Arctic exploration and Jacob van Heemskerck charting their route Heemskerck's early fame arose from an attempt to discover an
Arctic passage from Europe to China. Two vessels sailed from Amsterdam on 10 May 1596, under the command of Heemskerck and
Jan Rijp.
Willem Barentsz accompanied Heemskerck as pilot, and
Gerrit de Veer, the historian of the voyage, was on board as mate. The masses of ice in the straits leading to the
Kara Sea, and the impenetrable nature of the pack near
Novaya Zemlya, had suggested the advisability of avoiding the land and, by keeping a northerly course, of seeking a passage in the open sea. They sailed northwards, and, on 9 June, discovered
Bear Island in the
Barents Sea. Continuing on the same course they sighted a mountainous snow-covered land in about 80° N., soon afterwards being stopped by the polar pack ice. This important discovery was named
Spitsbergen, and was believed—incorrectly—to be a part of
Greenland. On 25 February 1603, three Dutch ships under Heemskerck's command attacked and captured a Portuguese merchant
carrack,
Santa Catarina, off the Eastern coast of
Singapore. The
Admiralty of Amsterdam's subsequent decision to take the ship and her cargo as a
prize, despite Portugal's demands, became the
casus belli for the
Dutch–Portuguese War that lasted until 1663. J. K. J. de Jonge described Heemskerck as "less of a rough sailor, more of a Drake or a Cavendish, a gentleman adventurer, somewhat proud and lofty, but polished and afraid of naught." When reproached by a factor in Madura for risking the company's property, Heemskerck responded, "Where we risk our lives, the gentlemen of the Company must risk their ships and cargoes." He knew how to inspire his men with a blind confidence in himself. When Heemskerck was on board a vessel, the sailors felt safe. A battle they termed a "Heemskerck fight".
Gibraltar Heemskerck died as a result of leg wounds caused by a cannonball, during the
Battle of Gibraltar, an engagement in which a Spanish fleet of 21 vessels was entirely destroyed. His body was returned to Amsterdam to be buried with full honours at
Oude Kerk, Amsterdam. Heemskerck's suit of armour—minus a thigh plate shattered by the fatal cannonball—is on display in the
Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. == Notes ==