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Curonian colonization of the Americas

The Curonian colonization of the Americas was performed by the Duchy of Courland (now Latvia), which was the second-smallest state to colonise the Americas, after the Knights of Malta. It had a colony on the island of Tobago from 1654 to 1659 and intermittently from 1660 to 1689.[1]

History edit

 
Great Courland Bay Monument

Courland was located in present-day Latvia, and had a population of only 200,000, mostly of Latvian and Baltic German ancestry, and was itself a vassal of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth at that time. Under Duke Jacob Kettler (ruled 1642-1682), a Baltic German, it established one of the largest merchant fleets in Europe, with its main harbours in Windau (today's Ventspils), and Libau (today's Liepāja). During his travels to Western Europe, Duke Jacob became an eager proponent of mercantilism. Metalworking and shipbuilding became much more developed. Trading relations were established not only with nearby countries, but also with England, France, the Netherlands, Portugal and others.

Courland and Tobago edit

The Duchy's ships started undertaking trade voyages to the West Indies at least as early as 1637, when a Couronian ship attempted to found a colony on Tobago with 212 settlers. An earlier European settlement on the island, a Dutch colony named New Walcheren, formed in 1628, had been wiped out a few months earlier by Spain. The first Curonian colony met a similar end, whilst a second attempt was essentially blockaded by Spain and strangled in infancy by 1639.

In 1642 two ships under Captain Caroon with about 300 settlers attempted to settle on the north coast near Courland Bay. This colony was again blockaded, but proved more successful. Jesuit missionaries among the Carib quickly agitated and armed the tribes to attack the settlement. In 1650 the colonists abandoned the colony, which was evacuated to Tortuga and later Jamaica. Under agreement with other Protestant powers who saw their various individual efforts insufficient to trade and/or colonise the Americas, Africa, and the Indies simultaneously, Courland's attention shifted to Africa. In 1651 the Duchy gained its first successful colony in Africa, on St. Andrews Island in the Gambia River and it established Fort Jacob there.

Soon afterwards the Protestant powers felt sufficiently organised and prepared to launch several colonial expeditions against Spanish interests in the Caribbean. The alliance between England and the Netherlands against Spain began to dissolve thanks to England's attempts to break Dutch monopolies. The Dutch were primary competitors to Courland, which decided to support the English in the brewing conflict. Therefore, Courland received permission from its Protestant English allies to make still another attempt at a colony on Tobago.

On 20 May 1654, the ship Das Wappen der Herzogin von Kurland ("The Arms of the Duchess of Courland") arrived carrying 45 cannon, 25 officers, 124 Curonian soldiers and 80 families of colonists to occupy Tobago. Captain Willem Mollens declared the island "New Courland" (Neu-Kurland). A fort was erected on the southwest of the island, also called Fort Jacobus (Fort James) with the surrounding town called Jacobsstadt (Jamestown). Other features were given Curonian names such as Great Courland Bay, Jacobs (James) Bay, Courland Estate, Neu-Mitau, Libau Bay and Little Courland Bay.

In their first year on the island the Curonians built an Evangelical Lutheran church. The colony was successful, but the Netherlands was not willing to accede to losing the West Indies and replied by establishing its own colony nearby a few months later. Thus, the small Curonian colony soon became overshadowed by a second Dutch colony. While 120 Curonian colonists had come in 1657, the Dutch colony reached a population of 1,200 by the next year, when 500 French Protestant refugees fleeing Catholic persecution joined them.

Goods exported to Europe included sugar, tobacco, coffee, cotton, ginger, indigo, rum, cocoa, tortoise shells, tropical birds and their feathers.

The Duchy of Courland became a focus of strategic interest for both Sweden and Poland–Lithuania. In 1655 the Swedish army entered the territory of the Duchy and the Northern Wars (1655–1660) began. The Swedish army held Duke Jacob captive from 1658 to 1660. During this period both colonies continued to thrive until they were taken by the more numerous Dutch settlers, who surrounded Fort James and forced Hubert de Beveren, Governor of the Curonians, to surrender. The merchant fleet and factories were destroyed. Courland officially yielded New Courland on 11 December 1659. However, this war ended with the Treaty of Oliwa (signed near Gdańsk) of 1660, on the basis of which Tobago was returned to Courland.

