Hieronymous Cruse

Hieronymous Cruse (Jeronimus Croase) was a soldier and explorer for the Dutch East India Company in South Africa.

Background

During the early years of the East India Company's presence in South Africa, the interior of the country remained largely unexplored. Cruse was one of a number of explorers tasked with discovering routes through the interior and gathering intelligence on local tribes.[1] Cruse reportedly excelled at compiling information on the indigenous peoples.[2][3]

Early expeditions

His earliest expedition in South Africa was in 1663, when he took part in an unsuccessful expedition to interior under Jonas de la Guerre in an attempt to find an overland route to the Orange River.[2] Cruse was the first to discover a route from Table Bay to Mossel Bay and Outeniqualand in 1668, where he discovered the Attakwa tribe.[2][4][5][6][7][8][9] A year earlier, he had also discovered the Gourits River.[10]

Military Career

In September 1670 Cruse (a sergeant at the time) was commanding a post at Saldanha Bay when he came under attack by Admiral De la Haye of the French East India Company. Cruse and his men were temporarily taken prisoner.[2]

In July 1673, Cruse was sent to aid a group of burghers who had come under attack from the tribal warlord Gonnema. The burghers had been slain long before the rescue party arrived, but Cruse had also been tasked with leading a retributive attack. He and his men attempted an attack on Gonnema's kraal, but the warlord and his men escaped to the mountains and Cruse had to be content with capturing their livestock.[2]

In later years Cruse was promoted through the ranks of the military, and as a lieutenant was invited in 1674 to join the Governor's policy council. [2] In 1685 he was appointed to the colony's high court of justice under Hendrik van Rheede.[2] He died of an unspecified illness on June 20th 1687.[2][11]

References

  1. Fleminger, D; Back Roads of the Cape, Jacana Publishing, 2006, p96
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 McCall Theal, George; History and Ethnography of Africa South of the Zambesi, from the Settlement of the Portuguese at Sofala in September 1505 to the Conquest of the Cape Colony by the British in September 1795, Cambridge University Press, 2010, ISBN 978-1-108-02333-7
  3. Man, Volumes 9-10, Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 1909, p186
  4. Reynolds, Gilbert Westacott; The aloes of South Africa, A.A. Balkema, 1974, p13
  5. Ross, Graham; The Romance of Cape Mountain Passes, New Africa Books, 2004, p32
  6. Heawood, E; A History of Geographical Discovery: In the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, Cambridge University Press, 2011, p391
  7. Leon, Nell; The Garden Route and Little Karoo, Struik, 2003, p27
  8. The Cape monthly magazine, Volume 3, J.C. Jutta, 1880
  9. Preller, Gustav Schoeman;Day-dawn in South Africa, Wallachs, 1938, p109
  10. Paterson, W., Siegfried Forbes, V., Rourke, John P.; Paterson's Cape travels 1777 to 1779, Brenthurst Press, 1980, p72
  11. Joernale van die landtogte van die edele vaandrig Olof Bergh (1682 en 1683) en die vaandrig Isaq Schrijver (1689), Die Van Riebeeck vereniging, 1931
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