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Samuel Blommaert

Samuel Blommaert (Bloemaert, Blommaerts, Blommaart, Blomert, etc.) (11 or 21 August 1583, in Antwerp – 23 December 1651, in Amsterdam[1]) was a Flemish/Dutch merchant and director of the Dutch West India Company from 1622 to 1629 and again from 1636 to 1642. In the latter period, he was a paid commissioner of Sweden in the Netherlands and he played a dubious but key role in Peter Minuit's expedition that led to the Swedish colonizing of New Sweden. For years Blommaert was involved in the copper trade and industry. In 1645 he was appointed for a third time as a manager of the WIC, being one of the main investors from the beginning.

Samuel Blommaert (1583-1651)

Early life edit

 
Portrait of Gerard Reynst, Blommaert's father-in-law

Blommaert was born in Antwerp, Duchy of Brabant, in current-day Belgium but grew up in London. He was the son of Margaretha Hoefnagel (-1585)[a] and the wealthy goldsmith/merchant Lodewijk Blommaert (1537–1591),[4] who in 1581 was schepen of Antwerp and in 1583 captain at Fort Lillo on the eastern border of the Scheldt; he knew the area very well as his ancestors came from Bergen-op-Zoom. His mother died when Samuel was young and his father moved the family to London when Antwerp was occupied in 1585 by the Duke of Parma. In 1587 he remarried Janneken van Hove but he died four years later. Samuel was apprenticed in Stade with his aunt Susanne, and in Vienna at his uncle Daniel. In 1601 he became "poorter" of Amsterdam. In 1602 he visited Benin.[5][6]

In 1603, Samuel enlisted with the Dutch East India Company and traveled to the Dutch East Indies on a ship under admiral Steven van der Hagen. In the years 1605–1607 he stayed on Borneo. He was sent by the board (Jacques l'Hermite) to Sukadana West Kalimantan to free merchant Hans Roeff, who had died or left when Blommaert arrived. He returned to Bantam with 633 diamonds he was able to save at the trading post.[7] In 1609/1610 he again stayed on Sambas, Borneo and was able to get a monopoly on diamond trade for the VOC.[8] In September 1610, after seven years, he left sooner than expected and arrived in June 1611 at Texel. Pieter Both had to investigate the case.[9] On 5 June 1612, he married the 22-years-old Catharina Reynst, a daughter of Gerard Reynst, governor of the East Indies. Both were living at Sint Antoniesbreestraat with whom he would have twelve children between 1613 and 1633; two died in an early age.[10]

Early career edit

 
In 1615 Gerrit Reynst became the owner of an empty lot, now Prinsengracht 2; his heirs, two daughters who married Samuel Blommaert and Isaac Coymans sold the lots in 1617, 1618 and 1622.

For many years Blommaert was involved in a company which traded in copper from Angola and the African coast, together with Frans Jacobsz. Hinlopen, and Lucas van der Venne.[11][12] In 1615 Jacob le Maire carried a letter from his father Isaac le Maire to be presented to Governor Reynst, with an offer to smuggle goods to his son-in-law in Amsterdam. Blommaert was investigated in Amsterdam by the board of the East-India Company on January 30, 1616 [13] about a vessel, named Mauritius de Nassau, sailed from a Dutch port, under the command of Jan Remmertszoon from Purmerend. The ship was ostensibly destined for Angola, but from there she was ordered to direct her course for "Terra Australis." The plan, therefore, was, from the west coast of Africa to sail southward to Tierra del Fuego, and then

"to explore the whole of the coast : as far as the Straits of Magellanes, on the chance of finding an opening that might allow a passage to the South-sea; and on such opening being found, to run into and through the same, in order to discover whether they could in such manner get into the South-sea; should such passage to the South-sea have been found, they had orders to return home forthwith, but in case adverse circumstances should prevent them from doing so, they were to run on for the East Indies."[14]

Around 1619 he settled on Keizersgracht and bought a lot (30x170 ft) where a new house was built, next to Laurens Reael. In 1620 Isaac Coymans, a broker, became his brother-in-law.

