Jan Janse de Weltevree was born around 1595, according to Hendrik Hamel in
De Rijp, though other sources speak of
Vlaardingen. He signed on the ship
Hollandia and went on 17 March 1626 to the
Dutch East Indies. He arrived in 1627 from
Batavia, Dutch East Indies on the ship
Ouwerkerck. On 16 July 1627 the
Ouwerkerck with its captain Jan Janse de Weltevree captured a Chinese
junk and its 150-man crew bound for the port of Amoy, China. Seventy Chinese were brought aboard the
Ouwerkerck. Jan Janse de Weltevree, Dirk Gijsbertsz from De Rijp, and Jan Pieterse Verbaest from Amsterdam, all from Holland, along with thirteen other Dutch crewmen went aboard the junk to sail the vessel to
Tainan, Formosa. The
Ouwerkerck reached safe harbor after battling a fierce summer storm that swept the area. The storm-tossed Chinese junk carrying the hapless Dutch and Chinese ended up on the shores of an island off Korea's west coast, during the reign of the
Joseon dynasty. Although the details of what happened next are unclear, the Chinese, with a five-to-one advantage, overpowered the Dutch survivors, captured Jan Janse de Weltevree, Dirk Gijsbertsz and Jan Verbaest, and handed them over to the Korean Joseon authorities. They would have fought in the Korean army. In 1653, the ship
De Sperwer was wrecked en route from Jakarta to
Nagasaki, with
Hendrick Hamel on board, and Jan Janse de Weltevree acted as a translator and adviser. This group of 36 Dutchmen stayed in Korea for 13 years, working as military advisors to the
Joseon Army, until 8 of them escaped to Nagasaki in 1666. Hendrick Hamel authored the accounts of his stay in Korea, from which we hear about Jan Janse de Weltevree. ==Legacy==