Previous   Next
Home » Images » 0013 Pictures From History » CPA0006212

Netherlands/ Mauritius: Van Warwijk’s sailors on the island of Mauritius, claimed by the Dutch in 1598. Note the Dutch coat of arms nailed to a tree in the center, making it clear who is colonizing the island.

Netherlands/ Mauritius: Van Warwijk’s sailors on the island of Mauritius, claimed by the Dutch in 1598. Note the Dutch coat of arms nailed to a tree in the center, making it clear who is colonizing the island.

Situated some 900 km east of Madagascar, the island of Mauritius was a tantalizingly ideal port for medieval European explorers en route to India and the East Indies. It was also unpopulated but for animals, including the dodo bird. First came the Dutch: Wybrant van Warwijk claimed the island of Mauritius for Holland on Sept. 20, 1598. They abandoned it until 1638 when the Dutch East India Company (VOC) returned to stake their claim on the island; it remained colonized by the Netherlands until 1710. The French East India Company then claimed the island in 1721; it held Mauritius as a colony until the British seized it in 1810. Mauritius finally gained independence in 1968.

Quick links to other images in this gallery: