In early 1606 C.E., a small Dutch vessel called the Duyfken — “Little Dove” in Dutch — rounded the southern coast of New Guinea and edged into waters no European had ever charted. Its captain, Willem Janszoon, was looking for gold and trade. What he found instead was the edge of a continent that would one day be called Australia, making him the first European on record to make landfall there.
Key findings
- First European contact: Willem Janszoon and the crew of the Duyfken landed on the western shore of Cape York Peninsula in present-day Queensland in 1606 C.E., predating any other confirmed European arrival on Australian soil.
- Dutch East India Company voyage: The expedition was commissioned by the Dutch East India Company (VOC), then the most powerful trading corporation in the world, seeking commercial opportunities in the southern seas.
- Terra Australis mapping: Janszoon charted roughly 320 kilometers of coastline, believing he was still tracing the southern edge of New Guinea — he did not realize he had reached a separate and vast continent.
A continent already full of people
The land Janszoon reached was not empty. Aboriginal Australians had lived on the continent for at least 65,000 years — one of the longest continuous cultural histories on Earth. Their ancestors had navigated open ocean to reach Australia during the last Ice Age, long before Europe’s Bronze Age began.
Cape York Peninsula in 1606 C.E. was home to Aboriginal peoples with sophisticated knowledge of the land, its seasons, and its ecosystems. When Janszoon’s crew made contact with local communities, the encounter turned violent. Several of his men were killed, and the expedition turned back. The log of those interactions reflects early colonial contact at its most fraught — curiosity and fear on both sides, with tragic results.
It is a necessary part of this story. The “discovery” of Australia by Europeans was, from the Aboriginal perspective, an arrival of strangers on land that had been continuously known, named, and cared for across thousands of generations.
What the Dutch were actually looking for
Janszoon sailed under orders from the VOC’s base in Bantam (modern-day Indonesia). The company’s ambitions in the region were commercial above all else — spices, gold, and new trading routes. Australia offered none of what the VOC wanted. Its coastline appeared dry, its soil barren, and its peoples showed no interest in Dutch trade goods.
Subsequent Dutch navigators — including Dirk Hartog in 1616 C.E., who left a pewter plate on the western coast as the first confirmed artifact of European presence in Australia, and Abel Tasman, who circumnavigated the continent in 1642 C.E. — reached similar conclusions. The Dutch called the land Nieuw Holland, or New Holland, but never settled it. Their colonial priorities lay in the East Indies, the Cape Colony, and the Caribbean.
This meant that for nearly 170 years after Janszoon’s landing, European presence in Australia remained episodic and uncommitted — a chain of coastal surveys rather than any sustained effort at understanding the interior or its peoples.
How the name Australia came to be
The name “New Holland” stuck in European cartography for two centuries. It was not until 1804 C.E. that British navigator Matthew Flinders formally proposed the name “Australia” for the whole continent, drawn from the Latin Terra Australis — the “Great South Land” long theorized by European geographers. The British government approved the name in 1824 C.E.
Even then, “New Holland” persisted in atlases, scientific literature, and everyday speech for decades. It survives today in taxonomy: the emu’s scientific name, Dromaius novaehollandiae, literally means “emu of New Holland.”
Lasting impact
Janszoon’s 1606 C.E. voyage cracked open European awareness of a continent that had been theorized for centuries but never confirmed. The maps he and subsequent Dutch navigators produced circulated through European courts and academies, feeding the Age of Exploration’s hunger for geographic knowledge.
That knowledge eventually drew James Cook to the eastern coast in 1770 C.E., followed by British colonization beginning in 1788 C.E. — events that would reshape the continent’s demographics, ecologies, and Indigenous societies profoundly and often brutally.
But the Duyfken‘s journey also illustrates something larger: how the expansion of geographic knowledge is rarely the story of one nation or one crew. Portuguese navigators may have sighted Australia’s northwest coast as early as the 1520s C.E., though the evidence remains contested. Chinese maritime exploration under Zheng He reached the East African coast in the early 15th century C.E. and may have ventured further. And Makassan fishermen from the island of Sulawesi had regular contact with Aboriginal communities in northern Australia centuries before Janszoon arrived — a relationship that left lasting traces in language, ceremony, and material culture across northern Aboriginal societies.
The story of “first contact” is almost always more complex than a single name on a ship’s log.
Blindspots and limits
The historical record of Janszoon’s voyage is fragmentary. No journal in his own hand survives; what we know comes from VOC administrative documents and later charts. The names, nations, and experiences of the Aboriginal peoples his crew encountered are almost entirely absent from those records — their perspective on the encounter, and what they made of these strange visitors, was never written down in a form that survived.
The framing of 1606 C.E. as the “first European contact” also rests on the current state of evidence. Portuguese and Spanish charts from the early 1500s C.E. show landmasses in the southern seas that some historians interpret as early sightings of Australia’s coast — a debate that has not been fully resolved. What is certain is that Janszoon’s voyage is the earliest confirmed, documented European landing on Australian soil.
Read more
For more on this story, see: New Holland (Australia) — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights secured for 160 million hectares ahead of COP30
- Ghana establishes a marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the early modern era
About this article
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