New Netherlands edit

 
The relative locations of New Netherland (magenta) and New Sweden (blue) in America; modern state boundaries and postal abbreviations are shown

By 1621, he invested in the Amsterdam chamber of the Dutch West India Company and was appointed director in October 1622.[15] In 1623 he and Kiliaen van Rensselaer, Samuel Godijn en Albert Coenraetsz. Burgh were investigating the possibility of the slave trade in Angola.[16] In 1624 his grandfather Jacob Hoefnagel became one of the three mayors in Göteborg and president of the court of justice for a while.[17] Louis de Geer received the official monopoly on the copper and iron trade in Sweden and decided to settle there. In 1627 Blommaert had an argument with Pieter Trip about 34 Swedish guns.[18]

In 1628 he collaborated with Van Rensselaer, Godijn and Burgh.[19] Godyn, Van Rensselaer and Samuel Blommaert sent two persons to New Netherland to inspect the country.[20] Gilles Housset and Jacob Jansz Cuyper bargained with the natives for a tract of land reaching from Cape Henlopen to the mouth of the Delaware River.[21] This was in 1629, three years before the charter of Maryland, and is the oldest deed for land in the state of Delaware. The purchase was ratified in 1630 by Peter Minuit and his council at Fort Amsterdam.[22]

A company was formed to colonize the tract that included Blommaert, Godin, Van Rensselaer, Joannes de Laet (a geographer), and David Pietersen de Vries. A ship of eighteen guns was fitted out to bring over the colonists and subsequently defend the coast, with incidental whale-fishing to help defray expenses. A colony of more than thirty souls was planted on Lewes creek, a little north of Cape Henlopen, and its governorship was entrusted to Gilles Housset. This settlement antedated by several years any in Pennsylvania, and the colony at Lewes practically laid the foundation and defined the singularly limited area of the state of Delaware, the major part of which was included in the purchase. A palisaded fort was built, with the "red lion, rampant," of Holland affixed to its gate, and the country was named "Swaanendael" or Zwaanendael Colony, while the water was called Godyn's Bay. The estate was further extended, on May 5, 1630, by the purchase of a tract twelve miles square on the coast of Cape May opposite, and the transaction was duly attested at Fort Amsterdam.

The existence of the little colony was short, for the Indians came down upon it in revenge for an arbitrary act on the part of Housset, and it was destroyed, not a soul escaping to tell the tale. According to acknowledged precedent, occupancy of the wilderness served to perfect title; but before the Dutch could reoccupy the desolated site at Lewes, the English were practically in possession.[23]

Because of the ongoing Polish–Swedish War (1626–1629), no grain could be exported through the city of Dantzig.[24] In 1630 the price of grain remained extremely high due to increasing competition. Albert Burgh tried to ensure a monopoly for the City of Amsterdam in Moscovy. In 1631 Blommaert bought rye in Archangelsk. Isaac Coymans, his brother-in-law, moved all his furniture to Keizersgracht 139 as Coymans was in trouble for embezzlement.[citation needed] In 1631 De Geer had a disagreement with his partner Elias Trip. The quarrel was resolved in 1634?

New Sweden edit

In 1635, he started a brass factory in Nacka, outside Stockholm, to boost the export of copper which could be used for making guns and coins. Blommaert tried to attract workers and experts from Aachen and Stolberg.[25] In 1636, Blommaert was reappointed as "bewindhebber" of the WIC after its first bankruptcy, but also became the consul for Sweden in Amsterdam.[26] In 1636 the directors of the WIC could not gather because of an outbreak of plague.[27] In 1637 Blommaert secretly invested money in the first Swedish expedition with Fogel Grip and Kalmar Nyckel to New Sweden. By doing so, he hoped to avoid paying the Dano-Norwegian Sound Tolls on all foreign merchantmen crossing the Sound. He engaged the former diamond cutter Peter Minuit to command the expedition, without the knowledge or permission of the WIC.[b] Blommaert suggested to Oxenstierna to take part in the WIC, and organize from Gothenburg and trade on Spanish and Portuguese ports.[c] Blommaert was interested in seizing Spanish ships, which sailed from the East or West-Indies to Cadiz or Seville, to make his expeditions and colonization more profitable.[29]

