Jan Jacobszoon May van Schellinkhout

Jan Jacobszoon May van Schellinkhout (fl.1614–1623) was a Dutch seafarer and explorer.

Family

May was born in the small village of Schellinkhout, just east of the town of Hoorn in North Holland. He appears to be the brother of Cornelis Jacobsz May, the first director of New Netherland.[1] The brothers were cousins of the in those days far more famous sailor Jan Cornelisz May, [2] who led several expeditions to explore the Northeast passage and between 1614 and 1617, circumnavigated the world with Joris van Spilbergen.

Discovery of Jan Mayen island

Jan Jacobsz May is best remembered for giving his name to the island of Jan Mayen. As part of an exploratory expedition for the Noordsche Compagnie, May visited the island in July 1614. The highly regarded cartographer Joris Carolus was on board, and made a (now lost) report and (still existing) map of the voyage. On this map, he named one of its promontories "Jan Meys Hoeck". In 1620, the cartographer Willem Jansz Blaeu transferred the name to the island as a whole, although two other Dutch captains—Jan Jansz Kerckhoff, sailing for the Noordsche Compagnie, but privately financed by other people, and Fopp Gerritsz, sailing for the Englishman John Clarke, of Dunkirk—appeared to have beaten May to the island by a week or two.[3][4]

The other captains apparently kept the discovery secret, perhaps so that their companies could benefit without giving the location away to the competition. The discovery allowed the Dutch company to use the island as its whaling base for the coming 35 years.[5]

Later life

After his 1614 voyage of discovery, Jan Jacobsz May was as late as 1623 mentioned as a captain on a Dutch warship employed by the Admiralty of the Noorderkwartier. In 1622, for example, he brought in a French warship.[1]

In the past a street was named after him in his hometown of Schellinkhout,[2] but he is otherwise little known in his home country, where the name Jan Mayen is often thought to be of Norwegian origin.

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References

  1. Samuel Muller Geschiedenis van de Noordsche Compagnie., Gebr van der Post, 1874, footnote on page 167
  2. Gerben Kazimier History of Schellinkhout 1601–1650
  3. Holland, Clive (1994). Arctic Exploration and Development, c. 500 B.C. to 1915: an encyclopedia. New York: Garland.
  4. Hart, S. De eerste Nederlandse tochten ter walvisvaart (1957), p. 50. Hart says Gerritsz sighted it on 28 June 1613, on his way to Spitsbergen. However, William Baffin (Markham [1881], pp. 40–43), pilot of the English warship Tiger, had met Gerritsz off Spitsbergen between 19–23 June 1613, giving him only five days to have reached Jan Mayen after having visited Spitsbergen. Hart either erred on the date or Gerritsz, writing years after the fact (1631), may have made the discovery up.
  5. Louwrens Hacquebord, “The Jan Mayen Whaling Industry” in Jan Mayen Island in Scientific Focus, Stig Skreslet, editor, Springer Verlag 2004
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