Jacques Mahu

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Jacob (Jacques) Mahu (1564 – 23 September 1598) was a Dutch merchant and explorer.

In 1598, he led an expedition with five vessels organised by and intended to find a trade route to the Spice Islands and to incite the local population to rise against the Spanish. The expedition left from Rotterdam on 27 June 1598, but suffered misfortune from the start.[1]

The ships with their (initial) captains were: Hoop (Hope), captained by Jacques Mahu, leader of the expedition; Liefde (Love), captained by Simon de Cordes, second-in-command; Geloof (Believe), captained by Gerrit van Beuningen; Trouwe (Faith), captained by Jurriaan van Boekhout; and finally Blijde Boodschap (Good Tiding or The Gospel), captained by Sebald de Weert. The Blijde Boodschap was better known as Vliegend Hart (Flying heart) prior to this particular voyage. Liefde had been previous known as Erasmus and still had a figurehead of him.

After leaving European waters the ships spent 2 till 29 September at the Cape Verde Islands off the coast of Africa. Many of the crew of the Hoop caught fever there, with some of the men dying, among them Admiral Jacques Mahu. He died on September 23, 1598, leaving the expedition without its leader. The leadership of the expedition was taken over by Simon de Cordes. Blijde Boodschap was captured by the Spanish in South America, Hoop was lost near Hawaii and Trouwe was captured by the Portuguese on Tidore. The Geloof became the first Dutch ship to cross the Pacific and returned to Holland via the Strait of Magellan in July 1600 with only 36 of her original 109 crewmen.[citation needed] Liefde was wrecked on the coast of Japan with 24 survivors, one of whom, William Adams, remained as a trader[2] and personal advisor to shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu.

References[]

  1. ^ Sluiter, Engel (1933). The voyage of Jacques Mahu and Simon de Cordes into the Pacific Ocean, 1598-1600. Thesis/dissertation.
  2. ^ Quanchi, Max (2005). Historical Dictionary of the Discovery and Exploration of the Pacific Islands. The Scarecrow Press. p. 173. ISBN 0810853957.
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