In November 1637 two ships belonging to the Swedish South Company with crew and settlers left Gothenburg.[30] Because of a storm the ships could get around Scotland; after a month at sea one arrived at Texel the other at Medemblik.[31] The damage was provisionally repaired; sails and victuals (butter, bread, and beer) needed to be bought. Having arrived on Swedes' Landing on 29 March Minuit acted as he had done before, he did not conquer the land by force but bought it legally from the Lenape or Minqua Indians. What happened next is not very clear. (It seems he was hardly involved in building Fort Christina). Minuit left the colony mid-June, 1638 and sailed to the Caribbean island of St. Christopher where he arrived in early July to barter salt, a ship's cargo of wine and liquor for tobacco.[32][33][34] (Meanwhile Cornelis Jol attempted to capture the Spanish treasure fleet near Cuba with four ships but didn't succeed to the disappointment of Blommaert.) On 5 August 1638 Minuit drowned during a hurricane at St. Christopher (today's St. Kitts).[35] About 20 ships drifted out of the harbour. One ship sank near the Azores, the Kalmar arrived without a mast. A second voyage, which departed on February 7, 1640, and arrived at Fort Christina on April 17, brought additional settlers for New Sweden. As the two expeditions turned out to be unprofitable for Blommaert, he withdrew in 1641.

In 1639 Blommaert and Isaac Coymans sold tobacco and sugar; they were accused of cheating as there were a couple of stones in one of the cases and problems with the tobacco.[36] In 1640 Portuguese Restoration War improved the situation for the Dutch. Blommaert was involved in mining in Dutch Brazil.[37] In 1641 the Zwaanendael Colony was sold to Sweden; all the participants agreed on an equal share.[38] A ship with 211 slaves arrived in Brazil.[39] In 1642 with collaborated with Jan Valkenburgh in Angola.[40] In 1647 he and his wife were portrayed.[41] He told professor Nicolaes Tulp, stories on bestiality he heard on Borneo.[42] In 1651 Blommaert got ill and was buried in Westerkerk. In 1655 his daughter Constantia (1626-) married the admiral Isaac Sweers, Catharina married Abraham Elzevir and Anna moved to Malakka with her husband, director of the VOC.[43]

Legacy edit

Blommaert's thirty-eight letters to Axel Oxenstierna from 1635 to 1641 are of great importance to the history of New Sweden. They mention Willem Usselincx one of the founders of the WIC, who had moved to Gothenburg in 1624 and founded the Swedish South Company; sv:Peter Spiring dealt with the Dutch merchants.[44] These letters were published in Repertorium Veterrimarum Societatum Litterariarum 1870–1879 of the Utrecht Historical Society and in Bijdragen en Mededeelingen (1908).[45]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Her grandfather was Joris Hoefnagel was, the court-painter and diplomat Jacob Hoefnagel was her father; Constantijn Huygens was her uncle.[2] In: Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna, 1635-1641. Joris Hoefnagel was a diplomat supporting Frederick V, Elector Palatine and accused in Prague of fraudulently dealing with a certain financial matter. Hoefnagel was convicted in absentia in a political process of embezzlement of funds. All his goods were confiscated he was sentenced to death but fled to Sweden?[3]
  2. ^ Minuit was dismissed by the WIC in 1632.
  3. ^ In 1649 Louis de Geer founded the Swedish Africa Company which led outraged citizens in Amsterdam to riot and in 1650 Christina, Queen of Sweden hired Hendrik Carloff to improve trade on Gold Coast.[28]

