Jan van Riebeeck (21 April 1619, Culemborg, Gelderland – 18
January 1677) was a Dutch colonial administrator and founder of Cape Town.
Van Riebeeck was born in Culemborg, Netherlands as the son
of a surgeon. He grew up in Schiedam, where he married 19-year old Maria de la
Quellerie 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 or nine children, most
of whom did not survive infancy. Their son Abraham van Riebeeck, born at the
Cape, later became Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies.
Joining the Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie (VOC) Dutch
East India Company 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 volunteered to undertake the command of the
initial Dutch settlement in the future South Africa. He landed three ships
(Dromedaris; 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.
The primary purpose of this way-station was to provide fresh
provisions for the VOC fleets sailing between the Dutch Republic and Batavia,
as deaths en route were very high. The Walvisch and the Oliphant arrived later
in 1652, having had 130 burials at sea.
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