L'Hermite was born in Antwerp, County of Flanders (present-day Belgium) around the year 1582. After the fall of Antwerp in 1585 in a battle with the Spanish Empire, the family moved north to Amsterdam and later settled in Rotterdam.[1] He left the Republic in 1606 and spent the next six years working in the Dutch East Indies.
Professional life
In 1606, l'Hermite set sail to the Dutch East Indies as a secretary on the fleet commanded by Admiral Cornelis Matelief Jr. where in 1607 he was appointed chief merchant on the Black Lion (Dutch: Swarte Leeuw). From 1607 to 1611 l'Hermite was chief merchant (Dutch: opperkoopman) for the Dutch East India Company in Bantam, Dutch East Indies. After six years working abroad he returned to Amsterdam in the Dutch Republic.[1] There he married Theodora van Wely in March 1613.[2]
In April 1623, l'Hermite was commissioned by Prince Maurice of Nassau and the Dutch State General to lead a fleet of eleven ships known as the Nassau Fleet (Dutch: Nassausche vloot) with its flagship Amsterdam. The fleet set sail on a circumnavigational voyage westwards from Amsterdam to the western coast of South America with the objective to hunt down Spanish silver ships leaving Peru and to establish a Dutch colony in either Peru or Chile, at that time known as the Viceroyalty of Peru.[3]
Although commanded by Admiral l'Hermite, the fleet was de facto led by his Vice-Admiral Gheen Huygen Schapenham and Rear-Admiral Julius Wilhelm Van Verschoor after l'Hermite like most of its crew suffered from dysentery[4] during the journey. In early 1624, the fleet passed Cape Horn through Lemaire Channel and explored and charted the Hermite Islands.[5] In May 1624, the fleet blocked the port of Callao and raided the cities of Pisco and Guayaquil, but they were unsuccessful in establishing a colony and the fleet was forced to continue its voyage westwards towards the Dutch East Indies.[6]
Death
L'Hermite died on 2 June 1624, during the blockade of Callao, after suffering from dysentery and scurvy for months.[4][6] He was buried on San Lorenzo Island off the coast of Callao, Peru.[7]
^ abBrederode, van, Willem (2008). Op jacht naar Spaans zilver, het scheepsjournaal van Willem van Brederode (in Dutch). Uitgeverij Verloren. pp. 54–55. ISBN978-90-8704-047-5.
Gerhard, Peter (2003). Pirates of New Spain 1575–1742. Courier Dover Publications. ISBN0-486-42611-4.
Iournael vande Nassausche vloot (English: Journal of the Nassau Fleet). Amsterdam: Jacob Pietersz Wachter. 1643. (in Dutch)
Brederode, van, Willem; A. Doedens; H. Looijesteijn (2008). Op jacht naar Spaans zilver, het scheepsjournaal van Willem van Brederode (English: The hunt for Spanish silver). Uitgeverij Verloren. ISBN978-90-8704-047-5. (in Dutch)