References edit

  1. ^ Samuel Bloemert was buried in the Westerkerk in 1651
  2. ^ "Digitaal Vrouwenlexicon van Nederland". 17 September 2019.
  3. ^ Hoefnagel, Jakob on Austria-Forum
  4. ^ "Gouwer Frittema » Genealogie Peeters-Rouneau » Genealogie Online".
  5. ^ His account, given to Isaac Vossius was used by Olfert Dapper in 1668.
  6. ^ Baesjou, René (2005). "Historiae Oculus Geographia". Journal des Africanistes (75–2): 101. doi:10.4000/africanistes.125.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on July 24, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  8. ^ Kernkamp, G.W. (1908) Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635–1641, pp. 16–17. In: Bijdragen & Mededeelingen van het Historisch Genootschap, nr. 29.
  9. ^ Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna, 1635-1641.
  10. ^ De Nederlandsche Leeuw
  11. ^ Klein, P.W. (1963) De Trippen in de 17e eeuw, p. 146.
  12. ^ Gelderblom, O. (2000) Zuid-Nederlandse kooplieden en de opkomst van de Amsterdamse stapelmarkt, pp. 224, 231.
  13. ^ Kernkamp, G.W. (1908) Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635–1641, pp. 16–17
  14. ^ "Abel Janszoon Tasman's Journal".
  15. ^ The Flemish Influence on Nieuw Nederland
  16. ^ K. Ratelband (2006) De Westafrikaanse reis van Piet Heyn 1624-1625, p. LV.
  17. ^ Jacob Hoefnagel, attributed to (1575-1630), "Konung Gustaf II Adolf" och "Drottning Maria Eleonora" at Bukowsi
  18. ^ Klein, P.W. (1963) De Trippen in de 17e eeuw, p. 279.
  19. ^ "Samuel Blommaert".
  20. ^ Wikisource
  21. ^ "Verhalenarchief".
  22. ^ The First Settlers ( Delaware Living History) http://www.delawareliving.com/history.html 2009-05-08 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ Isaack de Rasieres to Samuel Blommaert 1628 (Caleb Johnson. MayflowerHistory.com) (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-07-25. Retrieved 2008-07-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  24. ^ J.G. van Dillen (1970) Van Rijkdom en Regenten, p. 65.
  25. ^ J. Römelingh (1986) Een rondgang langs de Zweedse archieven, p. 247, 158, 247, 267
  26. ^ Klein, P.W. (1963) De Trippen in de 17e eeuw, p. 374.
  27. ^ Kernkamp, G.W. (1908) Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635–1641, p. 174
  28. ^ Wirta, K.H.(2018) Dark horses of business : overseas entrepreneurship in seventeenth-century Nordic trade in the Indian and Atlantic oceans, p. 134-135
  29. ^ Kernkamp, G.W. (1908) Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635–1641, p. 93, 136-137, 143, 149, 155.
  30. ^ Kernkamp, G.W. (1908) Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635–1641, p. 175.
  31. ^ Kernkamp, G.W. (1908) Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635–1641, p. 50, 56, 145, 146, 182.
  32. ^ Kernkamp, G.W. (1908) Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635–1641, p. 158
  33. ^ Ashmead, Henry Graham History of Delaware County, Pennsylvania (Chapter II, Philadelphia: L. H. Everts & Co. 1884)
  34. ^ Weslager, C. A. A Man and his Ship: Peter Minuit and the Kalmar Nyckel (Wilmington, Delaware: Kalmar Nickel Foundation. 1989
  35. ^ "17th Century Hollanders / Peter Minuit".
  36. ^ "Inventarissen".
  37. ^ "Inventarissen".
  38. ^ "Inventarissen".
  39. ^ Kernkamp, G.W. (1908) Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635–1641, p. 195
  40. ^ "Inventarissen".
  41. ^ "Anoniem Noordelijke Nederlanden (Historische regio) 1647 gedateerd".
  42. ^ Dekkers, Midas (July 31, 2000). Dearest Pet: On Bestiality. Verso. ISBN 9781859843109 – via Google Books.
  43. ^ Genealogie van Isaak Sweers, (H. de Voogd v.d. Straaten In: De Nederlandsche Leeuw, No. 9 (1893), pp. 65–7) (in Dutch)
  44. ^ The Founding of New Sweden, 1637-1642 Author(s): C. T. Odhner and G. B. Keen Source: The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography , 1879, Vol. 3, No. 3 (1879), pp. 269-284 Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/20084410
  45. ^ Journal-Title Abbreviations in Old Journals in the Repertorium Veterrimarum Societatum Litterariarum 1870–1879

