Background
Frederick de Houtman was born in Gouda, Holland, Seventeen Provinces.
Frederick de Houtman was born in Gouda, Holland, Seventeen Provinces.
He made pioneering observations of the southern stars that contributed to the creation of 12 new southern constellations. He assisted fellow Dutch navigator Pieter Dirkszoon Keyser with astronomical observations during his first expedition from the Netherlands to the East Indies in 1595-1597. During subsequent expeditions he added further stars to the list of those observed by Keyser.
Between them the constellations at the bottom of this article are credited to them as discoverers.
De Houtman was the elder brother of Cornelis de Houtman who in a second expedition in 1598-1599 was killed. Frederick was imprisoned by the Sultan of Aceh in northern Sumatra, but made good use of his two years in prison by studying the local Malay language and making astronomical observations.
In 1603, after his return to Holland, Frederick published his stellar observations in an appendix to his dictionary and grammar of the Malayan and Malagasy languages. In 1619 he, in the VOC ship Dordrecht, and Jacob d"Edel, in another VOC ship Amsterdam, sighted land on the Australian coast near present-day Perth which they called d"Edelsland.
After sailing northwards along the coast he encountered and only narrowly avoided a group of shoals, subsequently called the Houtman Abrolhos.
De Houtman then made landfall in the region known as Eendrachtsland which previous explorer Dirk Hartog had encountered. In his journal, De Houtman identified these coasts with Marco Polo"s land of Beach, or Locach, as shown on maps of the time such as that of Petrus Plancius and January Huygen van Linschoten. De Houtman died in Alkmaar, Holland, Dutch Republic.