The explorer who landed in New Zealand in 1642 was Abel Janszoon Tasman, a Dutch seafarer and explorer born in 1603 in the village of Lutjegast, Netherlands. In 1634 Tasman joined the Dutch East India Company and, after gaining further experience and promotions, was ordered to explore the south-east waters in order to find a new sea trade route to Chile in South America. On 24 November 1642, he discovered a previously unknown island on his voyage past the "Great South Land", or "New Holland", as the Dutch called Australia. He named the island "Antony Van Diemen's Land" in honour of the High Magistrate, or Governor-General of Batavia.
Tasman did not try to circumnavigate the island, but continued to sail east. On 13 December 1642, Tasman sighted a new land which he described as mountainous and covered in cloud in the south, but more barren in the north. He had discovered New Zealand. However, he also did not choose to explore further, assuming that the two lands were part of a larger continent.
Abael Janszoon Tasman is credited with being the first European to sight New Zealand. He led a two ship expedition for the Dutch East Indies trading company and, though he anchored his ship in waters in a bay on the northwest coast of the South Island, due to a confrontation with local Maori neither he nor his people set foot on New Zealand soil.
Dutch explorer, Abel Tasman was the first European to sight Aotearoa New Zealand but did not land there.
Captain James Cook 1953
captin cook
abel tasman
Abel Tasman was a Dutch explorer who was the first European to discover the area now called New Zealand. Zeeland is a Dutch province which is a seafaring region. The Dutch authorities on the report of Abel Tasman named the new found island, New Zealand.
The Dutch explorer Abel Tasman was the first recorded European to discover New Zealand in the 1600's and was named Nieuw Zeeland,or in Latin,Zelandia Nova.Zeeland is a maritme province of Holland suggesting it means sealand.
The Tasman Sea named for Dutch explorer Abel Tasman.
New Zealand is officially named "New Zealand". Its inhabitants are generally referred to as "New Zealanders" or, colloquially, "Kiwis". It was discovered by Dutch explorer Abel Tasman in 1642, and some time after he named it "Nieuw Zeeland", which later became anglicised as New Zealand. New Zealand is sometimes referred to as "Aotearoa" one of the names used by some Maori and more commonly by those on the political far left in recent times. "Aotearoa" first referred to the north island only, then later became used (more commonly since the 1990s) for the whole country. Prior to European settlement, Maori did not have a concept of New Zealand being a singular nation as they were several warring tribes that had no use or desire for unification. New Zealand's national anthem is "God Defend New Zealand" and its flag is referred to as the New Zealand flag.
There is not a majority in favour of changing the name of New Zealand. Why would New Zealand change its name? One reason given is: It should have a name given by the first inhabitants, the Maori. One suggested name is Aotearoa. But this name possibly only refers to one of the main islands rather than the whole country.
James Cook did not name New Zealand. New Zealand had already been named by Dutch explorer Abel Tasman in 1642 - over 130 years before Cook's expedition.
Abel Tasman
Abel Tasman had been the first European to sight New Zealand in 1642 but had named it Staten Land thinking it was part of the bottom of South America. An unknown Dutch cartographer sometime between 1644 and 1647 had the job of giving it a new name. He chose to name it after Zeeland, a Dutch province, as a parallel to the name of Australia which was then also named after a Dutch province and called New Holland.
New Zealand was discovered by a Dutch explorer, Abel Tasman, in 1642. At first, Abel thought he had ended up on an island near Chile, so he named it "Staten Landt" on his maps. He quickly realised his mistake, however, and renamed the land "Nieuw Zeeland". Which is named after the providence "Zeeland", in Holland. From Dutch to English translations, Zeeland means Sea-Land. Later, the English explorer, Captain James Cook, ordered that his maps of the known world be updated. His map-makers actually, accidentally, misspelt the country's name on their maps, labelling it "New Zealand" instead of "New Zeeland". The name, New Zealand, has stuck ever since. Abel Tasman also discovered an island off Australia which he named Van Diemen's Land, but was later given the more appropriate name of Tasmania.
Abel Tasman was a Dutch explorer who was the first European to discover the area now called New Zealand. Zeeland is a Dutch province which is a seafaring region. The Dutch authorities on the report of Abel Tasman named the new found island, New Zealand.
Abel Tasmin was the first person to sight the islands in 1642 and named them Staten Landt, assuming they were connected to land off the southern tip of South America. In 1645 Dutch cartographers renamed the islands Nova Zeelandia after the Dutch provence of Zeeland. British explorer James Cook subsequently anglicized the name to New Zealand.
Willem Jansz/Janszoon did not name Australia, although he was the first known European to land on the Australian continent. He believed that Cape York Peninsula, where he landed, was part of New Guinea. However, he named the location where he had a skirmish with the indigenous Australians, resulting in the deaths of several of his crew, "Cape Keerweer", which is Dutch for "turnabout".
The Dutch explorer Abel Tasman was the first recorded European to discover New Zealand in the 1600's and was named Nieuw Zeeland,or in Latin,Zelandia Nova.Zeeland is a maritme province of Holland suggesting it means sealand.
Tasmania's name comes from Dutch sea explorer Abel Tasman, who was the first European explorer to discover it in 1642. However, Tasman originally called it Van Diemen's Land.
The name Santa Claus came from the Dutch version of the name, "Sint Klaas" or "Sinterklaas," brought to New York by Dutch settlers. Sinterklaas was adopted by the country's English-speaking majority under the name Santa Claus.
New Zealand did not come from a continent. It grew out of the ocean where it is as a result of volcanic activity.
The name meerkat came from the Afrikaans (Dutch population of South Africa)!