Primary Source edit

  • Jameson, J.F. editor. Narrative of New Netherland 1609–1664 (Project Gutenberg – from the series: Original narratives of early American history. Original Printing 1909)

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1891). Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

samuel, blommaert, bloemaert, blommaerts, blommaart, blomert, august, 1583, antwerp, december, 1651, amsterdam, flemish, dutch, merchant, director, dutch, west, india, company, from, 1622, 1629, again, from, 1636, 1642, latter, period, paid, commissioner, swed. Samuel Blommaert Bloemaert Blommaerts Blommaart Blomert etc 11 or 21 August 1583 in Antwerp 23 December 1651 in Amsterdam 1 was a Flemish Dutch merchant and director of the Dutch West India Company from 1622 to 1629 and again from 1636 to 1642 In the latter period he was a paid commissioner of Sweden in the Netherlands and he played a dubious but key role in Peter Minuit s expedition that led to the Swedish colonizing of New Sweden For years Blommaert was involved in the copper trade and industry In 1645 he was appointed for a third time as a manager of the WIC being one of the main investors from the beginning Samuel Blommaert 1583 1651 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 New Netherlands 4 New Sweden 5 Legacy 6 Notes 7 References 8 Primary SourceEarly life edit nbsp Portrait of Gerard Reynst Blommaert s father in lawBlommaert was born in Antwerp Duchy of Brabant in current day Belgium but grew up in London He was the son of Margaretha Hoefnagel 1585 a and the wealthy goldsmith merchant Lodewijk Blommaert 1537 1591 4 who in 1581 was schepen of Antwerp and in 1583 captain at Fort Lillo on the eastern border of the Scheldt he knew the area very well as his ancestors came from Bergen op Zoom His mother died when Samuel was young and his father moved the family to London when Antwerp was occupied in 1585 by the Duke of Parma In 1587 he remarried Janneken van Hove but he died four years later Samuel was apprenticed in Stade with his aunt Susanne and in Vienna at his uncle Daniel In 1601 he became poorter of Amsterdam In 1602 he visited Benin 5 6 In 1603 Samuel enlisted with the Dutch East India Company and traveled to the Dutch East Indies on a ship under admiral Steven van der Hagen In the years 1605 1607 he stayed on Borneo He was sent by the board Jacques l Hermite to Sukadana West Kalimantan to free merchant Hans Roeff who had died or left when Blommaert arrived He returned to Bantam with 633 diamonds he was able to save at the trading post 7 In 1609 1610 he again stayed on Sambas Borneo and was able to get a monopoly on diamond trade for the VOC 8 In September 1610 after seven years he left sooner than expected and arrived in June 1611 at Texel Pieter Both had to investigate the case 9 On 5 June 1612 he married the 22 years old Catharina Reynst a daughter of Gerard Reynst governor of the East Indies Both were living at Sint Antoniesbreestraat with whom he would have twelve children between 1613 and 1633 two died in an early age 10 Early career edit nbsp In 1615 Gerrit Reynst became the owner of an empty lot now Prinsengracht 2 his heirs two daughters who married Samuel Blommaert and Isaac Coymans sold the lots in 1617 1618 and 1622 For many years Blommaert was involved in a company which traded in copper from Angola and the African coast together with Frans Jacobsz Hinlopen and Lucas van der Venne 11 12 In 1615 Jacob le Maire carried a letter from his father Isaac le Maire to be presented to Governor Reynst with an offer to smuggle goods to his son in law in Amsterdam Blommaert was investigated in Amsterdam by the board of the East India Company on January 30 1616 13 about a vessel named Mauritius de Nassau sailed from a Dutch port under the command of Jan Remmertszoon from Purmerend The ship was ostensibly destined for Angola but from there she was ordered to direct her course for Terra Australis The plan therefore was from the west coast of Africa to sail southward to Tierra del Fuego and then to explore the whole of the coast as far as the Straits of Magellanes on the chance of finding an