Although peace had been established between the Curonians and the Dutch, there still remained Spain. Following several attacks by buccaneers seeking new harbours, and an expeditionary fleet of Spanish vessels, the Curonians left Tobago in 1666. In 1668 a Curonian ship attempted to reoccupy Fort Jacobus and was driven off by the Dutch.

Tobago was regained again just for a short period at the end of Duke Jacob's rule with an attempt in July 1680 at a new colony which also later failed. He began to restore the fleet and factories, and the Duchy never again reached its previous level of prosperity. The island was abandoned except for visiting buccaneers from March 1683 to June 1686, before again being occupied by a collection of scattered Curonians from throughout the Dutch, French, and English West Indies, as well as by fresh settlers from the home country.

In May 1690, shortly after the island was sold by Courland the previous year, the Curonian government permanently left Tobago, and those who remained essentially joined the buccaneers or other Anglo-Dutch colonies. Absentee governors would continue to be appointed until 1795, thereby facilitating the continued use of covert privateering Letters of Marque and Reprisal in the region.

The Courland Monument near Courland Bay commemorates the Duchy's settlements.

Governors of New Courland edit

  New Courland (Neu Kurland)
Portrait Incumbent Governor Tenure Duke of Courland and Semigallia Monarch of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
From Until
1   Edward Marshall 1642 1643  

Friedrich Kettler
Frīdrihs Ketlers
House of Ketteler
(17 May 1587 – 17 August 1642)

 
Ladislaus IV
Władysław IV Waza
Vladislovas Vaza
House of Vasa
(8 November 1632 – 20 May 1648)
2   Cornelius Caroon 1643 1650  
Jacob Kettler
Jakob von Kettler
House of Ketteler
(17 August 1642 – 1 January 1682)
 
John II Casimir
Jan II Kazimierz
Jonas Kazimieras Vaza
House of Vasa
(20 November 1648 – 16 September 1668)
3   Willem Mollens

Curounian Governor

1654 1656
  Adrian Lampsins

Dutch Governor

1654 1656
  Cornelius Lampsins

Dutch Governor

1654 1656
4   Hubert de Beveren 1656 1659
Dutch Settlers Take Control (16591660) after Jacob Kettler is captured by the Swedish Empire in the Second Northern War by 16581660
5   Adrian Lampsins
Baron of Tobago
De Facto
1662 1666  
Jacob Kettler
Jakob von Kettler
House of Ketteler
(17 August 1642 – 1 January 1682)
 
John II Casimir
Jan II Kazimierz
Jonas Kazimieras Vaza
House of Vasa
(20 November 1648 – 16 September 1668)
  Cornelius Lampsins
Baron of Tobago
De Facto
1662 1666
  Karl de Napp
Absentee Governor
De Jure
1660 1689  
Frederick Casimir Kettler
Friedrich Casimir Kettler
House of Ketteler
(1 January 1682 – 22 January 1698)
 
Michael I
Michał Korybut Wiśniowiecki
Mykolas Kaributas Višnioveckis
House of Wiśniowiecki
(19 June 1669 – 10 November 1673)
 
John III
Jan III Sobieski
Jonas III Sobieskis
House of Sobieski
(21 May 1674 – 17 June 1696)

Jamaican buccaneers and English forces from Barbados invade by 1666 during the Second Anglo-Dutch War.

French forces from Grenada then capture the island.

The Dutch recapture the island by 1667 and Dutch settlers re-establish the colony by 1668.

The Nepoyo (Arawakans) from Trinidad attack the settlement, but they were able to fend off the attacks with the help of the native Kalina (Carib) of Tobago, but were attacked again by the Kalinago (Island Caribs) from St. Vincent.

At the outbreak of the Third Anglo-Dutch War (1672–1674), the colony was captured and looted again by Barbadians, where in 1673 Adrian Lampsins and the late Cornelius' son Jan briefly again retook Tobago, but the island was recaptured by an English Barbadian force under Sir Tobias Bridge from Barbados, and Adrian was killed alongside his nephew when the fort was blown up.

