2021 Australia $1: The 1727 Zeewijk Shipwreck

In a quick review; the saga of 1629 Batavia pits survivors in a life and death struggle not against nature and the elements but from being in the hands of an authoritative madman. The tale of the 1656 Vergulde Draeck tells of a handful of men set out on an desperate 1400 km trek to Batavia by longboat to organize a rescue expedition only to return to an abandoned campsite, the remaining 68 survivors all gone without a trace.

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“Black birds tend to like shiny things.” ~ The Bloody Raven

No survivors of the lost 1712 Zuytdorp ever made their way to Batavia to tell the tale of her demise. It wasn’t until 1964 the discovery of her remains and question asked of the local aboriginal descendants of Shark Bay about old stories on the whereabouts of a strange people of fair complexion. The Malgana man with a hint of fair hair, blue eyes, and goes by the name of Vilhiam just shruggs his shoulders.

Introducing the fourth and last coin of the Australian Shipwrecks series the 2021 Australian $1 The 1727 Zeewijk with a different tale to tell.

The Next Triangular Silver Coin

2021 Australia $1 The 1727 Zeewijk
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Reverse; The Zeewijk, framed in florals and rigging.
Text; ZEEWIJK, 1 OZ, .999 Ag, AB
0.999 Fine silver, Weight 31.1g
Height 33.9mm, Thickness 3.5mm

1725 the Zeewijk was a brand new ship of the VOC, with a new experienced crew, her maiden voyage was assigned to ferry some needed construction supplies and personnel to the colony at the Cape of Good Hope then continue on to Batavia with the remaining cargo and ten chests of silver worth 315,837 Guilders. Before the Zeewijk departed the Port of Remmekens, Captain Jan Bogaard fell ill such that he could not assume effective command, so the ship was placed under a novice Jan Steyns’ as his first command.

My Marleen sterling Pirate Brig broach, posing as this East Indianman.

⛵️
  • Name; The Zeewijk
  • Built; 1725 Rammekens Shipyard
  • Class; Dutch East Indiaman
  • Owner; VOC
  • Port Registered; Amsterdam
  • Captain; Jan Steyns, replacing Jan Bogaard.
  • Crew complement; 212
  • Guns; 36 Cannon, 6 Swivel guns.
  • Tonnage; 850 Tons
  • Length; 145 ft.
  • Beam; 36 ft.
  • Draft; 17.6 ft.

An East Indianman photo similar to the Zeewijk

☠️ 💀

It was expected that all VOC ships were to follow the Brouwer Route from the Cape of Good Hope to Batavia. All VOC ships were directed to make an early north to north-east heading by a certain longitude to avoid the treacherous waters off the Western Australian coast. Steyns ignored the VOC orders and the protests from the veteran Steersman then ordering an East by Northeast heading.

On June 9th, 1727 the ship’s watch warned of breakers spotted but Steyns dismissed the sighting as a lunar illusion. At about 7:30 PM, in the dark, the Zeewijk crashed hard into Half Moon Reef just west of the Houtman Abrolhos island group, resulting in the rudder being dislodged and snapping the mainmast. Yet the ship still remained in one piece.

2021 Australia $1 The 1727 Zeewijk
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Edge; Plain/Smooth

The crew waited a week aboard the ship for the heavy seas to settle before ferrying the remaining survivors to a nearby habitable small island. At this point there were 99 survivors out of the 208 and though the ship did not break up she had sustain too much damaged to be saved. The survivors took the opportunity to offload needed supplies and the chests from the ship. With other nearby islands having fresh water and available game to supplement their provisions, they can survive for some time. On July 10th, 1727 the First mate and ten of men were selected to take a longboat to Batavia to bring help, they were never seen again.

2021 Australia $1 The 1727 Zeewijk
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Obverse; The stricken Zeewijk upon the reefs , Survivors building the Sloepie, and the arrival to Batavia , Queen Elizabeth II facing right.
Text; QUEEN ELIZABETH II, AUSTRALIA 2020, ONE DOLLAR, JC
Text; 1 OZ., 999 FINE SILVER
Royal Australian Mint, Mintage of 20,000 in BU
Mintage of 1000 in Antiqued finish

On October 29th, 1727 a decision was made to build a sloop by cannibalizing the Zeewijk of her timbers and utilizing the wood from Mangrove trees of nearby islands. In a marvelous feat of craftsmanship a 60 ft. Sloop was constructed in only four months. A feat that I would even think impress MacGyver. The Sloepie was launched on March 26th, 1728 and arrived a month later at Batavia on April 30th 1728 with 82 survivors of the original 208 with the treasure chests.

