Persistent URL of this record https://hdl.handle.net/1887/3422479
Documents
-
- Download
- 2019_BOS_DoA_CF_Reimer
- Publisher's Version
- open access
- Full text at publishers site
In Collections
This item can be found in the following collections:
Dead on arrival: the unused cartographic legacy of Carl Friedrich Reimer
reporting on the (military) state of affairs in the East, surveying the settlements and making plans for their improvement. The Prussian-born Carl Friedrich Reimer was employed as the main surveyor and military engineer. He had already been in the VOC’s service for two decades before he was given this important task and became a confidant of Governor-General Arnold Willem Alting. The Governor-General was
very skeptical towards the activities of the Military Commission, which operated fully outside the Company’s established chain of command. By maneuvering Reimer into the Commission, Alting had eyes and ears in its affairs. Next to observing, surveying, drawing plans and writing...Show moreAfter the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War (1780–1784), which ended disastrously for the Dutch East India Company (VOC), the need to reform was strongly felt. The Board of Directors (Heren XVII) asked for state support. This resulted in the formation of an independent Military Commission, with the mandate of
reporting on the (military) state of affairs in the East, surveying the settlements and making plans for their improvement. The Prussian-born Carl Friedrich Reimer was employed as the main surveyor and military engineer. He had already been in the VOC’s service for two decades before he was given this important task and became a confidant of Governor-General Arnold Willem Alting. The Governor-General was
very skeptical towards the activities of the Military Commission, which operated fully outside the Company’s established chain of command. By maneuvering Reimer into the Commission, Alting had eyes and ears in its affairs. Next to observing, surveying, drawing plans and writing recommendations, Reimer would
also inform Alting about the journeys. Every major Dutch settlement from South Africa to the Moluccas was visited by the Military Commission, forming a unique view on the (military) state of affairs of the Dutch presence in Asia in around 1790. Together with the various recommendations that were accompanied by the excellent military maps by Reimer, the Dutch could make a fresh start in their imperial ambitions. However, when the Commission Fleet returned to the Republic in 1793 and all the reports and maps were transferred, the political constellation no longer had an eye for the overseas troubles of the VOC. The young and revolutionary French Republic just declared war. As such, the cartographic legacy of CF Reimer
was ‘dead on arrival’.
Show less
- All authors
- Bos, J.
- Editor(s)
- Kent, A.J.; Vervust, S.; Demhart, I.F.; Milea, N.
- Date
- 2019-08-27
- Title of host publication
- Lecture Notes in Geoinformation and Cartography; Mapping empires: colonial cartographies of land and sea
- Pages
- 287 - 307
- ISBN (print)
- 9783030234461
- ISBN (electronic)
- 9783030234478