A new Dutch colony was re-established in 1676.

The French attack again by March 1677, with the resulting naval battle resulted in serious losses on both sides, and the French forces withdrew, but returned the following year, captured the island, and destroyed the settlement.

Fresh Courlander attempts to establish a colony in Tobago in 1680 and 1681 were abandoned in 1683.

New Courland is abandoned from 1683–1686.

A final Courlander attempt to settle the island in 1686 was largely abandoned by 1687.

New Courland is finally sold to the British Empire by around 1690 to 1693, where last mention of the colony was a small group of settlers encountered by a Danish ship in 1693.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Tobago: The history of the Dutch and Courlanders' settlements September 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine This website contains further bibliography:
    • Archibald, D. "Tobago: melancholy isle, vol. I 1498-1771" 137 pp. Westindiana, 1987, Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tobago
    • Carmichael,Gertrude "The history of the West Indian Island of Trinidad and Tobago, 1498-1900", 463 pp. 8 plts. 1961, London, UK.
    • Edmundson "The Dutch in Western Guiana" English historical review: 1901 Vol. XVI 640 - 675 pp. -- About he first period of Dutch settlements in Guiana and Tobago, including some information about Courland colonizing Tobago.
    • Goslinga,C.Ch. "The Dutch in the Caribbean & on the Wild Coast 1580-1680" 647 pp. 12 maps Van Gorcum & C. 1971 Assen, The Netherlands

Further reading edit

  • Edgar Anderson: The Couronians and the West Indies, Chicago 1965.
  • Karin Jekabson-Lemanis: Balts in the Caribbean, The Duchy of Courland's attempts to colonize Tobago Island, 1638 to 1654, in: Caribbean Quarterly, Vol. 46, No. 2, 2000, pp. 25–44.
  • Harry C. Merritt: The colony of the colonized: the Duchy of Courland’s Tobago colony and contemporary Latvian national identity, in: Nationalities Papers; Vol. 38, No. 4, 2010, pp. 491–508.
  • Imbi Sooman, Jesma McFarlane, Valdis Teraudkalns, Stefan Donecker: From the port of Ventspils to Great Courland Bay: The Couronian colony on Tobago in past and present, in: Journal of Baltic Studies, Vol. 44, No. 4, December 2013, pp. 503–526.

