
Jan van Riebeeck
'Johan Anthoniszoon "Jan" van Riebeeck' (
21 April,
1619–
18 January,
1677), was a
Dutch colonial administrator and founder of Cape Town. He was born in
Culemborg in the Netherlands as the son of a surgeon. He grew up in
Schiedam, where he married
Maria Cotze on
28 March 1649. (She died in
Malacca, now part of
Malaysia, on
2 November 1664, at the age of 35). The couple had eight sons, one of whom,
Abraham van Riebeeck, would become a Governor-General of Dutch East Indies.
Joining the
Dutch East India Company (VOC) in
1639, he served in a number of posts, including that of an assistant surgeon in the
Batavia in the
East Indies. He subsequently visited
Japan. His most important position was that of head of the VOC trading post in
Tonkin,
Vietnam. However, he was called back from this post as it was discovered that he was conducting trade for his own account.
In
1651 he was requested to undertake the command of the initial Dutch settlement in the future
South Africa. He landed three ships ''Drommedaris'', ''Reijger'', and ''Goede Hoop'' at the future
Cape Town on
6 April 1652 and fortified the site as a way-station for the VOC trade route between the Netherlands and the East Indies.
Van Riebeeck was Commander of the Cape from
1652 to
1662; he was charged with building a fort, with improving the natural anchorage at Table Bay, planting fruit and vegetables and obtaining livestock from the indigenous
Khoi people. In the
Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens in Cape Town there is a wild
almond hedge still surviving that was planted on his orders as a barrier. The initial fort was made of mud, clay and timber, and had four corners or bastions. This fort should not be confused with the present-day Cape Town Castle, which was built between 1666 and 1679, several years after Van Riebeeck left the Cape, has five bastions, and is made of brick, stone and cement.
Van Riebeeck reported the first
comet discovered from South Africa,
C/1652 Y1, which was spotted on
December 17,
1652.
He died in Batavia (now renamed
Jakarta) on the island of
Java in
1677.
References
★ Collins, Robert O. ''Central and south African history. Topics in world history''. New York: M. Wiener Pub. 1990. ISBN 9781558760172
★ Hunt, John, and Heather-Ann Campbell. ''Dutch South Africa: early settlers at the Cape, 1652-1708''. Leicester, UK: Matador 2005. ISBN 9781904744955
★ Riebeeck, Jan van, and Robert Kirby. ''The secret letters of Jan van Riebeeck''. London, England: Penguin Books 1992. ISBN 9780140177657