TitleTasman's ships Zeehaen and HeemskerckDate of publication1898Description
In 1642 Abel Tasman was sent out by the Dutch East India Company to discover a route to the Pacific Ocean south of New Holland. Leaving Batavia in Java he sailed south of the known Dutch discoveries of the continent and continuing east he discovered and named Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania). Continuing to the east and then north he discovered the west coast of New Zealand. Tasman returned to Java round the north coast of New Guinea. He was sent out again in 1643, to search for a passage between Carpentaria (Cape York Peninsula) and New Guinea. Deterred by the reefs and shoals of the strait (now known as Torres Strait), and which gave the appearance of land, Tasman instead explored the north coast of New Holland.
Tasman's ships on his historic discovery of Tasmania (Van Diemen's Land) were the Zeehaen and Heemskerck. It was Matthew Flinders in his 1798-99 circumnavigation of Tasmania who named two prominent mountains on the west coast of the island after Tasman's ships: Mount Zeehan and Mount Heemskirk.
Torres Strait had been discovered in 1606 by the Spaniard Luis Vaez de Torres, the commander of one of the ships of a Spanish expedition led by Pedro Fernandez de Quiros which had sailed from Peru to search for the unknown South Land. De Quiros discovered Vanuatu. Torres was separated from the expedition, and sailing south west discovered the strait between New Guinea and Australia and which was later named for him. He then sailed to Manila in the Philippines. The Spanish suppressed all knowledge of the strait, and it was not until 1762 that Alexander Dalrymple found Torres' report in the archives in Manila. James Cook used this information and was only the second European to navigate the strait.
The discoveries by Tasman and other Dutch explorers of the New Holland coastline are shown in the map published in 1663 by Melchisedec Thevenot.
Click on the image to add a tag or press ESC to cancel
Tasman's ships Zeehaen and Heemskerck. State Library of South Australia, accessed 10/12/2025, https://digital.collections.slsa.sa.gov.au/nodes/view/2617