curonian, colonization, americas, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Curonian colonization of the Americas news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Curonian colonization of the Americas was performed by the Duchy of Courland now Latvia which was the second smallest state to colonise the Americas after the Knights of Malta It had a colony on the island of Tobago from 1654 to 1659 and intermittently from 1660 to 1689 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Courland and Tobago 2 Governors of New Courland 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingHistory edit nbsp Great Courland Bay MonumentCourland was located in present day Latvia and had a population of only 200 000 mostly of Latvian and Baltic German ancestry and was itself a vassal of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth at that time Under Duke Jacob Kettler ruled 1642 1682 a Baltic German it established one of the largest merchant fleets in Europe with its main harbours in Windau today s Ventspils and Libau today s Liepaja During his travels to Western Europe Duke Jacob became an eager proponent of mercantilism Metalworking and shipbuilding became much more developed Trading relations were established not only with nearby countries but also with England France the Netherlands Portugal and others Courland and Tobago edit The Duchy s ships started undertaking trade voyages to the West Indies at least as early as 1637 when a Couronian ship attempted to found a colony on Tobago with 212 settlers An earlier European settlement on the island a Dutch colony named New Walcheren formed in 1628 had been wiped out a few months earlier by Spain The first Curonian colony met a similar end whilst a second attempt was essentially blockaded by Spain and strangled in infancy by 1639 In 1642 two ships under Captain Caroon with about 300 settlers attempted to settle on the north coast near Courland Bay This colony was again blockaded but proved more successful Jesuit missionaries among the Carib quickly agitated and armed the tribes to attack the settlement In 1650 the colonists abandoned the colony which was evacuated to Tortuga and later Jamaica Under agreement with other Protestant powers who saw their various individual efforts insufficient to trade and or colonise the Americas Africa and the Indies simultaneously Courland s attention shifted to Africa In 1651 the Duchy gained its first successful colony in Africa on St Andrews Island in the Gambia River and it established Fort Jacob there Soon afterwards the Protestant powers felt sufficiently organised and prepared to launch several colonial expeditions against Spanish interests in the Caribbean The alliance between England and the Netherlands against Spain began to dissolve thanks to England s attempts to break Dutch monopolies The Dutch were primary competitors to Courland which decided to support the English in the brewing conflict Therefore Courland received permission from its Protestant English allies to make still another attempt at a colony on Tobago On 20 May 1654 the ship Das Wappen der Herzogin von Kurland The Arms of the Duchess of Courland arrived carrying 45 cannon 25 officers 124 Curonian soldiers and 80 families of colonists to occupy Tobago Captain Willem Mollens declared the island New Courland Neu Kurland A fort was erected on the southwest of the island also called Fort Jacobus Fort James with the surrounding town called Jacobsstadt Jamestown Other features were given Curonian names such as Great Courland Bay Jacobs James Bay Courland Estate Neu Mitau Libau Bay and Little Courland Bay In their first year on the island the Curonians built an Evangelical Lutheran church The colony was successful but the Netherlands was not willing to accede to losing the West Indies and replied by establishing its own colony nearby a few months later Thus the small Curonian colony soon became overshadowed by a second Dutch colony While 120 Curonian colonists had come in 1657 the Dutch colony reached a population of 1 200 by the next year when 500 French Protestant refugees fleeing Catholic persecution joined them Goods exported to Europe included sugar tobacco coffee cotton ginger indigo rum cocoa tortoise shells tropical birds and their feathers The Duchy of Courland became a focus of strategic interest for both Sweden and Poland Lithuania In 1655 the Swedish army entered the territory of the Duchy and the Northern Wars 1655 1660 began The Swedish army held Duke Jacob captive from 1658 to 1660 During this period both colonies continued to thrive until they were taken by the more numerous Dutch settlers who surrounded Fort James and forced Hubert de Beveren Governor of the Curonians to surrender The merchant fleet and factories were destroyed Courland officially yielded New Courland on 11 December 1659 However this war ended with the Treaty of Oliwa signed near Gdansk of 1660 on the basis of which Tobago was returned to Courland Although peace had been established between the Curonians and the Dutch there still remained Spain Following several attacks by buccaneers seeking new harbours and an expeditionary fleet of Spanish vessels the Curonians left Tobago in 1666 In 1668 a Curonian ship attempted to reoccupy Fort Jacobus and was driven off by the Dutch Tobago was regained again just for a short period at the end of Duke Jacob s rule with an attempt in July 1680 at a new colony which also later failed He began to restore the fleet and factories and the Duchy never again reached its previous level of prosperity The island was abandoned except for visiting buccaneers from March 1683 to June 1686 before again being occupied by a collection of scattered Curonians from throughout the Dutch French and English West Indies as well as by fresh settlers from the home country In May 1690 shortly after the island was sold by Courland the previous year the Curonian government permanently left Tobago and those who remained essentially joined the buccaneers or other Anglo Dutch colonies Absentee governors would continue to be appointed until 1795 thereby facilitating the continued use of covert privateering Letters of Marque and Reprisal in the region The Courland Monument near Courland Bay commemorates the Duchy s settlements Governors of New Courland edit nbsp New Courland Neu Kurland Portrait Incumbent Governor Tenure Duke of Courland and Semigallia Monarch of the Polish Lithuanian CommonwealthFrom Until1 nbsp Edward Marshall 1642 1643 nbsp Friedrich KettlerFridrihs KetlersHouse of Ketteler 17 May 1587 17 August 1642 nbsp Ladislaus IVWladyslaw IV WazaVladislovas VazaHouse of Vasa 8 November 1632 20 May 1648 2 nbsp Cornelius Caroon 1643 1650 nbsp Jacob KettlerJakob von KettlerHouse of Ketteler 17 August 1642 1 January 1682 nbsp John II CasimirJan II KazimierzJonas Kazimieras VazaHouse of Vasa 20 November 1648 16 September 1668 3 nbsp Willem Mollens Curounian Governor 1654 1656 nbsp Adrian Lampsins Dutch Governor 1654 1656 nbsp Cornelius Lampsins Dutch Governor 1654 16564 nbsp Hubert de Beveren 1656 1659Dutch Settlers Take Control 1659 1660 after Jacob Kettler is captured by the Swedish Empire in the Second Northern War by 1658 16605 nbsp Adrian LampsinsBaron of TobagoDe Facto 1662 1666 nbsp Jacob KettlerJakob von KettlerHouse of Ketteler 17 August 1642 1 January 1682 nbsp John II CasimirJan II KazimierzJonas Kazimieras VazaHouse of Vasa 20 November 1648 16 September 1668 nbsp Cornelius LampsinsBaron of TobagoDe Facto 1662 1666 nbsp Karl de NappAbsentee GovernorDe Jure 1660 1689 nbsp Frederick Casimir KettlerFriedrich Casimir KettlerHouse of Ketteler 1 January 1682 22 January 1698 nbsp Michael IMichal Korybut WisniowieckiMykolas Kaributas VisnioveckisHouse of Wisniowiecki 19 June 1669 10 November 1673 nbsp John IIIJan III SobieskiJonas III SobieskisHouse of Sobieski 21 May 1674 17 June 1696 Jamaican buccaneers and English forces from Barbados invade by 1666 during the Second Anglo Dutch War French forces from Grenada then capture the island The Dutch recapture the island by 1667 and Dutch settlers re establish the colony by 1668 The Nepoyo Arawakans from Trinidad attack the settlement but they were able to fend off the attacks with the help of the native Kalina Carib of Tobago but were attacked again by the Kalinago Island Caribs from St Vincent At the outbreak of the Third Anglo Dutch War 1672 1674 the colony was captured and looted again by Barbadians where in 1673 Adrian Lampsins and the late Cornelius son Jan briefly again retook Tobago but the island was recaptured by an English Barbadian force under Sir Tobias Bridge from Barbados and Adrian was killed alongside his nephew when the fort was blown up A new Dutch colony was re established in 1676 The French attack again by March 1677 with the resulting naval battle resulted in serious losses on both sides and the French forces withdrew but returned the following year captured the island and destroyed the settlement Fresh Courlander attempts to establish a colony in Tobago in 1680 and 1681 were abandoned in 1683 New Courland is abandoned from 1683 1686 A final Courlander attempt to settle the island in 1686 was largely abandoned by 1687 New Courland is finally sold to the British Empire by around 1690 to 1693 where last mention of the colony was a small group of settlers encountered by a Danish ship in 1693 See also editCuronian colonisationReferences edit Tobago The history of the Dutch and Courlanders settlements Archived September 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine This website contains further bibliography Archibald D Tobago melancholy isle vol I 1498 1771 137 pp Westindiana 1987 Port of Spain Trinidad amp Tobago Carmichael Gertrude The history of the West Indian Island of Trinidad and Tobago 1498 1900 463 pp 8 plts 1961 London UK Edmundson The Dutch in Western Guiana English historical review 1901 Vol XVI 640 675 pp About he first period of Dutch settlements in Guiana and Tobago including some information about Courland colonizing Tobago Goslinga C Ch The Dutch in the Caribbean amp on the Wild Coast 1580 1680 647 pp 12 maps Van Gorcum amp C 1971 Assen The NetherlandsFurther reading editEdgar Anderson The Couronians and the West Indies Chicago 1965 Karin Jekabson Lemanis Balts in the Caribbean The Duchy of Courland s attempts to colonize Tobago Island 1638 to 1654 in Caribbean Quarterly Vol 46 No 2 2000 pp 25 44 Harry C Merritt The colony of the colonized the Duchy of Courland s Tobago colony and contemporary Latvian national identity in Nationalities Papers Vol 38 No 4 2010 pp 491 508 Imbi Sooman Jesma McFarlane Valdis Teraudkalns Stefan Donecker From the port of Ventspils to Great Courland Bay The Couronian colony on Tobago in past and present in Journal of Baltic Studies Vol 44 No 4 December 2013 pp 503 526 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Curonian colonization of the Americas amp oldid 1146532561, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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