Last modified: 2005-08-19 by bruce berry
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This
webpage shows a different version of the Dutch East India Company
Flag (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie or VOC for short) than what is
shown at FOTW.
Zane Whitehorn, 28 Mar 2003
There were quite a few different VOC flags, for use by the different Chambers
(places of settlement). This flag was for the Cape Colony, see this
webpage. The link just provided and an image in "Ensiklopedie van Suidelike
Afrika", 1967, suggests that it was indeed used on flags after 1652. I've
made a gif, using Mark Sensen's images, for this Cape Colony VOC flag.
On the cited FOTW-page Mark Sensen queries: "There was also a cipher for
the Cape (with a small "c"), but it is unknown if it was ever used on flags."
Jarig Bakker, .28 Mar 2003
The version of the VOC flag on this
page really should not have been placed on the Homepage of an article
dealing exclusively with the Dutch East Indies, as the cipher used on this
flag refers in particular to the Cape of Good Hope (Caab de Goede Hope
in 17th Century Dutch).
In "National and Provincial Symbols" by F.G.Brownell (1993) [brl93], it
states on page 10:
"More common was the use of the company's cipher, a combination of
the letters VOC (Vereenigde Nederlandsche Oost Indische Compagnie), over
which a small letter C for Cabo (Cape), was sometimes placed. The flag flown (in
the Cape) was either that of the
Netherlands, or that of the Company,
which was the Netherlands flag bearing the Company's cipher".
Note that the above does not specifically mention a flag with the Company's
cipher with above it a small letter "c". It does show us that such a
cipher
combination existed, however, and that its use on flags used on ships with
the Cape of Good Hope as their homeport must assumed to have been in use.
The cipher can also be viewed on the same page in the above mentioned
book, as well as in C. Pama's Lions and Virgins (1965) [pam65] as Fig. 12.
Caabse Vleck was a very early name for Cape Town (Kaapstad) but I have
not been able to find the material relating to this.
I have a few photocopies of early paintings of the Cape of Good Hope.
The first is a watercolour dated 1655/56 and is the oldest known painting
of the settlement. It is headed: Aldus Verthoont hem de TAFEL BAY Geleegen
Aen CABO de BONA SPERANCA.
Three other drawings by Johannes Rach dated 1762 have handwritten underneath:
Gezigt van Cabo de Goede Hoop.
So more than a Century after the landing of Jan van Riebeeck at the
Cap