opening that might allow a passage to the South sea and on such opening being found to run into and through the same in order to discover whether they could in such manner get into the South sea should such passage to the South sea have been found they had orders to return home forthwith but in case adverse circumstances should prevent them from doing so they were to run on for the East Indies 14 Around 1619 he settled on Keizersgracht and bought a lot 30x170 ft where a new house was built next to Laurens Reael In 1620 Isaac Coymans a broker became his brother in law New Netherlands edit nbsp The relative locations of New Netherland magenta and New Sweden blue in America modern state boundaries and postal abbreviations are shownBy 1621 he invested in the Amsterdam chamber of the Dutch West India Company and was appointed director in October 1622 15 In 1623 he and Kiliaen van Rensselaer Samuel Godijn en Albert Coenraetsz Burgh were investigating the possibility of the slave trade in Angola 16 In 1624 his grandfather Jacob Hoefnagel became one of the three mayors in Goteborg and president of the court of justice for a while 17 Louis de Geer received the official monopoly on the copper and iron trade in Sweden and decided to settle there In 1627 Blommaert had an argument with Pieter Trip about 34 Swedish guns 18 In 1628 he collaborated with Van Rensselaer Godijn and Burgh 19 Godyn Van Rensselaer and Samuel Blommaert sent two persons to New Netherland to inspect the country 20 Gilles Housset and Jacob Jansz Cuyper bargained with the natives for a tract of land reaching from Cape Henlopen to the mouth of the Delaware River 21 This was in 1629 three years before the charter of Maryland and is the oldest deed for land in the state of Delaware The purchase was ratified in 1630 by Peter Minuit and his council at Fort Amsterdam 22 A company was formed to colonize the tract that included Blommaert Godin Van Rensselaer Joannes de Laet a geographer and David Pietersen de Vries A ship of eighteen guns was fitted out to bring over the colonists and subsequently defend the coast with incidental whale fishing to help defray expenses A colony of more than thirty souls was planted on Lewes creek a little north of Cape Henlopen and its governorship was entrusted to Gilles Housset This settlement antedated by several years any in Pennsylvania and the colony at Lewes practically laid the foundation and defined the singularly limited area of the state of Delaware the major part of which was included in the purchase A palisaded fort was built with the red lion rampant of Holland affixed to its gate and the country was named Swaanendael or Zwaanendael Colony while the water was called Godyn s Bay The estate was further extended on May 5 1630 by the purchase of a tract twelve miles square on the coast of Cape May opposite and the transaction was duly attested at Fort Amsterdam The existence of the little colony was short for the Indians came down upon it in revenge for an arbitrary act on the part of Housset and it was destroyed not a soul escaping to tell the tale According to acknowledged precedent occupancy of the wilderness served to perfect title but before the Dutch could reoccupy the desolated site at Lewes the English were practically in possession 23 Because of the ongoing Polish Swedish War 1626 1629 no grain could be exported through the city of Dantzig 24 In 1630 the price of grain remained extremely high due to increasing competition Albert Burgh tried to ensure a monopoly for the City of Amsterdam in Moscovy In 1631 Blommaert bought rye in Archangelsk Isaac Coymans his brother in law moved all his furniture to Keizersgracht 139 as Coymans was in trouble for embezzlement citation needed In 1631 De Geer had a disagreement with his partner Elias Trip The quarrel was resolved in 1634 New Sweden editIn 1635 he started a brass factory in Nacka outside Stockholm to boost the export of copper which could be used for making guns and coins Blommaert tried to attract workers and experts from Aachen and Stolberg 25 In 1636 Blommaert was reappointed as bewindhebber of the WIC after its first