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A Concise History of Dutch Mauritius, 1598-1711: A Fruitful and Healthy Land  
Author: P. J. Moree
ISBN: 0710306091
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

Book Description
The island of Mauritius is well known for its ebony and its rare species of animals. Less is known, however, about the Dutch East India Company that occupied the Indian Ocean Island twice between 1598 and 1711. Based on a comprehensive search of the company's archives, this book gives the first full account of the Dutch settlement of Mauritius.

About the Author
P. J. Moree, a Dutch maritime historian, is chairman of the Linschoten-Vereeniging and a staff executive of the National Library of the Netherlands.




A Concise History of Dutch Mauritius, 1598-1711: A Fruitful and Healthy Land

FROM THE PUBLISHER

In 1598 a fleet of five East India ships from the Nether-lands landed on the uninhabited island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean, which they claimed as a Dutch possession. Being rich in food and water and free of diseases, Mauritius became an important station for outward or homeward-bound ships of the Dutch East India Company, who built a fort, garrisoned the island, began cutting the island´s ebony forests, and introduced slaves from Madagascar, some of whom succeeded in escaping Dutch rule and lived as refugees in the interior of the island. Even in the seventeenth century, Mauritius had a multiethnic population. This book describes the vicissitudes of the Dutch on Mauritius and examines the commanders of the island, from the successful Adriaen van der Stel to the despotic Isaac Lamotius, from the disastrous George Wreede to the diplomatic but harsh Roelof Diodati. Appendices list ships calling at Mauritius and the first foreign inhabitants of Mauritius.

SYNOPSIS

The island of Mauritius is well known for its ebony and its rare species of animals. Less is known, however, about the Dutch East India Company that occupied the Indian Ocean Island twice between 1598 and 1711. Based on a comprehensive search of the company's archives, this book gives the first full account of the Dutch settlement of Mauritius.

     



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