The Council of Batavia in 1642 dispatches …

Years: 1642 - 1642
April

The Council of Batavia in 1642 dispatches Abel Tasman and Franchoijs Visscher on a voyage of which one of the objects is to obtain knowledge of "all the totally unknown provinces of Beach".

Beach appears on maps of the time, notably that of Abraham Ortelius of 1570 and that of Jan Huygen van Linschoten of 1596, as the northernmost part of the southern continent, the Terra Australis, along with Locach.

According to Marco Polo, Locach was a kingdom where gold was “so plentiful that no none who did not see it could believe it”.

Beach was in fact a mistranscription of Locach, Marco Polo’s name for the southern Thai kingdom of Lavo, or Lop Buri, the “city of Lavo”, (after Lavo, the son of Rama in Hindu mythology).

In Chinese (Cantonese), Lavo was pronounced “Lo-huk”, from which Marco Polo took his rendition of the name.

In the German cursive script, “Locach” and “Beach” look similar, and in the 1532 edition of Marco Polo’s Travels published by Simon Grynaeus and Johann Huttich, his Locach had been changed to Boëach, later shortened to Beach.

Linschoten’s very popular 1596 map of the East Indies showed BEACH projecting from the map’s southern edge, leading (or mis-leading) Visscher and Tasman, in their voyage of 1642, to seek Beach with its plentiful gold in a location to the south of the Solomon Islands somewhere between Staten Land near Cape Horn and the Cape of Good Hope.

Confirmation that land exists where the maps show Beach to be had come from Dirk Hartog’s landing in October 1616 on its west coast, which he called Eendrachtsland after the name of his ship.

In accordance with Visscher's directions, Tasman sails first to Mauritius.

The reason for this is that his ships are sailing ships and the best route from one place to another is not always the direct route; of more importance is the direction of the wind.

Tasman has some knowledge of the prevailing winds and so he chooses Mauritius as a turning point and from there a course is set towards what is presumed to be the mainland of Beach, or Terra Australis. (At least part of the western shore of the continent is already known to the Dutch, but the shape of the southern coast is unknown).

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