Petition to the Dutch West India Company by the Jews of New Netherlands

Item

Country

US

Name of institution (official language of the state)

Language of name of institution

eng

Contact information: postal address

1300 Locust Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107

Contact information: phone number

001 (215) 732-6200

Contact information: web address

Contact information: email

chutto@hsp.org (Director of Archives)
ssmith@hsp.org (Director of Research Services)

Reference number

Am. 226

Type of reference number

Archival reference number

Title (official language of the state)

Petition to the Dutch West India Company by the Jews of New Netherlands

Language of title

dut

Creator / accumulator

West-Indische Compagnie (WIC)

Date(s)

1655

Language(s)

dut

Extent

1 volume

Type of material

Textual Material

Scope and content

Petition to the Dutch West India Company by the Jews of New Netherlands claiming the right to reside, trade and travel in the Dutch colonies. Samuel Oppenheim published a translation of this document (1919). It is part of the manuscript collection of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.

Administrative / Biographical history

The West-Indische Compagnie (WIC), the Dutch West India Company, was founded in 1621 mainly to carry on economic warfare against Spain and Portugal by striking at their colonies in the West Indies and South America and on the west coast of Africa.
A board of 19 members (the Heerem XIX) governed the WIC, which had five offices (Kamers) corresponding to the various regions of the Netherlands. Having the monopoly of trade with the Americas, Africa, and the Atlantic regions between them, the WIC was militarily and financially supported by the States General (the Dutch national assembly).
It reached its zenith during the administration of Count John Maurice (1636-44) with the conquest of the northeastern region of Brazil and the foundation of New Holland, which ended up capitulating to the Portuguese in 1654. Between 1634 and 1648, the WIC established several colonies in the West Indies and Guyana, including Aruba, Curaçao, and Saint Martin, but later lost many of them to the French. New Netherland, the Dutch colony in North America, became a province of the WIC in 1623 and remained so until 1667, when it was ceded to the English.
The loss of Brazil to the Portuguese and later of other colonies to the French and the English reflected the decline of the WIC. The Second and Third Anglo-Dutch Wars also threatened its influence on the west coast of Africa. Deeper in debt, the WIC was dissolved in 1674 and, in the same year, created a new company, the Tweede West-Indische Compagnie, which lasted until 1794.

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Access points: subject terms

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Access, restrictions

A digital copy of the document is available online.

Links to finding aids

Author of the description

Carla Vieira, 2023

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Title Alternate label Class
Historical Society of Pennsylvania Collections (official language of the state)