Wessel Islands

The Wessel Islands are a group of islands belonging to the Northern Territory of Australia. They extend in a more or less straight line from Buckingham Bay and the Napier Peninsula of Arnhem Land, and Elcho Island, to the northeast. Marchinbar Island is the largest of the group. Other islands include Elcho Island, Rimbija Island (the most outlying island), Guluwuru Island, Raragala Island, Stevens Island, Burgunngura Island, Djeergaree Island, Yargara Island, Drysdale Island, Jirrgari Island, Graham Island, Alger Island, Abbott Island, and Howard Island.

Bumaga Island and Warnawi Island, both part of the Wessel Islands group, are also part of the Cunningham Islands.

History

European discovery and naming

The islands were mapped and named by a Dutch expedition that sailed from Banda Neira to explore the coasts of New Guinea and the South Land following up on discoveries made in 1623 by Jan Carstensz and Willem van Colster (who named Arnhem Land after his ship Arnhem).[1] The expedition used two small yachts that had been prefabricated in the Netherlands and were assembled on the Banda Islands, the Klein Amsterdam and the Klein Wesel (klein = small).[2] The ships sailed on 17 April 1736 under the command of Gerrit Thomas Pool, who was killed on New Guinea just 11 days later. The merchant Pieter Pietersen took over command and continued the voyage, returning to Banda. Besides the Wesel Eilanden, named after the ship, Pietersen described the Cobourg Peninsula, Melville Island, and Dundas Strait.[3] 170 years later Matthew Flinders decided to retain the name of the islands, though he slightly modified it to Wessel.[4] The cities of Arnhem and Wesel, ultimate sources of the names of Arnhem Land and Wessel Islands, are themselves only 60 km (37 miles) separated.

Marchinbar coins

In 1944, Australian soldier Morry Isenberg found nine coins buried in the sand one day while fishing when he was stationed on Marchinbar Island. In 1979 he sent these coins to be authenticated.[5][6] Four of the coins were found to have come from the Dutch East India Company, while the other five were determined to be from the Kilwa Sultanate in Tanzania.[7]

Only one such Kilwan coin had ever previously been found outside east Africa (unearthed during an excavation in Oman). The inscriptions on the Jensen Bay coins identify a ruling Sultan of Kilwa, but it is unclear whether the ruler was from the 10th century or the 14th century. This discovery has been of interest to those historians who believe it likely that non-aboriginal people made landfall in Australia or its offshore islands before the first generally accepted such discovery, by the Dutch sailor Willem Janszoon in 1606. (See Janszoon voyage of 1605-6 and History of Australia (1606–1787).)[8]

References

  1. Jan Ernst Heeres, Instructions by the VOC for Gerrit Thomasz Pool en Pieter Pietersen in The Part Borne by the Dutch in the Discovery of Australia 1606-1765, page 64-67
  2. The ship Wezel at the VOC website
  3. Jan Ernst Heeres, The Netherlanders on the North-West Coast of Australia, page VIII and pp. 67-71
  4. Matthew Flinders, A voyage to terra Australis, 1814, page 246
  5. "COINS COULD REWRITE AUST HISTORY". AAP. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  6. "Ancient African coins that could change history of Australia". CNN. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  7. Bennettsmith, Meredith (20 May 2013). "Ancient African Coins Found In Australia Could Rewrite History; Team Seeks 1,000-Year-Old Evidence". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  8. Jonathan Gornall, Were the African coins found in Australia from a wrecked Arab dhow?, The National, 29 May 2013. Retrieved 24 June 2013

External links

Coordinates: 11°30′S 136°25′E / 11.500°S 136.417°E / -11.500; 136.417

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