In modern history, the Tanimbar islands (as the
Aru Islands) were mentioned in the 16th century maps of Lázaro Luís (1563),
Bartolomeu Velho (c. 1560), Sebastião Lopes (1565), in the 1594 map of the East Indies entitled
Insulæ Moluccæ by the Dutch cartographer
Petrus Plancius, and in the map of
Nova Guinea of 1600 (based on Portuguese sources). The Tanimbar Islands were sighted and possibly visited by Portuguese navigators such as Martim Afonso de Melo Jusarte around 1522–1525, who traveled around the archipelagos of Aru (with the reference "Here wintered Martin Afonso de Melo") and Tanimbar, and possibly
Gomes de Sequeira in 1526. The Tanimbar Islands were part of the
Dutch East Indies. During
World War II the Dutch sent a detachment of 13 soldiers led by
KNIL sergeant
Julius Tahija to the town of Saumlaki in the Tanimbar Islands in July 1942. Japanese ships entered the bay at Saumlaki on 30 July and small boats were used to get to the jetty. The Japanese filed in ranks on the jetty and wanted to march in close order into Saumlaki. The
garrison opened fire at close range with their two light
machine guns. The Japanese retreated to their boats leaving several dead on the jetty. Subsequent enemy landings, however, were made elsewhere while the Japanese ships opened fire on the defenders’ position. Six of the Dutch soldiers were killed and the seven survivors were driven into the bush. On 31 July, a vessel carrying an
Australian Army contingent arrived at the jetty at Saumlaki, unaware that the town had fallen to the Japanese. The vessel was fired on from the shore, and the commander of the landing party was killed. The Australians retreated to
Darwin. Afterwards, the members of the Dutch garrison came under naval gunfire from the Japanese; this inflicted some casualties, and was followed by attacks by Japanese infantry on a wider front. The seven surviving members of the garrison then boarded a sailing ship and escaped to Australia. ==Economy==