Saxemberg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Saxemberg was a phantom island believed to have existed in the South Atlantic. It appeared intermittently on charts between the 17th to the 19th centuries.
Saxemberg was reportedly discovered by Dutch seafarer John Lindestz Lindeman in 1670. Lindeman reported the island's coordinates as 30º:45' S latitude and 19º:40' W longitude. [1]. Lindman made a sketch which depicted the island as being low lying, but with a somewhat pointed mountain in the middle. Other sketches, of unidentified authorship, presented a more detailed view of Saxemberg. Major General Alexander Beatson, a resident of St. Helena, reported that he had drawings of the island depicting different forms of plantlife. [2] Another resident of St Helena, James Wathen, wrote a book where he surmised that Ascension, Tristan da Cunha, Gough, and Saxemberg constituted a chain extending 1800 miles in length and 500 miles in bredth. [3]
Despite Lindeman's original report, many sailors were apparently unable to locate the island at the coordinates provided by the Dutchman. There appears to have been some skepticism about the existence of Saxemberg, and the island was not always depicted on charts. The next reported sighting of Saxemberg was made in 1804, when a Captain Galloway of the American ship Fanny reported seeing the island and keeping it in view for four hours. Galloway observed that the island did have the peak in the middle, as reported by Lindeman. In 1816, a Captain Head of the True Briton found the island and kept it in view for six hours. His account corroborated with Galloway's.
The famed Australian explorer Matthew Flinders, attempted to find Saxemberg during his cruise on the ship Investigator, in September 1801. [4] Flinders concluded in his book, A Voyage to Terra Australis, that he did not believe Saxemberg existed at all. However, he noted sometime later that he met the Earl of Caledon in 1810, who showed Flinders a log extract from a Captain Long of the sloop Columbus. The log, dated 22 September 1809 noted:
"Five p.m., saw the island of Saxonburg (Saxemberg), bearing E. S. E., first about 41 leagues distant: clear weather. Steered for the said island, and found it to be in the latitude of 30° 18' south, longitude 28° 20' west, or thereabout.
"The island of Saxonburg is about four leagues in length, N. W. and S. E., and about 2½ miles in breadth. The N. W. end is a high bluff of about 70 feet, perpendicular form, and runs along to the south-east about 8 miles. You will see trees at about a mile and a half distance, and a sandy beach."
Flinders noted that "The situation of Saxemberg in the common tables and charts, was 30° 45' south and 19° 40' west, almost 9° of longitude too little; and therefore it is not surprising that ships have missed it. At the time so many birds were seen, on the 28th, the Investigator was not more than eighty miles from the position of the island, as above given from Mr. Long." [5]
None of the captains who reported seeing Saxemberg, actually made landfall. It is possible that they all saw cloud formations that were taken as islands, that the island somehow vanished into the sea, or that the island never existed.
[edit] Sources
- Ramsay, Raymond H. No Longer on the Map. Discovering Places That Never Were. New York: Ballantine Books, 1972. SBN 345-23421-9-165.