Abel Tasman’s 1642 Landing and the Silence That Followed
In December 1642, Dutch explorer Abel Tasman anchored two ships in a New Zealand bay and attempted first contact with Māori warriors — a failed trumpet exchange, a fatal cockboat crossing, and four dead sailors later, he fled and named it Murderers' Bay, and no European would return for 127 years. 📖 The book behind this story: First Encounters: The Early Pacific and European Narratives of Abel Tasman's 1642 Voyage by Rüdiger Mack — https://geni.us/cwfCIP 🎨 Visual Storytelling: This documentary features digital historical reconstructions and composite imagery to bring the past to life. This documentary follows the full 1642–1643 voyage of Abel Tasman and the Dutch East India Company ships Heemskerck and Zeehaen — from their departure in Batavia under orders from Governor-General Anthony van Diemen, through the discovery of Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania), the deadly encounter with Māori at what is now Golden Bay, and the ten-month journey home that mapped coastlines no European had ever seen. Based on Tasman's original journal and modern scholarship exploring the Māori perspective on this catastrophic first contact. 📚 FURTHER READING First Encounters by Rüdiger Mack (Heritage Press, 2024) — https://geni.us/cwfCIP Abel Janszoon Tasman: His Life and Voyages by James Backhouse Walker — https://geni.us/YerKL The Merchant of the Zeehaen: Isaac Gilsemans and the Voyages of Abel Tasman by Grahame Anderson (Te Papa Press, 2001) Abel Tasman's Journal, 1642 — Project Gutenberg of Australia Dr. Ian Barber, University of Otago — research on Māori motivations at Golden Bay 🔔 SUBSCRIBE for new true survival stories every week. Survival Instinct explores history's most extraordinary true stories of human endurance, maritime disasters, and survival against impossible odds. ⚠️ DISCLAIMER: Some links in this description are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the channel and allows me to continue creating free documentary content. Thank you! #history #exploration #documentary #newzealand Abel Tasman's 1642 expedition for the VOC was one of the most significant voyages of the Age of Exploration — he discovered Tasmania and New Zealand, circumnavigated Australia without knowing it, and charted Tonga and Fiji. Yet the violent encounter at Golden Bay, where Māori warriors killed four Dutch sailors in a cockboat ambush after a misunderstood ritual trumpet challenge, sealed Tasman's reputation as a failure in the eyes of the Dutch East India Company. Governor-General Van Diemen declared Tasman had found "nothing of great importance and profit," and the explorer never received another command of discovery.

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