bankruptcy but also became the consul for Sweden in Amsterdam 26 In 1636 the directors of the WIC could not gather because of an outbreak of plague 27 In 1637 Blommaert secretly invested money in the first Swedish expedition with Fogel Grip and Kalmar Nyckel to New Sweden By doing so he hoped to avoid paying the Dano Norwegian Sound Tolls on all foreign merchantmen crossing the Sound He engaged the former diamond cutter Peter Minuit to command the expedition without the knowledge or permission of the WIC b Blommaert suggested to Oxenstierna to take part in the WIC and organize from Gothenburg and trade on Spanish and Portuguese ports c Blommaert was interested in seizing Spanish ships which sailed from the East or West Indies to Cadiz or Seville to make his expeditions and colonization more profitable 29 In November 1637 two ships belonging to the Swedish South Company with crew and settlers left Gothenburg 30 Because of a storm the ships could get around Scotland after a month at sea one arrived at Texel the other at Medemblik 31 The damage was provisionally repaired sails and victuals butter bread and beer needed to be bought Having arrived on Swedes Landing on 29 March Minuit acted as he had done before he did not conquer the land by force but bought it legally from the Lenape or Minqua Indians What happened next is not very clear It seems he was hardly involved in building Fort Christina Minuit left the colony mid June 1638 and sailed to the Caribbean island of St Christopher where he arrived in early July to barter salt a ship s cargo of wine and liquor for tobacco 32 33 34 Meanwhile Cornelis Jol attempted to capture the Spanish treasure fleet near Cuba with four ships but didn t succeed to the disappointment of Blommaert On 5 August 1638 Minuit drowned during a hurricane at St Christopher today s St Kitts 35 About 20 ships drifted out of the harbour One ship sank near the Azores the Kalmar arrived without a mast A second voyage which departed on February 7 1640 and arrived at Fort Christina on April 17 brought additional settlers for New Sweden As the two expeditions turned out to be unprofitable for Blommaert he withdrew in 1641 In 1639 Blommaert and Isaac Coymans sold tobacco and sugar they were accused of cheating as there were a couple of stones in one of the cases and problems with the tobacco 36 In 1640 Portuguese Restoration War improved the situation for the Dutch Blommaert was involved in mining in Dutch Brazil 37 In 1641 the Zwaanendael Colony was sold to Sweden all the participants agreed on an equal share 38 A ship with 211 slaves arrived in Brazil 39 In 1642 with collaborated with Jan Valkenburgh in Angola 40 In 1647 he and his wife were portrayed 41 He told professor Nicolaes Tulp stories on bestiality he heard on Borneo 42 In 1651 Blommaert got ill and was buried in Westerkerk In 1655 his daughter Constantia 1626 married the admiral Isaac Sweers Catharina married Abraham Elzevir and Anna moved to Malakka with her husband director of the VOC 43 Legacy editBlommaert s thirty eight letters to Axel Oxenstierna from 1635 to 1641 are of great importance to the history of New Sweden They mention Willem Usselincx one of the founders of the WIC who had moved to Gothenburg in 1624 and founded the Swedish South Company sv Peter Spiring dealt with the Dutch merchants 44 These letters were published in Repertorium Veterrimarum Societatum Litterariarum 1870 1879 of the Utrecht Historical Society and in Bijdragen en Mededeelingen 1908 45 Notes edit Her grandfather was Joris Hoefnagel was the court painter and diplomat Jacob Hoefnagel was her father Constantijn Huygens was her uncle 2 In Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635 1641 Joris Hoefnagel was a diplomat supporting Frederick V Elector Palatine and accused in Prague of fraudulently dealing with a certain financial matter Hoefnagel was convicted in absentia in a political process of embezzlement of funds All his goods were confiscated he was sentenced to death but fled to Sweden 3 Minuit was dismissed by the WIC in 1632 In 1649 Louis de Geer founded the Swedish Africa Company which led outraged