In the end, Captain Steyns claimed that the crew mutinied, took possession of the silver and were responsible for the loss of the Zeewijk. The Governor of Batavia became alarmed and took immediate possession of the Sloepie. When the facts came to light, Captain Steyns was charged of falsifying his logs, relieved of his position, fired, and sued with his personal property taken in compensation of losses.

Aye, this Captain was better off going under with the ship than to throw his crew under the bus with a tale of treachery.☠️

The Australian ,Dutch East Indian, Shipwreck Series
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A historian has estimated that there may be up to 1600 shipwrecks of all types including modern vessels scattered all around the coastal waters off Australia, more than what the what the Bermuda have reputedly claimed. Who knows what treasures and dangers await beneath the waves.

Added Shipwreck Silver to my Stack for that big stormy day!

…and triangle coins won’t roll off the deck!

The #piratesunday tag is the scurvy scheme of Captain @stokjockey for #silvergoldstackers pirates to proudly showcase their shiny booty and plunder for all to see. Landlubbers arrrh… welcomed to participate and be a Pirate at heart so open yer treasure chests an’ show us what booty yea got!

Related Posts

2019 Australia $1 The 1628 Batavia Shipwreck.
2020 Australia $1 The 1656 Vergulde Dreack Shipwreck.
2020 Australia $1 The 1712 Zuytdorp Shipwreck.
2021 Australia $1 The 1727 Zeewijk Shipwreck.

References

My own pictures shot with a Samsung SM-A530W
P. Image under Pixabay
W. Wiki Commons
💀 Page Dividers by thekittygirl 🎃

Sources and Readings

Mass; The Zeewijk.
Wiki; The Zeewijk
Western Australian Maritime Museum ships
Alchetron Zeewijk East Indianman picture.
Cameo Raven Brooch from The Black Wardrobe
Silver Raven, made by ‘Silver to Burn’ Burnie





"Ahh ains nae bluudy Financial Advisor!"



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55 comments
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The captain should have gone down with his ship..... Very cool story and awesome silver!

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I'm sure that the crew gave this inexperienced Captain the cold shoulder throughout the whole ordeal. While there were likeky some who like to see the Captain keelhauled, there had to be plenty of rumblings and whispers going on behind Steyns' back and only followed sensible orders until they could properly charge him with incompetancey as a commanding officer, if and only if they could get back to civilization. I got the feeling that it was survivors that came up with the plan of building the Sloepie and Steyns merely rubber stamped it.
This would have made a decent movie, methinks.
Thanks for the Comment @thebigghigg

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You received an upvote of 100% from Precious the Silver Mermaid!

Thank you for contributing more great content to the #SilverGoldStackers tag.
You have created a Precious Gem!

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Your collection is so cool... and consistent! It would be difficult to sell them, hehehe!
Do they have images of some of the 1600 shipwrecks? That would be so nice if they had it, because it would be a never-ending collection! Did the series continue into the current year?
!LADY

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The Spice Trade was an incredably lucrative venture. Many other private ships large and small from other countries wanted to get in on the action. While some achieved some sucess, many, many more failed and were unrecorded in history. This 4 represent the Dutch East India Company, with three others mentioned in my readings. Sadly, there was no further coins after 2021.

Always, with love 🤗🌺❤️
!LADY

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There’s no way that captain was a true pirate at heart. Either way it’s a very coil coin. Love it

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I'm sure that Captain Steyns felt the heat from the surviving crew, no doubt more than a few would gladly slit his throat. While the blame for this predicament is placed justifiably on his shoulders, the crew still had to follow his orders and allow for Rule of Law's justice to prevail rather by mob rule in an act of mutiny, if they could get back to civilization.
I bet the building of the Sloop wasn't Steyns' ideal but sgreed on by unanimous vote by the survivors.
🖤❤️🖤☠️

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Up to 1600 shipwrecks scattered along Australia’s coast, it must be treacherous waters !
And putting the ship in the command of a novice captain, things were bound to go wrong right from the start !😳

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You'd think the VOC commitee would have picked a more experience officer to command a brand new ship carrying ten treasure chests of money? I haven't dug deep enough to find out the reason to pick such a man for an important task but there lots of documents written in Dutch that was archived if anyone like to do a deep dive. Perhaps this assignment was for some political favor? Or a debt owed? A backrooom deal? Or they simply ran out of Captains.
IF I were a member of the Crew, I'd wonder why?
Enquiring minds would like to know! @silvertop ☠️
!PIZZA

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Hard to say my friend……. My Mom always said “Money rules the World”!
Maybe like you said….” debts or back room deals”……….🤔

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I bet your collection impressive, very nice triangle.

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I will be wishing for the Bermuda Triangle shipwreck coins to come out. Think that they may come out as round coins instead? 🔺☠

Thanks for coming aboard @raybrockman
!BEER

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Ms Ravenhill @kerrislravenhill
Everyday is #PirateSunday in my Book..........

