Background
His father, Arend Roggeveen, was a mathematician with much knowledge of astronomy, geography, rhetorics, philosophy and the theory of navigation as well.
His father, Arend Roggeveen, was a mathematician with much knowledge of astronomy, geography, rhetorics, philosophy and the theory of navigation as well.
On 12 August 1690 he graduated as a doctor of the law at University of Harderwijk.
Jacob Roggeveen also encountered Bora Bora and Maupiti of the Society Islands, Samoa. He became notary of Middelburg (the capital of the province of Zeeland, where he was born) on 1 February 1659. In 1706 he joined the Dutch East Indies Company, and between 1707 and 1714 as a Raadsheer van Justitie ("Council Lord of Justice") at Batavia, Dutch East Indies (now Jakarta).
In 1714, he returned to Middelburg by himself.
He became involved in religious controversies, supporting the liberal preacher Pontiaan van Hattem by publishing his leaflet De val van "s werelds afgod (The fall of the world"s idol). The first part appeared in 1718, in Middelburg, and was subsequently confiscated by the city council and burned.
Roggeveen fled from Middelburg to nearby Flushing. Thereafter he established himself in the small town of Arnemuiden, and published parts 2 and 3 of the series, again raising a controversy.
On 1 August 1721 he left on his expedition, in the service of the Dutch West India Company, to seek Terra Australis.
lieutenant consisted of three ships, the Arend, the Thienhoven, and Afrikaansche Galey and had 223 men on crew. Roggeveen first sailed down to the Falkland Islands (which he renamed "Belgia Australis"), passed through the Strait of Le Maire and continued south to beyond 60 degrees south to enter the Pacific Ocean. He made landfall near Valdivia, Chile.
He visited the Juan Fernández Islands, where he spent 24 February to 17 March.
The expedition later arrived at Easter Island (Rapa Nui) on Easter Sunday, 5 April 1722 (whereupon he reported seeing 2,000-3,000 inhabitants). He then sailed to Batavia by way of the Tuamotu Archipelago, the Society Islands, and Samoa.
There he was arrested because he had violated the monopoly of the Dutch East India Company, but the Company was later forced to release him, to compensate him for the trouble, and to pay his crew. In 1723, Roggeveen returned to the Netherlands.
After his return Roggeveen published part 4 of De val van "s werelds afgod.