citizens in Amsterdam to riot and in 1650 Christina Queen of Sweden hired Hendrik Carloff to improve trade on Gold Coast 28 References edit Samuel Bloemert was buried in the Westerkerk in 1651 Digitaal Vrouwenlexicon van Nederland 17 September 2019 Hoefnagel Jakob on Austria Forum Gouwer Frittema Genealogie Peeters Rouneau Genealogie Online His account given to Isaac Vossius was used by Olfert Dapper in 1668 Baesjou Rene 2005 Historiae Oculus Geographia Journal des Africanistes 75 2 101 doi 10 4000 africanistes 125 1 04 02 de archieven van de Verenigde Oostindische Compagnie 1602 1795 Guest Archived from the original on July 24 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Kernkamp G W 1908 Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635 1641 pp 16 17 In Bijdragen amp Mededeelingen van het Historisch Genootschap nr 29 Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635 1641 De Nederlandsche Leeuw Klein P W 1963 De Trippen in de 17e eeuw p 146 Gelderblom O 2000 Zuid Nederlandse kooplieden en de opkomst van de Amsterdamse stapelmarkt pp 224 231 Kernkamp G W 1908 Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635 1641 pp 16 17 Abel Janszoon Tasman s Journal The Flemish Influence on Nieuw Nederland K Ratelband 2006 De Westafrikaanse reis van Piet Heyn 1624 1625 p LV Jacob Hoefnagel attributed to 1575 1630 Konung Gustaf II Adolf och Drottning Maria Eleonora at Bukowsi Klein P W 1963 De Trippen in de 17e eeuw p 279 Samuel Blommaert Wikisource Verhalenarchief The First Settlers Delaware Living History http www delawareliving com history html Archived 2009 05 08 at the Wayback Machine Isaack de Rasieres to Samuel Blommaert 1628 Caleb Johnson MayflowerHistory com Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 07 25 Retrieved 2008 07 25 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link J G van Dillen 1970 Van Rijkdom en Regenten p 65 J Romelingh 1986 Een rondgang langs de Zweedse archieven p 247 158 247 267 Klein P W 1963 De Trippen in de 17e eeuw p 374 Kernkamp G W 1908 Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635 1641 p 174 Wirta K H 2018 Dark horses of business overseas entrepreneurship in seventeenth century Nordic trade in the Indian and Atlantic oceans p 134 135 Kernkamp G W 1908 Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635 1641 p 93 136 137 143 149 155 Kernkamp G W 1908 Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635 1641 p 175 Kernkamp G W 1908 Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635 1641 p 50 56 145 146 182 Kernkamp G W 1908 Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635 1641 p 158 Ashmead Henry Graham History of Delaware County Pennsylvania Chapter II Philadelphia L H Everts amp Co 1884 Weslager C A A Man and his Ship Peter Minuit and the Kalmar Nyckel Wilmington Delaware Kalmar Nickel Foundation 1989 17th Century Hollanders Peter Minuit Inventarissen Inventarissen Inventarissen Kernkamp G W 1908 Brieven van Samuel Blommaert aan den Zweedschen Rijkskanselier Axel Oxenstierna 1635 1641 p 195 Inventarissen Anoniem Noordelijke Nederlanden Historische regio 1647 gedateerd Dekkers Midas July 31 2000 Dearest Pet On Bestiality Verso ISBN 9781859843109 via Google Books Genealogie van Isaak Sweers H de Voogd v d Straaten In De Nederlandsche Leeuw No 9 1893 pp 65 7 in Dutch The Founding of New Sweden 1637 1642 Author s C T Odhner and G B Keen Source The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 1879 Vol 3 No 3 1879 pp 269 284 Published by University of Pennsylvania Press Stable URL https www jstor org stable 20084410 Journal Title Abbreviations in Old Journals in the Repertorium Veterrimarum Societatum Litterariarum 1870 1879 1 Primary Source editJameson J F editor Narrative of New Netherland 1609 1664 Project Gutenberg from the series Original narratives of early American history Original Printing 1909 Wayback Machine nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1891 Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samuel Blommaert amp oldid 1207143619, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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