from Shark
Bay by Vlamingh in 1697 it was returned to the Netherlands and has been
in the Rijksmuseum since.
The Hartog plate is rare in that it is a single object made by Hartog
to record the expeditions landing at Shark Bay.
The Hartog Plate represents the beginning of the European exploration
and mapping of the Australian coast that would see the circumnavigation,
mapping and naming of Australia by Matthew Flinders in 1802.
The plate is in a good condition with some damage and repairs.
The Hartog Plate's importance lies in its potential to interpret the early
Dutch presence in the Indian Ocean, its trade with Java and the subsequent
mapping and exploration of the Australian coast that would culminate in
the arrival of the First Fleet and the British settlement at Port Jackson
in 1788 and the spread of European settlement across the Pacific.
Bibliography
Broese, F.
Island Nation: Australia's Maritime Heritage,
Sydney, 1998.
Coupe, S. & Andrews, M.
Their Ghosts May Be Heard: Australia to 1900,
Longman Cheshire, Sydney, 1992.
Regional Histories of NSW,
Heritage Office & Dept of Urban Affairs & Planning, Sydney, 1996.
Significance: A guide to assessing the significance of cultural heritage objects and collections,
Heritage Collections Council. 2001.
Websites
www.rijksmuseum.nl/aria/aria_assets/NG-NM-825?lang=en
www.nla.gov.au/exhibitions/southland/Char-Dirk_Hartog.html
www.anmm.gov.au/sample_navigators.htm


