Zacharias Wagenaer

Zacharias Wagenaer
2nd Commander of the Cape
In office
6 May 1662  27 September 1666
Preceded by Jan van Riebeeck
Succeeded by Cornelis van Quaelberg
Personal details
Born 10 May 1614
Dresdner Neustadt
Died 12 October 1668 (aged 54)
Amsterdam
Resting place Oude Kerk, Amsterdam
Spouse(s) Anna Auxbrebis

Zacharias Wagenaer (also known as Wagener, Wagenaar or Wagner) (10 May 1614 in Dresdner Neustadt 12 October 1668 in Amsterdam) was a clerk, illustrator, merchant, member of the Court of Justice, opperhoofd of Deshima and the only German governor of the Dutch Cape Colony. In 35 years he traveled over four continents.

Life

Zacharias was the son of a Saxonian judge and a painter. In 1633 he traveled from Dresden via Hamburg to Amsterdam. There he worked for Willem Blaeu. Within a year he enlisted as a soldier in the armed forces of the Dutch West India Company to serve in "New Holland" (Dutch Brazil) in 1634. Three years later, he was hired as a writer by the newly arrived governor of the colony, Count John Maurice, Prince of Nassau-Siegen. In Recife he kept a sort of diary with 109 water-colour drawings of curious fish, strange birds, useful and harmful animals, lovely tasty fruit and nasty, poisonous worms and big, brown or black people, published as "Thier-Buch". There are pictures of the Smooth Hammerhead, Cutlassfish, slender filefish, Serranidae, and Cirripedia. In 1641, he left Dutch Brazil, and traveled back to Dresden. After four months he returned already to the Netherlands, and took a position with the Dutch East India Company.

In 1642 he sailed for the Indies as a midshipman. In the next year he became an assistant for the governors Antonie van Diemen and Cornelis van der Lijn; in 1646 he became under-merchant and in 1651 merchant. Three times he became a member of the Court of Justice at Batavia. In 1653 he went on a mission to Canton to open up again trade relations, which proved fruitless, due to a civil war after the Fall of the Ming Dynasty.

The Great Fire of Meireki that lasted for three days and may be caused 100.000 deaths. Reconstruction efforts took two years, as the shogunate took the opportunity to reorganize the city according to various practical considerations.

In 1657 he rose to the rank of "opperhoofd" (senior official) of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) at the small island in Nagasaki bay in the Japanese island of Kyushu, Dejima. He traveled to the capital Edo in a tributary mission and escaped from a burning city, which started on 2 March 1657. (There is a drawing from his hand in the Edo-Tokyo Museum.) In 1659, as one of the first "opperhoofden", he ordered a dinner service, consisting of 200 pieces.[1] Wagener made the design of this Japanese porcelain, according to the European taste white and blue, with many flowers.[2][3]

In 1660 Wagner was involved in the peace negotiations with the sultan of Makassar. The port had about 2.000 Portuguese traders and for years threatened the Dutch spice trade on the Moluccas. The next year he was head of the Public Works in Batavia. In 1662 he went to Cape of Good Hope with his small family, five slaves and two horses.[4] He followed Jan van Riebeeck as a governor on 6 May. Riebeeck left the next day. In December 1663 he asked Batavia to send him some pottery from Persia.[5] He negotiated with the Hottentots about cattle for the Company.[6] By abstaining from further expeditions Wagener could pursue his policy to refrain from an interference in tribal disputes, and to keep strictly neutral. After five years studying the German student Georg Friedrich Wreede wrote a compendium of the Dutch and Hottentot language.[7] Wagener appointed him in Mauritius.

Wagener was one of the five people laying the foundation of the Castle of Good Hope, which was started in August 1665.[8] He constructed a waterbasin, supplying the ships with fresh water, a hospital, a school and a church. In 1666 his wife Anna Auxbrebis, whom he had married in 1648, died. On 27 September 1666 he resigned and Wagener went back to Batavia with his stepdaughter. He sold his slaves from Bengal. With presents he went to see the susuhunan of Mataram, who refused to trade with the VOC. While his knowledge of the Malay or Javanese language wasn't very good, the mission turned out to be fruitless; Wagener visited Japara afterwards. The year after he sailed back to Amsterdam as a vice-admiral, and in ill health. He was buried on 16 October 1668 in the Old Church.

A German excerpt of his diary[9] was translated into English and published in 1704 and 1732.[10]

Terms as Opperhoofd

Wagner served two terms as opperhoofd in alternation with Joan Boucheljon:

Work

Gallery


Notes

  1. Schoeman, K. (2006) Kinders van die Kompanjie, p. 164.
  2. http://www.aisf.or.jp/~jaanus/deta/i/imariyaki.htm
  3. Volker, T. (1971) Porcelain and the Dutch East India Company as recorded in the Dagh-registers of the Batavia castle, those of Hirado and Deshima and other contemporary papers 1602-1682, p. 126-127, 132-137. Leiden. E.J. Brill.
  4. Schoeman, K. (2006) Kinders van die Kompanjie, p. 165.
  5. Schoeman, K. (2006) Kinders van die Kompanjie, p. 167.
  6. Google books The History of South Africa
  7. Wreede, Georg Friedrich. 1916. Hottentotse woordelijst. In: Reizen in Zuid-Afrika in de hollandse tijd, vol. 1, pp. 215-224. Edited by E. C. Godée-Molsbergen. Martinus Nijhoff. s-Gravenhage (Netherlands).
  8. Spohr, O.H. (1967) Zacharias Wagner, second commander of the Cape, p. 4-5. Capetown. Amsterdam.
  9. The original manuscript has been published by Michel (1983) Zacharias Wagner and Japan (I).
  10. A collection of voyages and travels, Volume 2 by Awnsham Churchill, John Churchill, p. 496-499

References

External links

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