PRIOR DISCOVERIES IN TERRA AUSTRALIA
SECTION III.
SOUTH COAST.
Discovery of Nuyts. Examination of Vancouver: of D'Entrecasteaux. Conclusive Remarks.
No historical feet seems to be less disputed, than that the South
Nuyts
1627.
(Atl.,Pl. I.)
Coast of New Holland was first discovered in January 1627: whether
it were the 26th, according to De Hondt, or the 16th, as is
expressed on Thevenof's charts is of very little import. It is generally
said, that the ship was commanded by Pieter Nuyts; but as Nuyts,
on his arrival at Batavia, was sent ambassador to Japan, and
afterwards made governor of Formosa, it seems more probable that he
was a civilian, perhaps Company's first merchant on board, rather
than captain of the ship: the land discovered has, however, always
borne his name.
The Dutch recital says,—"In the year 1627, the South Coast of the Great South Land was accidentally discovered by the ship the Gulde Zeepaard, outward-bound from Fatherland, for the space of a thousand miles."
This discovery has always been considered as of importance. A memoir was published at Amsterdam in 1718, "to prove, that Nuyts' Land, being in the fifth climate, between 34° and 36° of latitude; it ought to be, like all other countries so situated, one of the most
habitable, most rich, and most fertile parts of the world."[1] The
- ↑ Hist. des Nav. aux Terres Australes. Tome I. page 429.