!LOL
!LUV
!PIZZA
!LADY

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(Edited)

PIZZA!

$PIZZA slices delivered:
stokjockey tipped kerrislravenhill
kerrislravenhill tipped stokjockey
kerrislravenhill tipped bitcoinman
lolzbot tipped stokjockey
kerrislravenhill tipped silvertop
@kerrislravenhill(1/5) tipped @fredaig
kerrislravenhill tipped punkysdad

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Illuminati confirmed 🤣 those are sick I like how you can line them up real nice I need to get me some triangulars

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I was hoping that the Royal Aussie mint would continue this series considering the many wrecks that are known around the dangerous coast. There's a faint hope that Bermuda would make Triangle coins too, get it? But may end up making then perfectly round coins.
Here's to hoping @bitcoinman
!PIZZA

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A fantastic conclusion to the very uniquely shaped series! Thanks for sharing @kerrislravenhill and have a lovely day!🤗💜. !LADY

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The Royal Aussie mint has to make more, there's still many cool wrecks out there with treasures to be found and stories to be made up if necessary!
Thanks for the support @elizabethbit 💙

!LADY

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I love reading your stories! Take care sis!🤗💜

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Plenty of treasure hunting sites in Australia, planning a vacation there?

PD

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(Edited)

So where did the silver Steyns kiped go? Oh and really sexy bars/coins - in their own class.

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I don't know what happened to Steyns afterwards. Maybe he was busted down to an ordinary Seaman and worked his way back to Amsterdam on another ship. Maybe had his throat cut and left for dead in a Batavia back alley by a survivor, otherwise it's business as usual in exotic sunny Batavia.
I love a set of coins that can tell a story.
Thanks for coming aboard Witty.

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(Edited)

Its a good thing when we are always reminded buy ancient times, are these really from the ships? there look so strong

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This coin did not come from the shipwreck. Nor the silver recovered from the Zutydorp, whatever was recovered ends up as the property of the Western Australian Maritime Museum. I hope that some would become available for sale to the public. And I would like to add one to my collection.
Here's an American Trade dollar 1874 that was recovered from the SS Japan, it's been under the sea for almost 150 years.

Thanks for visiting @fredaig

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wow this is truly one treasure, how do you come by this? did you go to the sea or you bought this, i like seeing things like this, makes one believe history did happen. Thank you for thanking me☺️

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It was found by a Chinese fisherman who accidentally netted some coins from the bottom of the South China Sea off Fujian Province. It was illegal to possess it according to law. He sneaked into Honk Kong and sold the coins to a Dealer I know. The Dealer tested, Researched, and verified the find. It's on a post I made back on last May 2022. I purchased one coin from him for my Shipwreck silver coin collection.
Here's another from the El Cazador, in the Gulf of Mexico 200 years prior to the SS Japan's shipwreck.
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!PIZZA

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was is worth fortune or just a penny back then in the days when it was used. is this the actual money they use back in the days in china, ?

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Today, It is worth a collector's or historical value and has a minimum value equivelent to 420 grains of silver. This American Trade dollar is modelled after the old Mexican 8 Reales of 416 grains silver, At the time, 1 Reale was approximately a days labor and so it represents about a weeks worth labor. This American Trade dollar was designed to buy goods and services in China. The extra 4 grains was an incentive to entice Chinese merchants to do some business.

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hmmm that means it is still in use for buying and selling in china?

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It's not currently used as money in China since China relies on the Remmimbi Fiat currency, perhaps in the Black Market. Silver itself is more considered a valuable commodity used in a large variety of commercial applications though it is still used in minting legal tender coins for collecting.

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oh i see now i get it, so its just like a form of treasure if such is found?

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have read the posts above. indeed history is never lost, but why did the finder sell the coin is the coin still worth something in the market or its just sold for collections and artifacts

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The finder's hoard of coins still has silver bullion value, of approximetly $20 USD at today's rate. I'm sure my Hong Kong dealer made the finder a good offer well above that considering the price I paid for it. To the typical Chinese fisherman, his lucky find earned him about an estimated four months pay. My guesstimation of course.

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wow its really nice how you justified each detailed accurately do you study history or its just one of your passions?

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I enjoy studying economic history, and saving my cash buying power in gold and silver.

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hmmm very good and lovely, anyways dont want to border you with conversations will be on the lookout for your wonderful post

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Wow this looks great!!!!

Here are some of the silver antiques i have. 1800s coins used in the Philippines and world war 2 coins. They're supposedly silver. Passed down by my great grandmother. We've got like 20+ of these and hundreds of the smaller ones but many of them are made of copper and nickel. But they're all very old. Near a century already.
IMG_20230527_204501.jpg

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